NYIntensity wrote:
mechaphil wrote:
X-pensfan wrote:
sabresEH wrote:
I don't think Myers is ever going to be a PP QB. Once he puts on some weight he'll actaully get some zip to his shot. But he doesn't have the vision to run the powerplay like true QB's do. That's just my opinion.
You just steered the bandwagon into a ditch, Debbie Downer.

No he didn't. If anyone knows Myers better than the rest, it's him. He lives in Kelowna and watched Myers develop his entire junior career.
boosh

And I think Foster is nothing more than a band-aid. I think PSP hit it on the head - our PP is abhorrent and I blame the coaching. Too many times did our guys look like monkeys fucking a football out there; you know how a PP QB becomes that QB? He learns the plays, he reads the field, and then picks the play.
Right now, our playbook has one play: the monkey football fuck.
While your analysis is nothing short of intoxicating, I must elaborate and present a counter argument that suggest that a PPQB and in fact talent do not necessarily make a good power play.
I give you my former favorite team the Powerless Penguins. When Ryan Malone took his hulking frame to TB the Pens PP entered a downward spiral and the TB PP ascended. Having a player on the team with a big body, good hands, and above all a willingness to stand in there every power play is perhaps THE most important thing to have.
The Penguins rolled Malkin, Crosby, and one of the games best PPQBs Gonchar out there all the time but were 20th or lower on the PP for the past two seasons. Then you looks at the tactical wizardry of the humble Habs and their epic PP. They don't have a net guy or a great deal of talent but they constantly score on the PP.
Puck movement, having a guy who can waste little time setting it up, coaching, a net guy, a QB, play makers, puck retrievers, and snipers all play a role. Kaberle is no cure-all but it might help to have him. I dunno.