Posted on June - 29 - 2009

Lunch Time Radio & TSM Game of the Night

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Here are the lineups for the shows at noon:

On Hockey Central at Noon:
Howard Berger hosting today

On Leafs Lunch:

Greg Brady is hosting

Bob McKenzie at 12:40pm

College of Sports Media Game of the Night:
The Toronto Blue Jays welcome the Tampa Bay Rays for their first visit to the Rogers Centre tonight. Amazing news for the Jays, as Roy Halladay (10-1) will make his first start since straining his groin. A win tonight and Doc will be the first 11 game winner in the majors. Tampa has been hot as of late. They’ve won five straight and are third in the American League East one game ahead of Toronto.

A couple intriguing games oversees at Wimbledon. On centre court it will be a French Open rematch as Roger Federer battles Robin Soderling. On the women’s side number three-seeded Venus Williams faces former number one Ana Ivanovic.

Posted on June - 25 - 2009

Lunch Time Radio & TSM Game of the Night

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Here are the lineups for the shows at noon:

Nothing released on time

College of Sports Media Game of the Night:
It’s pretty rare for a game involving the Washington Nationals to be considered the game of the day, but today is an exception. John Smoltz makes his Boston Red Sox debut in the last game of their three game set. Smoltz is the only pitcher in major league history to win over 200 games and have over 150 saves. Smoltz knows the Nationals well. Last season, while pitching with the Braves Smoltz struck out Washington’s Felipe Lopez to become the 16th member of the 3000 strikeout club. Flame thrower Jordan Zimmerman (2-3) gets the call for the Nats.

Posted on June - 24 - 2009

Lunch Time Radio & TSM Game of the Night

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Here are the lineups for the shows at noon:

On Hockey Central at Noon:

TBA

On Leafs Lunch:

Hosting Greg Brady
1240 – Craig Hartsburgh on new coaching gig in whl

College of Sports Media Game of the Night:
Game two of a three game set between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Cincinnati Reds goes tonight at the Rogers Centre. Scott Richmond (5-4) get the start for the Jays. Richmond’s set a career high in his last start, strucking out 11 Phillies en route to a 7-1 Toronto win. Bronson Arroyo (8-5) gets the call for the Reds. Toronto’s Scott Rolen has thrived in the four spot. He’s eighth in the league with .332 batting average. Richview Collegiate alum Joey Votto leads the Reds. Votto returned to the line-up last night and looks to keep leading his crew. He’s batting .354 with eight homers and 33 RBIS.

Posted on June - 18 - 2009

Lunch Time Radio & TSM Game of the Night

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Here are the lineups for the shows at noon:

On Hockey Central at Noon:

12:25 DEan Brown, voice of the Senators
12:40 Steve Milton, Hamilton Spectator

On Leafs Lunch:

Jamie Tawill is hosting
12:00- 12:40 Calls- If you are Brian Burke are the Sedin tiwns worth giving Zetterberg type money too? (TSM TAKE: NOOOOOOOOO)
12:40 – Darren Dreger

College of Sports Media Game of the Night:
Whether you like golf or not, you do not want to miss the opening round of the US Open at Bethpage Black. Tiger Woods looks to repeat as champion, but this time with the use of both of his legs. Phil Mickelson would love to win for his wife. Mike Weir won the Masters in similiar type conditions, but Augusta is no Bethpage Black. This course is extremely long and it looks like it’ll be wet, setting up for a difficult time for anyone looking to win the silver trophy.

Posted on June - 17 - 2009

Lunch Time Radio & TSM Game of the Night

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Hey folks, new double feature here on TSM. Many of you have asked and the fine folks at both The Fan and 640 Toronto have agreed to provide advance lineups for Hockey Central At Noon and Leafs Lunch respectively. In addition to that, Toronto Sports Media in partnership with the College of Sports Media will be bringing you the TSM Game of the night, providing you with insight into what game you should check out on the night in question. It may not always be a Toronto team playing. So…without further ado, here are the lineups for the shows at noon:

On Hockey Central at Noon:
Roger Lajoie hosting today

1210 Mark Spector from Sportsnet
1225 Stan Butler Coach GM Brampton Battalion on the Draft (Matt Duchene)
1240 John Tavares TBC

On Leafs Lunch:

Jamie Tawill is hosting
12:20 – Steven Stamkos
12:40 – Chris Campoli – sens dman on Heatley wanting out

College of Sports Media Game of the Night:
Game of the night?? It’s the Argo’s preseason opener! A new coach and new era???

Posted on February - 15 - 2009

Chris Pronger- Why Would Maple Leafs Trade For Me?

I loved this quote….

“but if he were running the Leafs, “I wouldn’t trade for me,” he said.

“How the heck is Burkie going to trade for me if he doesn’t have the draft picks?”

It gets better:

“”Why would a team — say Atlanta, Toronto or Ottawa — trade for me, right now at the deadline? And the other teams, the San Jose’s, Detroit’s Boston’s, New Jerseys’, they’re all up against the cap,” Pronger said. “I don’t think there will be nearly as many trades at the deadline as people think.” The irony is, it could be Pronger’s club that drives the needle on how many big trades happen on March 4.

Those are from Pronger talking to Mark Spector at Sportsnet.

I am not sure if this a rumour out there but Spector is talking about a Pronger for Kubina deal:

“”Why would you trade me for Kubina? I make the same as him.”

Kubina also has one year left in his deal, at $5 million. But Pronger is a better player, so Kubina-for-Pronger is a deal the Ducks wouldn’t make – not the other way around.

But the point 34-year-old Pronger is trying to make is this: The Leafs will reach their nadir this summer. Some contracts will be up. Burke and coach Ron Wilson will have taken stock, and they will begin reshaping the organization.

Rock bottom comes on Apr. 12 – the day after the Maple Leafs last game of the season against Ottawa. From there, the new management team can begin with their own bricks and mortar, a construction project that will take a few seasons.

If Anaheim deals Pronger, it will because the Ducks have decided to start all over again. It means Scott Niedermayer has told them that he’s not hanging around for the 2010 Olympics, which means Anaheim GM Bob Murray will want draft picks and prospects – neither of which Burke has enough of, or intends to part with.

The only player on the Leafs roster you’d trade Pronger for if you are Anaheim is Luke Schenn, which obviously won’t happen.”

Man, it must be very quiet out there if this is the type of garbage that is being written

Posted on November - 13 - 2008

All Brian Burke- Know This It’s All About The $

Had enough time to digest yet??? Sick of Brian Burke talk???? If you are, allow me to suggest a few places other then here (Toronto) that you should head for a few weeks, because the nonsense has only just begun.

In any event, here is a brief tour & analysis of the “experts”:

“The one thing that will not be a problem in negotiations between Brian Burke and Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment is money.MLSE, according to some insiders, let Burke know he could expect a four-year, $2.2-million-per-year (all currency U.S.) contract offer to be the Toronto Maple Leafs boss long before he stepped down as GM of the Anaheim Ducks. Now that Burke is a free agent, he will command more than that, but to think this potential marriage could fall apart because MLSE won’t want to pay what Burke asks is absurd…..If I were a gambling man, I’d wager Burke will be running the Maple Leafs before the end of the season. But I’d want some odds because of the complications.

That from David Shoalts of the Globe. Strike 1. This is all about the money. The board has proven with Cliff that they want to do the right thing. The only thing that will derail this is money. If Burke demands more then Colangelo, making him the highest paid executive in the NHL by a looooong shot, then this could get derailed… There is no other mitigating factor. I guy doesn’t say that this is the job where if you win they name schools after you if he doesn’t want the job. Scotty Bowman asked for Colangelo money. The economy is in the crapper, but rest assured Burke is not going to come for less then that. How much more is the #1 factor in him taking the job……

“This is a deal that should get done, possibly by the end of next week. If Brian Burke isn’t the new general manager of the Maple Leafs by then, and possibly the president as well, it will be because with the professional opportunity of a lifetime at his feet, he went for too much. Even Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, owners of the most valuable franchise in hockey despite their absolute failure to produce a winner, have their limits. It wouldn’t necessarily be dollars, or a specific amount. MLSE might balk if they are offended by a Burke request that comes in too high, a request that too brazenly tries to cash in on the leverage the former Anaheim GM quite obviously has in this situation”

Give Damien a prize. I am not sure if the word offended is right, but if he asks for the sky they may balk.

“Now comes the Burke opportunity, one that, regardless of what Richard Peddie was saying yesterday, could not have possibly surprised the Leafs.”

I think they were surprised. I think they were surprised that it was yesterday. I don’t think (and neither does Damien) that they were surprised it happened at all as eventually it would have…but I actually take Peddie at his word on this one…

“Going for $5 million might cause MLSE suits to tell him to take a hike. Burke, meanwhile, considers himself a strong negotiator and, at 53 years of age, this is his chance to nail down the biggest deal of his career. They want him. He wants them. It seems unthinkable anything could block this marriage now.
But it isn’t unthinkable. The most valuable franchise in the sport and one of its biggest personalities still have to strike a deal. Egos alone could kill it all.”

The key to this deal is the average salary over the term of the deal. It won’t be how much he makes each year, it will be the average. If he asks for an average of 5 per year I think that he isn’t coming here. I also don’t think he is going to get an average of 5 a year anywhere else. So I don’t think he is going to ask for that. Remember it is all about the money(and the term).

“But make no mistake: This is Toronto’s play to make. If the Leafs come up with appropriate finances and term, they will have in place the general manager they were hoping for when they fired John Ferguson Jr., last winter.”

Right on Mr. Simmons.

“Whether Burke and the Leafs will be a fit of any kind is open to interpretation.”

That is right, because when the news broke, prior to Mr. Armstrong’s slur on Detroit, you, Mr. Simmons said that you were no longer a supporter of bringing Mr. Burke to Toronto. You, gasp, cough cough, said that you were impressed with the job that Cliff and Ron have done so far and felt that bringing in Burke at this time may not be the right move (you failed to say it here by the way…)

“The dynamic has changed a little bit. It’s like Burke and the Leafs are at a high school dance. They’re both thinking very seriously about asking each other to dance, they’re clearly attracted to each other but they may now feel the need to play a little hard to get. There’s other fish in the sea for both of them, don’t you know. There may be some third-party interest in Burke beyond the Leafs. And now that the moment of truth is conceivably here, the Leafs may find some reasons to consider all their options, everything from the incumbent Cliff Fletcher to what they perceive might be available this summer.
At the end of the day, though, the probability of Burke becoming the Leafs’ next GM is far greater than not.It makes too much sense, but there’s a negotiation to be done and there could be issues along the way. So let the dance begin. This will be interesting.”

Too true Mr. McKenzie. I did find it interesting that your network released today news that the Leafs were a stones throw from landing Jimmy Rutherford 2 summers ago when he turned them down. Curious why that story came out today. These stories surface for a reason and you can bet there is an ulterior motive on someone’s part somewhere.

“Sources close to the Toronto Maple Leafs say the team was “caught off guard” by the news Brian Burke had been replaced as general manager of the Anaheim Ducks. However today’s announcement undoubtedly changes that and, with other names like San Jose’s Doug Wilson, Detroit’s Ken Holland and Nashville’s David Poile still being tossed around as potential candidates at the end of the season, Burke’s hiring in Toronto may depend on his expectations, both financially, as well as the autonomy he is sure to demand.”

Let’s take Darren Dreger’s first comment. To suggest that they weren’t surprised would mean that a: this announcement was premeditated or planned in advance. Just because they say it went down the way they said it did doesn’t mean it did. Secondly, even if it was known for 24 hours, how would the leafs have known. I guess the assumption is that Burke would have told them right? Ok, so let’s get into that. Assume for a second he wants to come to Toronto, why would he alert anyone and risk a tampering charge, can’t you imagine, he takes the Toronto job, the leafs win the lottery and Anaheim has the pick because he alerted the leafs this was going down??? Who cares if they were surprised it happened yesterday???? The media was……Why should he leaf brass be any different?

Dreger is right on the last comment, did you hear, it is all about the money and the term?

“The common perception is that he’ll get the same deal that Toronto Raptors GM Bryan Colangelo got, but that’s not a given. Colangelo is said to have an exit clause if there is interference from above, but Burke should want more than that. First off, if he gets an offer and takes it, he’s not going to want to leave so there has to be more to the autonomy clause than just the right to walk away. Burke will seek assurances that there will be no interference and penalties to ownership or bonuses to him if there is any. That’s not to say he gets complete control. Ownership needs to retain the right to make certain that Burke can’t make deals that are outside the economic or political scope of ownership (for example, dealing No.1 picks for an aging defenceman or a fading scorer). There also needs to be a clear statement of purpose so that should Burke want, for example, to bring Todd Bertuzzi to Toronto the day before his trial opens in Ontario in his assault on Steve Moore, ownership has the right to say yes or no.
That’s not interference. That’s protecting the rights and value of the franchise, an ownership responsibility. It’s something that goes on in every franchise and the Leafs are no different. Working out an agreement that covers that will be a time-consuming and difficult process.”

Whaaaat Mr. Kelly???? That is exactly what is interferance. Setting a budget and making a president/ceo stick to it is not interference, that is protecting the franchise. What you are talking about is the type of meddling the media has accused the board of engaging in!

“Then there’s always the possibility that a even more successful talent – say a Ken Holland in Detroit, a Lou Lamoriello in New Jersey or a Doug Wilson in San Jose (and Wilson’s stock has been consistently rising) – might come free at season’s end. The Leafs need to consider the possibility that one of those men will come into the market. The Leafs also need to be aware that now that Burke is free some big-name competitors, including Boston, New York and Chicago, might consider a management restructuring to get him.”

Kelly and others have roasted MLSE for not hiring someone last summer, yet know they want them to wait again. If Burke is the guy you wanted last summer, then you go hire him now. As he said in his conference yesterday, if Bob Murray is going to eventually take over there is no time like the present. You don’t wait around for a what if, when the one you want is there waiting.

“The man fits the job. The job fits the man. Somehow though, I sense we’ll have to chew on this hire for a couple of weeks before the two sides finally shake hands.”

I agree with Mark Spector on this one about 98% :)

“The problem in Toronto is that almost all the franchise’s plans end up falling to pieces because there is next to no consensus, from the top of the organization down, on which direction the Original Six franchise should take. Even if Burke is the best candidate for the job, getting from here to there is a veritable minefield and shouldn’t be considered a foregone conclusion.”

Yawn, Hey Scott, you paying attention these days???? If you want to take a shot, there is lots of ammo, try using something at least relevant.

“Other teams considered potential candidates include the Florida Panthers, Atlanta Thrashers, Tampa Bay Lightning and Ottawa Senators, but those clubs are likely to be long shots to land him. Interested teams now have a week to put together offers for Burke which will only ensure he’ll be the subject of considerable media speculation in the coming days.”

I am a huge Spector fan, but I think with respect to Florida, Atlanta and Tampa they have no shot of getting Burke. He won’t go to that type of market, in my opinion. Ottawa could be the one team that I could see. Question is would they fire Bryan Murray quick enough to make it happen.

Meanwhile, keep these in mind when (if) he takes the job and the locales start the he isn’t as good as people think parade. Speaking of parades, that means you Mike Hogan who asked this am why people are already planning the parade at the thought of Burke taking over the Leafs…Well for one, it’s not us the fans who are, it’s you the media creating all the hysteria and two, here are som opinions from folks who’s opinions I respect:

“Burke has a big personality, and it seems perfect for Toronto. He will enjoy the daily jousting with the media, and he won’t be intimidated by the pressure of running such a high profile franchise. The Maple Leafs just need to be re-energized, and Burke is a human transformer of energy. Burke loves entertaining skating teams, and he loves tough, fighting teams. That strategy will play well in Toronto. Players like Burke because he stands up for them. He defends his team ferociously and he’s not timid about calling the league office and complaining when he believes his team has been wronged. Edmonton general manager Kevin Lowe can vouch for that. That kind of style would also play well with Toronto fans. I’ve known the man 20 years and I can you with a high degree of certainty that he always has a purpose for any word that comes out of his mouth. Fans believe still today that Burke acts out of anger when he rips Kevin Lowe for signing Dustin Penner, but he continues to go after Lowe because he wants other general managers to know that there will be some discomfort in their lives if they do something that he believes is wrong. (Burke believed that Lowe’s signing changed the salary structure for the entire league).”

I agree with everything that Kevin Allen wrote there. If he comes here it is for the right reason$.

“Burke said he had “delivered” here, and that’s true. He took a wealth of talent assembled by his predecessor, Bryan Murray, totally rebuilt the defense, added some toughness and brought the Cup to the West Coast. The Kings still haven’t accomplished that despite a 26-year head start. The Ducks have taken on Burke’s personality. He likes fast, physical hockey and the Ducks have always been willing — often too willing — to take the body and sometimes take a penalty. His coups were signing Niedermayer, who wanted to play alongside brother Rob, and acquiring Pronger, who has caused opponents headaches with his ruthless hits and given the Ducks a few headaches with his many suspensions.
The Ducks are unapologetic about being combative, just as Burke is — and was — during a silly war of words he initiated with Edmonton GM Kevin Lowe after Lowe lured Dustin Penner away from Anaheim with a rich offer sheet. Burke was sometimes blustery, sometimes defiant, but he made sure his players looked beyond themselves and became involved in the community. He wasn’t always successful but he never was dull.”Burkie’s not someone that’s easily lost,” said Ryan Getzlaf, a franchise cornerstone. “He’s done an excellent job here.”Now he moves on to the next job, leaving Murray big sandals to fill.”

I am a huge fan of Helene Elliott, she calls it like she sees it. The guy isn’t perfect nor was his performance in Anaheim, but he is what he is…

“When hockey finally settled its lockout in 2005, the Ducks’ profile was somewhere between Cal State Fullerton basketball and Professional Bull Riding.Their ’05 season never started. Their ’04 season was a crushing bore, with Sergei Fedorov coming up a little short on the Messiah scale. There was new ownership, which was good after the Disney years, but all the momentum from the ’03 Stanley Cup Finals was a puddle. All they had were Teemu Selanne and Jean-Sebastien Giguere, and a building crying out for human interaction.But they also had Brian Burke. In a couple of weeks Burke signed Scott Niedermayer. In 10 months the Ducks played Edmonton for the Western Conference championship. A month after that they traded for Chris Pronger. Ten months after that, someone was engraving their names on the Stanley Cup.Success has multiple fathers, and certainly Pierre Gauthier and Bryan Murray did their part. But Burke, who turned over the general manager’s desk to Bob Murray on Wednesday, hired the coach and acquired — and aligned — the stars. He brought something the Ducks never had before. Scope. He thought big. He also brought clarity. In a market where hockey is an acquired taste, Burke knew the value of a consistent front man. His coach, Randy Carlyle, was just as uncompromisingly direct.

Burke is known for bombast and a long memory, and there’s no sign that he and Edmonton GM Kevin Lowe are going to golf in the same foursome. But he has that Irish sentimentality, too. He and a Vancouver columnist began trading tales about their recently deceased dogs, in a Calgary pub three years ago, and both had to break out the Kleenex. Sometimes two and two do make four, and sometimes rumor becomes real. But Burke knows he’ll be trading low-voltage comfort for a 24/7 fishbowl in Toronto. He also knows what lies ahead for the man who brings Toronto a Cup. Do they have knighthood in Canada? “They’d be naming schools after the guy who wins there,” Burke once said.
They ought to name the upper rows of Honda Center seats after Burke. Thanks to him, and his wide-angle perspective, people actually sit there.”

A very nice tribute by Mark Whicker. I have to tell you, when he takes the job it will be because, he knows his stuff. He has done it before with success, he can manhandle the media and HE CAN HANDLE THE BOARD. That is what this franchise will need and he may be the only guy out there who can. Will it lead to a cup or cups, I have no clue. I love Doug Wilson but I think he would have a tough time here. I am not sure Ken Holland would either (with respect to the board). There are others, not many (Our buddy Neil for sure!) who may be able to bring evertyhing that Burke does, I think that is why he will be the guy. The only other one who immediately comes to mind is Lou andI just don’t see that happening.

Type at you from the first period..

Posted on November - 10 - 2008

Who Is Maple Leaf Nation????

A Chilly Monday afternoon to you and yours. I really thought this was the year that we were going to skip winter. Oh well, off to get the snow tires on the mini this evening.

Help me out folks, I am really confused… When people speak of Leaf Nation, whom are they referring to??? In my mind, and you can call me crazy (mrs. TSM calls me way worse (just not in front of the kids)) Leaf Nation has you, and I…the ship of fools who follow the blue and white in everything they do. It is us who knows more about every player then Cliff Claven did on Jeopardy.

Since when did the media who covers the Leafs become part of Leaf Nation? Why is it that certain media are including their own as part of Leaf Nation. Personally I think the notion of Leaf Nation is stupid. Having said that, it is media created and usually is meant in a derogatory way to describe the die hard, all leaf all the time fans.

Cox, and Happy Howie have been taking shots recently at their fellow scribes along with us fans. We all know who the “good media” members are in this city, and which ones, ummmm, ahhhhh, aren’t. When did it become in vogue to lump the day to day media as one of US?

“They say what goes around will eventually come around, sooner or later. So maybe while Toronto defenceman Mike Van Ryn is rehabbing from that hit from behind that broke his nose, his finger, and left him with a concussion, he can hang with teammate Ryan Hollweg, who has perfected that hit.”

I have no problem with that as written by Mark Spector. The Village Idiot is no better then guy who hit Van Ryn, and to be honest when I heard the leaf brass talking about it, I thought the same thing, make sure you talk to Hollweg before spouting off about this hit.

““It is time for the NHL to punish careless players as severely as the dangerous ones,” began an article in Monday’s Globe and Mail, in the wake of Tom Kostopoulos’ hit on Van Ryn. The author noted with great consternation that (gasp) Luke Schenn was nearly injured on a dangerous play later in the game.”

I have no problem with either the quote or the article cited. However, it isn’t written by the fans. It was written by a colleague of Mark Spector’s at the Globe and Mail!

“Sure, the Leafs employed cheap-shot artist Darcy Tucker for eight seasons, and now have added a serial-offender in Hollweg. But when people start taking shots back at the Maple Leafs, you see headlines like the Globe’s: “Time to crack down on the careless.”

Once again, I have no problem with calling the organization hypocritical if you want to compare Darcy with others. We the fans don’t write the headlines or the stories Mark. We are stuck reading them just like you.

“Leafs Nation. It never ceases to amaze.”

There you have the source of my confusion. I get, and appreciate the humor in talking shit about the competition on both the fan and 640. To date it hasn’t been personal nor has it crossed the line. It is what we should expect. I get Cox blogging about the Globe’s piece on another team in Toronto (and no I refused to read yet another article today). Cox recently lit into the press that covers the team and Howie talked about 90% of the press covering the leafs as kool aid drinkers. Spector is now taking it even further. With the exception of Berger (who takes his kids to press boxes in foreign hockey cities and to Blue Jays game locally to cheer and hug) these guys aren’t supposed to cheer, they aren’t supposed to be fans. So if you, collectively that is, create a moniker for the fans, how do you start lumping the media into it?

You can read Spector here….

In case you didn’t see it, Smart Canucks ran a very nice piece about TSM this past Saturday. In case you haven’t frequented their site before, I highly recommend you do; it’s fantastic. Of all the sites I view on a regular basis it is by far the most valuable. Jim and Boo do an awesome job providing value to Canadians in an area where we are usually left behind.

Most recently their site posted a great upcoming promotion for shoppers drug mart. For whatever reason Shopper’s sent them a nasty cease and desist letter. Why I can’t begin to imagine. In a country of 30 million people, with all kinds of vertical competition, you would think this is the last thing shopper’s should be doing…. I for one can tell you I went to Walmart this weekend to buy all that I needed simple to support the cause.

You can read that review of TSM here, but check out their site daily for great stuff!

Lastly, I spent some time yesterday cleaning up the petiton. You should know that all of the names on the current list have been verified. So even if you see a name that you are suspicious of on it, I can tell you that regardless of the name provided the email provided is unique and real. Don’t forget to sign up and tell your friends:

Howie wants me to remind you to sign up:

sign the petition at <a href=”http://firehowardberger.com/”>http://www.firehowardberger.com</a>
join the <a href=”http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=38743531034″>facebook group</a>
follow on <a href=”https://twitter.com/FireHowardBerge”>twitter</a>

Posted on September - 02 - 2008

Mark Spector- The Common Sense Revolution

When it comes to sports sections in this area, few people think of the National Post as a major player. However, an article in today’s paper is BANG on, 100 % accurate with respect to the McCabe trade. It is the first level headed analysis of the deal I have seen:

“It was a great deal for Toronto no matter who or what was coming back, and no matter what the talking heads were saying last night on radio and TV panels across your dial.”

Huh??? Who are you? Do you really write for a Toronto paper?

“Look, Leafs fans, if the Rest Of The Country can tell you anything about the team you love – and the team we are forced far too often to watch – it is this:

Any trade that relieves your organization of one of those overpaid players with a no-movement clause in his contract is a good trade. Any such transaction that does not include the name Tomas Kaberle is a great trade for Toronto.”

Amen! I believe!!

“One of the oldest clichés in the game applies here – the one about how you are never supposed to critique a win. And this is a big win for Cliff Fletcher, who is quietly plodding along in his cleanup role, untying many of the knots that John Ferguson Jr., hamstrung this organization with during his damaging term as the Maple Leafs general manager.”

Exactly. That is what Cliff said he was going to do and that is what he has done. Hmmmm, state a plan and follow it…how rare….

“Van Ryn is younger, cheaper, and signed for a year less. Anyone who sees a hole in this deal from a Leafs’ perspective simply can not be looking at it from the mandate that Fletcher has in Toronto.”

Tomorrow we will see all kinds of crap about how dumb this is, how valuable McCabe was, how bad a signing McCabe was etc. The Muskoka five are almost gone. He chose to keep Kubina and Sundin is off playing poker with pokerstars.net

“This deal embodies every wrong decision that Fletcher has been hired to clean up, while he keeps the Leafs GM job warm for Brian Burke”

I am not so sure on the Burke part, but Cliff said he wanted to prevent the next GM from having 6 months of junk to go through, and that is what he has accomplished. For next years UFA season he will have lots of room and even more for the year after.

“And the least surprised about any of this? New head coach Ron Wilson, who put his cards on the table at his introductory news conference when he admitted that the Maple Leafs were going to have to go a bit further south before they could turn the ship north again.

That is something you won’t hear a new coach say very often, but it is worth applauding Wilson for coming to Toronto and calling a spade a spade. Wilson can do that because his years in San Jose gave him a distant vantage point in judging the Maple Leafs.”

Another reason why the Wilson hiring was a good one. He isn’t going to play vets to make a run to make the playoffs. He knows they aren’t supposed to be good this year; his job is to lay a foundation.

What a brilliant piece by Spector. I am impressed. You can read the whole story here.


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