toonarmy wrote:A couple points in response to your points. First, you must be missing my point about Thornton's lack of production in the playoffs. I have watched a ton of Sharks games this year, and Joe's point totals are very much dependent on the performance of his linemates. His role is much more about passing than making goals. If you have seen the playoff games then you should have observed that his linemates are not putting the puck in the net when Joe gets it to them. You cannot possibly say it is Joe's fault when the other guys cannot score goals when he gets it to them. Perhaps you do not understand Thornton's role too well.
I understand Thornton's role plenty well. It's to pass first. But you act like the guy is the second coming of Craig Janney, that all he does is pass. He had 25 goals this season. He has zero in four games this season. He's not producing.
toonarmy wrote:Second, regarding Thornton in Boston, have you watched this year's Bruins much? They have seven players with 20 goals or more. There would be more than enough opportunities for both of their lines.
No, I'm more of a Western Conference guy. But one of the reasons for that balance is, well, balance. If Thornton was on the Bruins, do you honestly think that balance would remain? They would just have eight 20-goal scorers, turn into the 1984-85 Edmonton Oilers? I highly doubt it.
toonarmy wrote:You do realize that Malkin and Crosby usually are not on the same line on the 5 on 5, right? Seems to me both guys score plenty, and their team scoring is not as balanced as that of Boston. I am not sure how redundancy comes into play, as you state, since both men would play on different lines at center, and also both players have different styles at the center position.
Malkin and Crosby score plenty because they are relied on more heavily to score and put up points. Boston is more balanced, and adding Thornton wouldn't enhance that balance.
Again, just look at Calgary. It was similar to Pittsburgh in that it relied heavily on Iginla and Cammalleri to put up big points. And when Jokinen arrived at the deadline, Cammalleri slumped. The chemistry of the team changed, for the worse.
Edmonton figured the arrival of Erik Cole this year would jump-start its offense. Cole never was a good fit. He was back in Carolina at the deadline.
Hossa was a perfect fit for Detroit because that team needed a sniper. Bingo -- Hossa is one of the league's elite goal scorers.
This isn't fantasy league. You can't just plug in guys and always maintain the same level of statistical output.
And explain to me how Savard and Thornton play differently? Both are pass first, shoot second players and great passers, although Savard did shoot much more than Thornton during the regular season.
It's very convenient to blame poor-shooting wingers for a center's lack of production. Funny, Gretzky somehow found a way to get his wingers to score. So did Yzerman, Mario, Brad Richards. Hank Zetterberg did a damn fine job of it last season. The clutch players produce, adapt their games to fit situations.
I would have no quarrel with you if this was an anomaly for Thornton. But it's not. He disappears every year in the playoffs. Guess his wingers mysteriously go in the tank at the same time, too, every year.
I really wish Thornton would have a great postseason because it's the only thing missing from his resume, along with a Cup. Thornton holding the Conn Smythe Trophy after grasping the Cup would be the best way to eliminate the deserved reputation for postseason futility that has dogged him. He's a great regular-season player and seems to be a really good guy; I would like to see him kick ass in the playoffs.
Take care,
PK
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