Sabresfansince1980 wrote:
Dreakon, you're not the only one doing it, but why does six games enable people to make such sweeping judgements? I understand the frustration with Connolly even if I don't agree, but six games (playoffs or not) is nothing to base the decision that Ennis is a sure top two forward next season. He certainly has the potential and is going to be eased into that role as necessary, but he shouldn't be thrown into that position by default in the off-season. Do we really have to review all the impressive rookie seasons from around the league, over the years, that turned into mediocre careers???
Ennis could be impressive, even really good, but let's not be tossing away known talent and handing an open spot on a platter to a rookie over six games.
We all know Ennis is going to make the team next year. Darcy wants him to keep working hard and know that a spot isn't handed to him, but you don't come up, get like 9 points in 10 regular season games and 4 points in 6 (very physical) playoff games on a team that was dropping the ball left and right and not get your fair shot on the team.
That said, where will he be? Which will help a small but talented rookie with a good head get into the NHL, on the 3rd or 4th line with the bangers getting 10 minutes a game? I dunno about that, I have to think playing 1st or 2nd line minutes with the guys like him that can actually pop in those passes of his and teach him a thing or two. These are the guys he's going to be playing with through (hopefully) a good chunk of his career and probably wouldn't hurt to start building chemistry with.
Maybe Connolly isn't the right guy to make room for him, and maybe Horton isn't the right guy to bring in, but the truth is we gotta do something, because this is a team that should've won that series against Boston, but didn't solely because the lack of production and motivation out of our top 6. Blow that shit up, dump the biggest disappointment and bring in a big, reasonably talented guy who may be a little bit of a risk. Horton could go one of two ways, flourish on a team that provides him with talented linemates and a challenge/goal (like experiencing playoff hockey) or sink into lazy mediocrity because he's finally forced to live up to expectations he can't meet. I bet none of us know well enough about him to really determine that he's immediately the laziest SOB on the team, just like none of us really know that he's actually a big hothead with great hands and enough talent to man the first line on a playoff-bound team. That's the risk, and I dunno, I think I wanna take a risk for once as a Sabres fan.

I understand the uneasiness about dumping a guy we know will get 50-60+ points over the course of the season for the rookie, and you're absolutely right that maybe it isn't the smartest and safest move ever. But sometimes the smartest and safest moves aren't the moves that make a deep playoff team... and I'm just talking on a forum, so I'll probably end up saying a lot of silly ideas.

That's why I don't GM any teams outside of my Xbox 360.
EDIT: Oh, and dumping Connolly for Horton doesn't immediately mean Ennis plays top line minutes right away. Horton could very easily be placed on the top line, or perhaps centering or playing the wing on the second line while we reunite Roy and Vanek on the first. Then for the wings we would just place Pominville, Stafford and maybe Kennedy or Ennis randomly throughout. However, I think it'd be a mistake putting Ennis on the 3rd or 4th line. I think that and some growing pains for Kennedy really screwed up his development because he spent more time trying to be a banger then actually honing his skill, I wouldn't want the same to happen to Ennis.