Jump to content

When Does Dominique Ducharme Get Fired?


Commandant

Recommended Posts

13 minutes ago, tomh009 said:

Julien in January:

  • 5-1-2
  • 4.1 FG, 2.8 GA

Julien in February:

  • 4-4-2
  • 2.8 GF, 3.0 GA

Ducharme:

  • 4-3-4
  • 2.9 GF, 2.5 GA

The wins are not rolling in for Ducharme yet, to be sure. But GAA is down from 3.0 to 2.5, which is is significant. In spite of the modest improvement in the winning record, I still see positives in what he is doing. We had four OT/SO losses since he took over, but we were within a goal of winning every one of those. The gap is not so huge.


ultimately my recent posts are borne of frustration so grain of salt and all. 
 

The difference in goals against is about Price not playing like crap. He has been good or at least very much improved. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He has improved the team in an environment with virtually no practice time to implement systems changes that he may want, and as such is forced to merely tweak what Julien was doing.  Ducharme deserves more time.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm more than willing to ride Ducharme and even for him to be the next coach.

 

Anyway, what was the list ?

 

Bouchard

Vincent

Groux

Ducharme

Roy

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bouchard is, and should be, a great player development guy. That doesn't mean that he would be a great NHL coach.

 

And Roy ... please, no. We'll remember him for his goaltending, let's not soil that with a failed coaching stint.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Commandant said:

He has improved the team in an environment with virtually no practice time to implement systems changes that he may want, and as such is forced to merely tweak what Julien was doing.  Ducharme deserves more time.


Yeah this is the truth and he has made adjustments which Julien would never have done. 
 

Im frustrated with his OT lines. It seems so obvious to play your scores 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Prime Minister Koivu said:

We continue to play like a bubble team.

 

Isn't that what they are though?  The division is basically Toronto, 5 bubble teams, and Ottawa.  This thing of one bad game, one good game isn't limited to Montreal; Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, and Winnipeg are all going through it as well.  The Habs aren't necessarily significantly better than any of those teams (maybe Vancouver), nor are they clearly worse.  That's basically the definition of a bubble team.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

45 minutes ago, dlbalr said:

 

Isn't that what they are though?  The division is basically Toronto, 5 bubble teams, and Ottawa.  This thing of one bad game, one good game isn't limited to Montreal; Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, and Winnipeg are all going through it as well.  The Habs aren't necessarily significantly better than any of those teams (maybe Vancouver), nor are they clearly worse.  That's basically the definition of a bubble team.


Yeah I’m starting to admit that I’m still in denial. I consider/considered the Habs to be a step above bubble status but we really aren’t. 
 

Still, it feels like we should be better than that. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

27 minutes ago, Prime Minister Koivu said:


Yeah I’m starting to admit that I’m still in denial. I consider/considered the Habs to be a step above bubble status but we really aren’t. 
 

Still, it feels like we should be better than that. 

Even Toronto has lost five of the last six. Three of the losses have been to Vancouver and Ottawa.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

This thread creted a lot of chatter on TSN 690, many commenting on how much the Habs have improved under Ducharme

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...


As Commandant pointed out Ducharme hasn’t had an opportunity to make real structural changes. 
 

Im questioning if the players respect him at all. How can a respected coach get such poor efforts over and over again?

 

My feeling is that the vets are in charge and not the coach. As if the vets allow Ducharme to exist but he certainly isn’t in charge. 
 

What explains the lack of effort? Besides fatigue - all teams are fatigued. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Prime Minister Koivu said:


As Commandant pointed out Ducharme hasn’t had an opportunity to make real structural changes. 
 

Im questioning if the players respect him at all. How can a respected coach get such poor efforts over and over again?

 

My feeling is that the vets are in charge and not the coach. As if the vets allow Ducharme to exist but he certainly isn’t in charge. 
 

What explains the lack of effort? Besides fatigue - all teams are fatigued. 

 

The vets got Julien fired and now they appear to be in the process of ruining Ducharme’s promising coaching career.

 

But look. Two huge keys to this edition of the Montreal Canadiens are Carey Price and Shea Weber. We’ve almost forgotten this, but Price is supposed to be an *edge* for the team, a difference-maker, the guy who steals us games we shouldn’t win and locks down games we should. It sounds almost funny to say it now. And Shea Weber is supposed to be a bruising legit #1 defenceman with a devastating, difference-making bomb on the PP. That’s how this club is built. That’s what the salary structure says as well.

 

It turns out that all of Bergevin’s great additions don’t do a whole lot to compensate for the regression of the two keystones of the franchise into mediocrity. They’ve helped to keep us competitive. But it’s a step forward and a step back, leaving us wallowing in a pool of inadequacy yet again. That’s not the coaches’ fault, ultimately.

 

They two key cogs have been average-to-terrible from opening day this season. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Prime Minister Koivu said:

... What explains the lack of effort? Besides fatigue - all teams are fatigued. 

 

For all the talk about the habs having a great locker room and veteran leadership, if the veterans were "in charge" the effort would still be there on a more regular basis ... IMO the team is fragile ... an early goal often gives them a boost that they can sometimes ride to taking control of the game ... but in a game like last night, despite a 1-0 lead, when the Oilers tie the game the tide shifts ... teams with great character and veteran leadership should not be so fragile ... I have not lost hope ... if they get on a roll confidence can inflate and the fragility can recede ... but I fear it would still be just below the "emotional surface"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

27 minutes ago, The Chicoutimi Cucumber said:

 

The vets got Julien fired and now they appear to be in the process of ruining Ducharme’s promising coaching career.

 

But look. Two huge keys to this edition of the Montreal Canadiens are Carey Price and Shea Weber. We’ve almost forgotten this, but Price is supposed to be an *edge* for the team, a difference-maker, the guy who steals us games we shouldn’t win and locks down games we should. It sounds almost funny to say it now. And Shea Weber is supposed to be a bruising legit #1 defenceman with a devastating, difference-making bomb on the PP. That’s how this club is built. That’s what the salary structure says as well.

 

It turns out that all of Bergevin’s great additions don’t do a whole lot to compensate for the regression of the two keystones of the franchise into mediocrity. They’ve helped to keep us competitive. But it’s a step forward and a step back, leaving us wallowing in a pool of inadequacy yet again. That’s not the coaches’ fault, ultimately.

 

They two key cogs have been average-to-terrible from opening day this season. 


and tell me how this is news for any of us?

you are stating the obvious 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

31 minutes ago, The Chicoutimi Cucumber said:

 

The vets got Julien fired and now they appear to be in the process of ruining Ducharme’s promising coaching career.

 

But look. Two huge keys to this edition of the Montreal Canadiens are Carey Price and Shea Weber. We’ve almost forgotten this, but Price is supposed to be an *edge* for the team, a difference-maker, the guy who steals us games we shouldn’t win and locks down games we should. It sounds almost funny to say it now. And Shea Weber is supposed to be a bruising legit #1 defenceman with a devastating, difference-making bomb on the PP. That’s how this club is built. That’s what the salary structure says as well.

 

It turns out that all of Bergevin’s great additions don’t do a whole lot to compensate for the regression of the two keystones of the franchise into mediocrity. They’ve helped to keep us competitive. But it’s a step forward and a step back, leaving us wallowing in a pool of inadequacy yet again. That’s not the coaches’ fault, ultimately.

 

They two key cogs have been average-to-terrible from opening day this season. 


Is it not Ducharme’s job to manage this? If Weber shows he can’t do it anymore should DD not address it? Peel his minutes back, no PK time etc? Does Ducharme not realize that Weber is an issue or is he afraid to upset the vets?

 

We have reasons why we stink and this team seems to shrug their shoulders as if there is nothing that can be done about it. 
 

I say again that we suck because we are not serious about fixing it. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

28 minutes ago, GHT120 said:

 

For all the talk about the habs having a great locker room and veteran leadership, if the veterans were "in charge" the effort would still be there on a more regular basis ... IMO the team is fragile ... an early goal often gives them a boost that they can sometimes ride to taking control of the game ... but in a game like last night, despite a 1-0 lead, when the Oilers tie the game the tide shifts ... teams with great character and veteran leadership should not be so fragile ... I have not lost hope ... if they get on a roll confidence can inflate and the fragility can recede ... but I fear it would still be just below the "emotional surface"


We have too many players that we elevate to very important/integral that do not contribute to the level we give them. 
 

Danault is perfect example. He is very important to our team and he is used very heavily in all situations. Our number one centre ... that does not put up points. 
 

He will be paid and used as a #1 but contribute as a #3. His defensive prowess is needed and wonderful but they are attributes of a #3. 
 

KK and Suzuki may be the future but Danault is relied upon and will surely be paid as the #1 despite being 60th versus other centres. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

30 minutes ago, Prime Minister Koivu said:


Is it not Ducharme’s job to manage this? If Weber shows he can’t do it anymore should DD not address it? Peel his minutes back, no PK time etc? Does Ducharme not realize that Weber is an issue or is he afraid to upset the vets?

 

We have reasons why we stink and this team seems to shrug their shoulders as if there is nothing that can be done about it. 
 

I say again that we suck because we are not serious about fixing it. 

 

If your franchise cornerstones suck, it is impossible to coach your way out of that. You can peel Weber’s minutes back, but who takes those minutes? Nobody who is anywhere near as good as a the team needs Weber to be.

 

It’s a problem that can only be fixed by the replacement of Weber with a legit #1 defenceman.

 

Similarly, the evaporation of Price as a difference-maker can only be fixed by the addition of a comparable difference-maker, whether at G or elsewhere.

 

Putting it this way shows the scale of the structural problem. MB added a number of good pieces (imagine if he hadn’t signed Allen???) but they amount to a patchup job over the craters caused by the distingtegration of the franchise cornerstones.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, The Chicoutimi Cucumber said:

 

If your franchise cornerstones suck, it is impossible to coach your way out of that. You can peel Weber’s minutes back, but who takes those minutes? Nobody who is anywhere near as good as a the team needs Weber to be.

 

It’s a problem that can only be fixed by the replacement of Weber with a legit #1 defenceman.

 

Similarly, the evaporation of Price as a difference-maker can only be fixed by the addition of a comparable difference-maker, whether at G or elsewhere.

 

Putting it this way shows the scale of the structural problem. MB added a number of good pieces (imagine if he hadn’t signed Allen???) but they amount to a patchup job over the craters caused by the distingtegration of the franchise cornerstones.


I agree with the heart of your argument but disagree that there isn’t anything we can do about it. 
 

Allen was vastly outplaying Price yet coaching would not play Allen more. Why not? 
 

Weber is struggling yet his ice time and usage remains the same. Use him less and other defence more. 
 

Bergevin provides the players but Ducharme decides how to use them

Link to comment
Share on other sites

37 minutes ago, The Chicoutimi Cucumber said:

 

If your franchise cornerstones suck, it is impossible to coach your way out of that. You can peel Weber’s minutes back, but who takes those minutes? Nobody who is anywhere near as good as a the team needs Weber to be.

 

It’s a problem that can only be fixed by the replacement of Weber with a legit #1 defenceman.

 

Similarly, the evaporation of Price as a difference-maker can only be fixed by the addition of a comparable difference-maker, whether at G or elsewhere.

 

Putting it this way shows the scale of the structural problem. MB added a number of good pieces (imagine if he hadn’t signed Allen???) but they amount to a patchup job over the craters caused by the distingtegration of the franchise cornerstones.

 
I find it a bit harsh given that they are playing 3 games I 4 days the rest of the way and nagging injuries and fatigue are making the cornerstones of this team crumble

 

buy you are not wrong.

 

I am ok in doing to Ducharme what the Habs did to that other interim coach in an impossible losing season (I forget the name) , honey something ?

 

Regardless of whom you would have brought in, the team is what it is.

If MB continues next season, it will be easier to find a new coach. If MB is fired, the new GM will have an easier task in hiring a coach.

 

Also, the pending UFAs multiple draft picks and salary structure will allow the Habs to complete the retool this summer, if a new GM comes in he will have a good chance to change the team to his liking  

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, alfredoh2009 said:

... Also, the pending UFAs multiple draft picks ...

 

Even if I sometimes disagree, almost envy your eternal optimism ... but this is one of the worst years ever to try to leverage draft picks in trades (I assume that is what you meant as no 2020 draft pick will help for a couple of years at least) ... it is a weak draft year ... teams have had minimal opportunity to even scout the previously expected top/lottery picks, let alone anyone else to be picked later ... sadly, likely not tremendous value

Link to comment
Share on other sites

His style reminds me a lot of Jaques Martin. All 5 back. All 5 supporting out of the d and through the neutral zone. But then crossing the offensive blueline, I get confused. How does a team that scores most of its goals from the rush, score when you never rush? If you're going to support up ice, you need to cycle and own the wall. You can still transition and rush from turnovers but not from breakouts. Because there aren't breakouts from what I'm seeing. I feel like they need to work on the cycle game in the o zone.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 minutes ago, BCHabnut said:

His style reminds me a lot of Jaques Martin. All 5 back. All 5 supporting out of the d and through the neutral zone. But then crossing the offensive blueline, I get confused. How does a team that scores most of its goals from the rush, score when you never rush? If you're going to support up ice, you need to cycle and own the wall. You can still transition and rush from turnovers but not from breakouts. Because there aren't breakouts from what I'm seeing. I feel like they need to work on the cycle game in the o zone.


Evidenced by the fact that our goal production is now pathetic. 
 

Can’t win if you can’t score

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...

revisiting old threads

 

Interest to look back and see how the team is playing so differently now and how that is translating into results.

 

Team is not scoring a lot, but they are creating chances. Price is back to his elite self and the new team structure is preventing the D from being exposed.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 hours ago, alfredoh2009 said:

revisiting old threads

 

Interest to look back and see how the team is playing so differently now and how that is translating into results.

 

Team is not scoring a lot, but they are creating chances. Price is back to his elite self and the new team structure is preventing the D from being exposed.

 

Elite Price makes a massive difference (as it should). But the difference between regular season and playoffs is significant too. First of all, the regular season, even in its 56-game attenuated form, is a grind with no end in sight and no defined target other than making the playoffs. Aging veterans tend to suffer in that context. By contrast, the playoffs are broken into defined 7-game series and aging vets are often able to recover their old form for those limited spurts.

 

Close games in the regular season are decided by 3-on-3 OT and shootout. That is very, very different from a 5-on-5 sudden death format.

 

Maybe more importantly, the way the regular season and playoffs are managed by the officials are completely different. It’s as though they are two different sports, really. The regular season rewards speed and skill. The playoffs reward grinding, relentlessness, size, and defence. In short, the 2021 NHL reverts to 1998 come playoff time. 

 

I think Bergevin realized this. His D still suffers from the lack of a puck-mover to spell of Petry, but he believed in the “Clydesdale” model of huge, suffocating D-men who could grind the daylights out of more skilled opponents. Over the regular season, it looked crazy - old, slow, plodding. But once the refs shove the whistles up their arses, they look legendary. This is the game they’re built for.

 

One interesting angle is the Habs’ willingness to ice the puck. Of course this is not the goal, but I think they are getting clear coaching instructions that icing is acceptable; it seems to be a strategic option within the defensive game plan. They’re getting away with it too.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...