Again, you accuse Homer of half truths but you're just making stuff up out of thin air. Complete fabrication.
Snider did not make demands to have Carter AND Richards traded but when Homer made that call he agreed. Realistically, they could have signed Bryz by only trading one. I was Homer who took them for the car rides and talked to them about their behavior. It was in support of Lavy that he finally decided they both had to go, secretly, surreptitiously and simultaneously before the whole league got wind of it. Snider certainly would have to have been consulted on dealing two huge recent contracts of star players - we may never know if it was Ed or Homer who finally decided they had to go, but it doesn't matter.
Snider explicitly denied ordering Homer to sign Bryz when asked. He said he told him he didn't want a repeat of the playoff disaster and to 'fix it'. It was a higher level order, not who but what. Homer presented the best UFA option and Ed agreed to the $51MM and then again to the buyout.
Darn interfering owner. Cares passionately, demands to be in the loop on franchise altering decisions, supports his guys or fires them, and backs them up with his chequebook. A lot of other GMs would kill to be so lucky.
The Carter-Richards and Bryz situations undoubtedly involved Snider, who would have had to approve both deals. I guess I don't see this a meddling - Snider is doing his job as ultimate head of the organization.Your narrative isn't exactly gospel either. As far as Snider with respect to Richards and Carter..I have to disagree based on some of the info that was privately conveyed and posted on this board at the time until they had to redact it per the request of the source. MSE can confirm that action but obviously he will not get into the specifics. Also don't feel like getting into a circular argument over this issue again. In time the truth will come out eventually anyway...
As far as with Bryz...that one is more of a shared responsibility no doubt and Holmgren deserves a lot of heat for first not addressing the goaltending properly in the previous seasons and then having to be reactive at Snider's insistence.
I don't mind so much that Snider cares but what I don't like is his hands on interference particularly in the last few years. It was too pronounced from my standpoint. We can agree to disagree...
The pressure in Snider's comments publicly, and what you can presume would have been said to Holmgren behind closed doors regarding the goaltending situation was a poor move by Snider. He deserves blame in that situation. It was essentially a mandate to make a goaltending splash. You aren't going to make the most shrewd decision when you are reacting to a mandate like that.
I like Snider a lot and I'm not trying to bash him, but he absolutely deserves criticism for that. That was a complete debacle that the organization completely lucked out of. I don't think people truly appreciate how bad that would have been without the amnesty clause.
There's also Brieres contract they amnest'd out of. Having to actually deal with both those contracts would have been a nightmare.
Nice...from today's installment.
Getting rid of Hartnell was a good message....."We got to fricking go!" so Hartnell had to go since he would always come into camp out of shape except that season when Jagr and G had a talk with him.
I hope Voracek is ready to go as well...he is typically a laggard come camp as well.
“I didn’t change my workout, it stayed the same,†Voracek said. “Physically, I was doing great. You saw my second half of the season. I was in shape. I changed up my diet this summer.â€
Voracek said his diet this summer was rather boring.
“Cut the carbs completely, no bread, pasta, just fish, chicken, eggs, salads,†Voracek said. “Maybe steak, once a week and lot of vegetables. I don’t know my body fat, but it’s way lower than last year, for sure.â€
How it all translates onto the ice in the weeks ahead will show whether things worked out as anticipated. Voracek says he has seen a difference already.
“I feel lighter and quicker on the ice,†he said. “Now it’s a question of whether it comes down to hard battles and whether it will benefit me. I feel stronger as well in the gym. I don’t think I lost any of that raw power.â€
http://www.csnphilly.com/hockey-philadelphia-flyers/offseason-message-flyers-focus-fitness
Richards was fairly insubordinate with Laviolette. CIP, the "Dry Island" stuff. Then there was Richards stiffing Comcast on an end of the year interview when he was a no show. A visibly perturbed Holmgren had to hastily step in and be interviewed in place of Richards.If Ed found out about something that Carter/Richards did that was so egregious they had to be dealt immediately, then good on him for doing his job.
Richards was fairly insubordinate with Laviolette. CIP, the "Dry Island" stuff. Then there was Richards stiffing Comcast on an end of the year interview when he was a no show. A visibly perturbed Holmgren had to hastily step in and be interviewed in place of Richards.
Snider seems to be a down the command type of guy. If a person flaunts the authority within the organization, they're ex-Flyers fairly fast. CIP Brad McCrimmon when he clashed with BC in contract negotiations. Carter with his own black marks on his scorecard from the OCC shenanigans, didn't like his buddy getting dealt so he was moved PDQ as well.
Snider was never going to let the players run the team no matter who they were. (Remember the on going battle with the Lindros family?) People forget how much he had at stake when he got this club. Its success has his hands and work all over it. No way in the Devil's kitchen is he going to let the team go off on a tangent that he doesn't support.
Bravo! He stayed away from his momma's potato dishes....
“Everybody needs to be in shape, for sure,†Lecavalier said. “Regardless, I think everyone would come in shape, but you have to push even harder.â€
Lecavalier spent most of August up in Montreal, his hometown only 40 minutes away in the suburbs, and trained with right wing Jake Voracek.
“It’s probably one of my best sessions,†Lecavalier said. “Skating with him, he’s pushing me. He’s so strong and makes you want to go faster. His practices with those skill drills ... that helped me. I feel good.â€
“Last year was a shock because I never did play that position [LW],†Lecavalier said. “I started right when I came back from the injury playing left wing. If that’s where I’m at, I’ve got to be better at that position. I’ve got to learn that position. I’ve got to look at guys, left wingers, and what they do; look at my tape and see what I could be doing better to enter the zone better, defensive zone, little things to do. It will be my jobto be better at that position.â€
As much as I wish Lecavalier could have found a new home this summer, you can't help but admire his professionalism. Most guys would pout at being scapegoated and relegated to the fourth line, but Lecavalier hasn't said a word and is intent on being better. I'm going in with an open mind.
I think Simmonds could be down a little production wise. I am skeptical he can duplicate the year he had last season. I hope I am wrong because I like him. I just think he could have a down year. I don't base that on anything, just a gut feeling.
I feel pretty good about him replicating his season, however I don't see Simmonds getting better than he is now. I think a lot of people see him still improving
VOORHEES, N.J. -- Flyers chairman Ed Snider said he is “cautiously optimistic” about this year’s club and is having to relearn “patience” again by keeping his top prospects and allowing them to develop into future Flyers.
http://www.csnphilly.com/hockey-philadelphia-flyers/ed-snider-laments-snake-bitten-flyers
RELATED: Snider: Bobrovsky wasn't re-signing with Flyers
“Not only did we make a mistake on the long-term contract, but Bobrovksy’s a young guy and he told Paul, ‘As soon as my contract’s out, I’m out of here,’” Snider said.
“He wasn’t going to re-sign with us. He was going to go back to Russia [or] he was going to go with another team, but he wasn’t going to be a second-string goalie for the rest of his life. So that was also a problem, and Paul made the best of the situation.
“It’s not that we did not like Bobrovsky. The whole thing was a fiasco. We can’t look back. What happened, happened, and here we are. But then Paul made what I think was a great move in picking up Mason, who’s not chopped liver.”
http://www.csnphilly.com/hockey-philadelphia-flyers/snider-bobrovsky-wasnt-re-signing-flyers
You don't appear to live in reality, so how do you know what it's like?
That interview just confirms that it was Holmgren and the Flyers scouts who were at fault for deciding on Bryzgalov and coming up with the ridiculous 9-year deal. It doesn't fit your imagined narrative at all.
“I think Ron has established a philosophy that is probably long overdue," Snider said. "I probably have been a little too anxious to win a Cup.