Jakey53
Registered User
- Aug 27, 2011
- 30,226
- 9,227
Nash is terrible at teaching the game. He repeats the same superlatives and cliches. I feel dumber for watching the Coyotes broadcast.
He is and does, but so was TGO.
Nash is terrible at teaching the game. He repeats the same superlatives and cliches. I feel dumber for watching the Coyotes broadcast.
Nash is terrible at teaching the game. He repeats the same superlatives and cliches. I feel dumber for watching the Coyotes broadcast.
He is and does, but so was TGO.
The young pups, as you like to call them, can never see any wrong when it comes to Domi and Duclair.
I agree. He has been there, done that.
Duclair kept his man to the outside, that goal was scored from like the opposing hash marks along the boards. It looks like he was caught flatfooted that's fair, but lets not pretend like he massively failed a defensive assignment or something.
Just because someone's "been there, done that" does not necessarily make him an expert observer.
I give you Wayne Gretzky.
So are you saying that he's talking at too high a level for many?
I always thought he brought it down to the "duh".
Just because someone's "been there, done that" does not necessarily make him an expert observer.
I give you Wayne Gretzky.
Duclair kept his man to the outside, that goal was scored from like the opposing hash marks along the boards. It looks like he was caught flatfooted that's fair, but lets not pretend like he massively failed a defensive assignment or something.
He may be obnoxious and repetitive, but you and several others here could stand to learn an awful lot about the game of hockey, should you elect to listen to him.
No, listen to Boynton. You can learn a lot from Boynton, not Nash.
Today I've learned there is an ignore list, wow that is pretty nice
Boynton was one of the stupidest players to ever lace 'em up, but he does have something to offer from what little I've heard after I leave the games.
He does - he's had the best actual analysis of the game action I've heard in a long time - but I do get sick of the way he keeps harping on how the whole team needs to be fighting everybody.
I learn more about hockey from McConnell than I do from Nash or Boynton. Walshie is a close second to McConnell; he truly knows the game of hockey
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Walsh hit his nadir last night during the D'backs home opener, when he interviewed some nuns to ask them where they thought Joe Garagiola was now.
Nash is terrible at teaching the game. He repeats the same superlatives and cliches. I feel dumber for watching the Coyotes broadcast.
The team his son plays on that he's an assistant coach for is very well-coached, at least.
He knows the game well, just doesn't do a very good job of communicating things to people who don't know it as well as him.
He does - he's had the best actual analysis of the game action I've heard in a long time - but I do get sick of the way he keeps harping on how the whole team needs to be fighting everybody.
Boynton's right! Teams were pounding OEL with borderline hits time and again and nobody but Domi seemed to want to put a stop to it. Our team allowed itself to be manhandled because nobody protected the smaller skilled players.