The Book Of Eli
Written by Nichols   
Wednesday, 13 January 2010 22:26

As first reported by TSN's Brent Wallace, Eli Wilson has been fired as the goaltending coach of the Ottawa Senators.

Here is what head coach Cory Clouston had to say on the matter,

“I’m telling (you) right now: The responsibility doesn’t solely lie on Eli’s shoulders. I have to take some of that responsibility, I am part of the coaching staff obviously. I’m the head coach.It falls on my shoulders as well. We’re not solely blaming Eli. It appears that way, but to me we still have to find a way to make a change and this is part of the change.”

And here's GM Bryan Murray's take on the issue,

“Performance of the goaltenders in the organization had everything to do with it. I think Eli was a hard worker and paid a lot attention to it, but for some reason, both at the NHL level and American league level, we felt that the goaltenders weren’t where we thought they were going to be and where they have shown they can be.”

Alright, so I'm not going to pretend to be some goaltending guru or a guy who has any ability to contrast the impacts that the other various goaltending coaches have had for their respective NHL clubs, however, I may be one of the few who are asking, why now?

Why did the organization had to wait for a 5-game losing streak to fire the goaltending coach when the organization's goaltending situation has been in disrepair for years? Think about that for second. For all of the garbage that we've endured as Senators fans since the team's Cup Finals appearance in 2007, Wilson's credibility has never come into question until now? Why? Are we to believe that the Gerber / Auld duo could have been more underwhelming?

Like Bruce Garrioch mentioned on Off the Posts, it's easier to fire the goaltending coach than it is to fire the players. I never really want to revel in the fact that a guy lost his job but ultimately, the goaltending situation hasn't remedied itself during Eli Wilson's tenure and he deserves to shoulder the blame here. But, why now?

We survived the Martin Gerber era for God's sakes. Thanks to the timing of the move, I can't help but view Wilson as some sort of sacrificial lamb to appease the fans during this losing streak and absolve some of the blame from their goaltenders but he shouldn't be alone. After years of being able to duck behind John Muckler's incompetence, the time has come to hold Bryan Murray accountable for the job that he's done as a general manager.

As head coach of the Senators during that 06/07 season, Bryan was the one who had a first hand experience of Ray Emery and his reported antics that still took place when the team was winning. And when Murray assumed John Muckler's position as GM of the Senators, he didn't trade Ray Emery. Instead, he rewared him with a $9M+ 3-year contract and catered to him by hiring his personal goaltending coach. (For the record, I don't buy the argument that this recent losing streak was an easy opportunity to turf the guy who reportedly first got the job because he was Ray Emery's friend and mentor. If that were the case, Murray would have turfed the guy at the same time that he pulled the trigger on the Paddock and Hartsburg firings.)

And after Emery, fans were forced to endure years of Gerber and lest we forget Alex Auld - a cruel punchline to some joke discussing all of the inconsequential players who were at one point dealt for Roberto Luongo. Which brings us to Pascal Leclaire. A goalie who looked like he was finally starting to put things together before that ill-fated night when Mike Fisher ripped a clearing attempt upside Leclaire's visage. And since his return from the IR, Leclaire's been Gerber'esque at best. (Ed. note: I'm not writing Leclaire off here. I'm just saying he's played like shit.)

Although Eli could remain with the organization in some fashion consultant capacity for Cory Clouston, his tenure with the Senators likely ended when Bryan Murray pointed the finger of blame in his direction. And now that the blame game has started, don't be surprised to see more people start pointing their fingers in Bryan Murray's direction.



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Comments (8)add
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Thank you....
written by The Dutch Treat , January 14, 2010

Thank you for echoing the sentiments some of us have been saying lately. We are apparently a minority since whenever we've dared to question Bryan Murray, we are virtually tarred and feathered for our heresy...

Whenever people defend Bryan Murray, it always begins with "it's Muckler's fault" and ends with "but look at all the prospects we have now because of him!" Yet in between that, no one questions the number of coaches he's fired in his 2.5 years as GM (Eli makes it 4...5 if you count Murray himself), his atrocious free agent signings (Randy Robitaille?!? Luke "OLD" Richardson?!? Jason Smith?!? Alex Kovalev for $5 million a season?!?) or the fact that many of his trades have been not helped this team in the least (trading Corvo for Stillman/Commodore then letting both walk, trading anything for Martin Lapointe and who knows how the Heatley deal and Leclaire trades will actually pan out).

When does ACCOUNTABILITY get placed on Murray's head? This defense was his creation, the most overpaid 3rd and 4th line in the league - his doing, and the goaltending...yeegads....

My biggest qualm is what is the direction of this team? Is he trying to build a contender now, to compete for the Stanley Cup? Or is he building for the future, hoping that his prospects act as the future of the Ottawa Senators. His moves don't indicate one or the other.
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Nichols
...
written by Nichols , January 14, 2010
@ The Dutch Treat

Tim and I got into this issue during the podcast recording last night and ran a number of our concerns regarding the direction of this team past our guest, Wayne Scanlan. And I have to say some of the answers that Scanlan gave us should scare the shit out of Sens fans who aren't happy right now.

Hopefully the podcast will be up some time today, but when it eventually is posted. Check it out.
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SLC
...
written by SLC , January 14, 2010
Why now? Because neither Snoopy nor Elliott were getting any better, which is the first job of any coach at any position. I am however, with you on why it hadn't been done the second Ray boarded the plane to the Motherland.

Call me misguided if you want, but to those of you screaming for Murray's head today, be careful what you wish for. They ran him out of Anaheim on a rail, remember, and two years later, the team he built...well, you know how that story ends. Patience grasshoppers. This too shall pass.

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SLC...
written by The Dutch Treat , January 14, 2010
Dude...firstly, love your biting blog. Secondly, I'm not calling for Murray's head but I am starting to get this unsettling feeling in my stomach that there may be a reason why he's never won a Stanley Cup as a GM. Unlike those just howling for Murray's blood, I have legitimate concerns as to how he's running this team currently. I have no qualms with his drafting ability and how he's built the team for the future. It's just that the present team isn't very good.

As for Anaheim, he did a great job with the prospects, but (it pains me to say this) it took Brian Burke to come in and shore up their defense with Chris Pronger and Scott Niedermeyer as well as getting an overpaid Russian (Sergei Fedorov) off his roster. A terrible defence and an overpaid, underwhelming Russian.....sound familiar?

Nichols, looking forward to your blog.
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written by Joshua M , January 14, 2010
I personally had my faith in Bryan Murray shaken at the deadline when he re-upped Kuba. Not because I thought Kuba was a poor player, but we were facing a very tight cap situation at the time (with Heatley still on the books) and allowing Kuba and Neil to walk would have given Bmurr substantial flexibility in terms of re-fashioning this team. Instead, it was status quo (and then he even re-signed Neil!) and now we are more than likely going to lose Volchenkov for nothing as part of an ill-advised playoff push.


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written by Smiles , January 14, 2010
I'd hate to give Burke any credit, I really would, but perhaps you're right Dutch Treat. I'd prefer to live in another reality however, one in which Murray stays on and add's d-men of his own, and wins the cup. Basically what I'm saying is, if Murray had stayed on in Anaheim, I think they would still have won. I just don't want the same thing to happen here, where he gets turfed two years too early.

And we don't ALL start our defences of the Bryan with "it's Muckler's fault". Sometimes we use "It's Karma's fault" too. Just kidding. Seriously though, he absolutely needs to be held accountable, and perhaps his day of reckoning is coming. All I'm saying is give the guy another couple of years, and if we aren't solidly positioned to be a threat for the cup every year, then he should be turfed.

@Nichols: Good piece btw. I can't for the life of me rationalize this firing taking so long. I think I understand why he chose this moment, but why he wasn't - to steal from SLC here - "jettisoned over the side" along with Emery is a mystery.
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written by Joshua M , January 14, 2010
I should clarify, that I am not calling for Murray's head, but I am concerned at his ability to manage the cap and his tendency to hold on to and acquire players well past their best-before date.
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MasterOfPuppets
Mikey to the rescue!
written by MasterOfPuppets , January 14, 2010
Hopefully "our" Brodeur shows some of the same poise he showed against Minnesota last month, tonight. Not asking for .960 Mike but .920 would be nice.

Sens squeak out a 3-2 win.

Murray made some questionable deals (Kuba, Kovalev), but really you have to look at the situations at the time - yeah he could have signed Comrie and Tanguay but both were broken and risky. He needed a name player because douche wanted out and put him in a bind. Kuba was a heck of a playmaker last year and piled on the assists. We had noone on the back end to do it so rather than lose him he extended him. Tough all around. He's damned if he does and damned if he doesn't. Old hindsight - 20-20. If Kuba had posted 30 assists and Kovalev was a point a game player now, we'd be singing his praises.

It's unreal how so much can go so wrong - Kuba, Kovalev, Pascal shitting the bed. Elliott turning on the suck. Karma I'd say is a big player in this shitstorm no doubt.


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