Squanto wrote:
I didn't say the game sucks. I said the talent levels of the players in the game lend teams to play a more defensive / protective style of play, which is boring.
I feel like I'm watching more and more games that teams are just locking it down when leading after two. Last season, Columbus was the WORST in the league in this category with a record of 24-7-4 (.686) when leading after 2. The majority of the league was at .800 or better, with the Sabres being perfect (30-0-0) when leading after 2.
The league wide average last year is higher than 80% of games played where the 3rd period didn't matter if one team was leading. That's BORING.
In the early 90s, a 2 goal lead going into the 3rd wasn't safe. Even bad teams could close that out on occasion, and good teams could do it with regularity. After the southern expansion and 94 lockout, that trended the other way. Part of it was the trap, but part of it were those extra roster spots. Teams now needed bodies to fill their rosters out, so career AHLers that just didn't have the skill set to compete in the NHL were your new 3rd and 4th liners. They didn't have the offensive talents, but they could sure clog up space. So, coaches did what worked, and prefered an early lead and defense over offensive strategy.
When leading after 2 periods:
97-98: 8 teams below .800 after 2.
98-99: 14 teams below .800 after 2.
99-00: 12 teams below .800 after 2.
00-01: 9 teams below .800 after 2. ** First year with 30 teams.
01-02: 13 teams below .800 after 2.
02-03: 14 teams below .800 after 2.
03-04: 12 teams below .800 after 2.
04-05: LOCKOUT***
05-06: 4 teams below .800 after 2.
06-07: 9 teams below .800 after 2.
07-08: 5 teams below .800 after 2.
08-09: 5 teams below .800 after 2.
09-10: 6 teams below .800 after 2.
10-11: 5 teams below .800 after 2, with 6 right at .800 so far.
Seems to me it wasn't expansion that created this problem. The drop off in those 2nd period comebacks didn't occur until after the lockout.
I don't think it had anything to do with southern expansion. I think it's just an overall improvement in defensive areas of the game.
Goaltenders got a lot better. Coaches started running more intricate systems. Players trained harder.
By the stats shown above, Southern expansion didn't tighten things up; it opened things up.
Either way you look at it, hockey is in very good shape right now, and it's still growing. The NHL isn't in worse shape than it was when Bettman started, so he hasn't done everything wrong.