pathshot
Verified Trader,
The word I used is AVERAGE and that's what those 3 goalies were and that's what Emery is
Either way, your definition of average is warped.
-m.
The word I used is AVERAGE and that's what those 3 goalies were and that's what Emery is
Though Emery would be average it would only be for 2-3 mil, Biron would be average for 5. And I still think Emery is above average.
Emerys skill level was never really in question here, it was his work ethic and temperment. If he has gotten the work ethic up in Russia and his temperament improves he should be fine in Philly and work out quite well.
Actually it was mostly the trainer's fault, tried forcing Emery to wear some ball cap after he had just gotten yanked from nets after a bad game.
Off topic but -
I have a hard time accepting Burke as being a average goalie, 300+ wins playing on sub-par teams? 2 World Championships for Canada? Olympic Silver...
Sounds like an AVERAGE player assessment...
Either way, your definition of average is warped.
-m.
He was a very good goaltender at one point. However, when the Flyers acquired him, he was at the tail end of his career and was average at best. The point is, the Flyers haven't tried to pick up a franchise goalie since Hextall left. They keep signing/trading for average goalies or good netminders in the twilight of their careers
Really? Explain to me how these goaltenders were more than average at the time when Philly picked them up
He was a very good goaltender at one point. However, when the Flyers acquired him, he was at the tail end of his career and was average at best. The point is, the Flyers haven't tried to pick up a franchise goalie since Hextall left. They keep signing/trading for average goalies or good netminders in the twilight of their careers
Really? Explain to me how these goaltenders were more than average at the time when Philly picked them up
Well, first, Burke had multiple stints with the Flyers. With the second, he was explicitly a backup - so, strike 1.
Robert Esche had promise, but didn't emerge as a starter until he reached Philly. He split time with Niittymaki, Cechmanek, and Burke. In 2003-04, the Flyers went 7 games against the eventual Cup champion Lightning. He wasn't brought in to be a starter, but he won the starting job. He made Cechmanek expendable.
Martin Biron was the only one out of your list who was brought in to win a starting job. He played behind some atrocious Buffalo teams, and he was hardly the issue. He kept the heir apparent, Ryan Miller, at bay for 3 years before he ultimately was brought in to start in 2005-06. He managed a 13 game winning streak in 2003-04, and was only moved to Philly because he deserved to be a started somewhere. Immediately, Philadelphia played better in front of him and he posted the best numbers of any goalie that year.
Philadelphia's habit is not that of bringing in "average" goalies, it's been a matter of plugging holes in a series of systems that weren't built around defense. They've done phenomenally well in drafting forwards in the last few years, and have had some success on defense - but they haven't drafted a franchise goaltender in a long time. So naturally, it means bringing in goalies from the outside.
-m.
Anyway, we're kinda going off topic. Emery is no franchise goalie. Therefore, I guess Philly is once again plugging a hole. They'll be disappointed
I love this signing and am rooting for the underdog the whole way.
You made my point for me. You just word it differently than I do. Your take is they "plug holes". Mine is they sign average goalies instead of either drafting a franchise 'tender or spending to bring one in as a FA
Anyway, we're kinda going off topic. Emery is no franchise goalie. Therefore, I guess Philly is once again plugging a hole. They'll be disappointed
Picking diamonds in the rough is not an exact art - it's has a great deal of plain old luck involved.
Oh. Really. Had no idea.
Thanks for putting millions of armchair GMs in their place.
-m.