Monday, May 12, 2008

Where Do We Go From Here?


It had been anticipated by many, and has now come to pass. Ron Wilson has been fired.

It's hard to argue with the notion that something had to change after yet another disappointing playoff exit. Part of the reason this malady is so distressing is that a diagnosis is so elusive...the Sharks seem like they ought to be a hockey team capable of bulldozing their way into the Stanley Cup Finals the way Pittsburgh and Detroit apparently are. All the pieces seem like they're there, but somehow things just never quite work when the playoffs come.

The Sharks' regular-season record was fantastic--second only to the Wings--but as I look back at my posts in this space over the course of the year I can see that I was continually beset by anxiety about the direction the team was heading. In this post, for instance, I worried about the team being fragile--a concern that appeared to be all-too-grounded when the Sharks collapsed in Game Two of the Dallas series after a bad break. My mid-season comments reflect concern about where the scoring was going to come from, despite the good record the team had posted to that point. Here I fretted about the Sharks' apparent lack of those intangibles that are so important come playoff time. And on and on. Indeed the team looked headed for a middle-of-the-pack finish before that twenty-game points streak swept them to the top of the Pacific and the two seed in the West.

But a twenty-game point streak is a twenty-game point streak...surely Coach Wilson deserves some credit for that, right? Well, maybe, maybe not. This is an immensely talented bunch of hockey players, and the thing that's so hard to gauge is whether their performance is at the level one ought to expect--or better, or worse. Looking at the above, and reflecting on my own analysis of the team as the season progressed, I have to say that I feel that this team ought to be better. Not just in the playoffs--that goes without saying, by now--but during the regular season as well. Somehow the team's talent just hasn't quite translated to results on the ice, and if the head coach of a professional sports team has a fundamental duty, it is to get the most out of the available talent.

In my mind, now that the Ron Wilson situation has been resolved (for better or worse), there are two major questions facing the organization in the offseason. First, of course, is who replaces Wilson? Second, will the firing of the head coach be the beginning or the end? Can we expect a major overhaul in player personnel, or is GM Doug Wilson hoping that this one surgical strike will win the war?

In any event, don't weep for Coach Wilson. With several coaching vacancies opening up around the league, he'll certainly find a home, and in fact will probably have multiple offers to choose from. We'll see him and his awesome suits behind an NHL bench next season.

2 comments:

Mark said...

So, why are Detroit so handily defeating the mighty Dallas?

Chris said...

Well, I haven't watched any of the games in the series--still too heartbroken to watch right now, but I'll probably tune in for some of the finals--but Dallas had their hands full going into this one. Although technically the Stars beat the Sharks in six, when you consider that four of those six games went into OT, and one of those into 4 OTs, Dallas actually played more than seven games against San Jose. Detroit swept Colorado and didn't even have to work very hard to do it. Being rested and healthy matters a lot at this time of year. Plus, Detroit is just scary-good, and apparently peaking at the right time. That said, Dallas pulled one back last night, so it ain't over yet...