fbpx

Author: Neil Keefe

BlogsRangersRangers Thoughts

Rangers Thoughts: David Quinn Doesn’t Seem to Be Coaching to Win or to Develop

The Rangers don’t seem to know if they should be trying to win this season or if they should be focused on the future. Their head coach’s decisions say as much.

The Rangers ended their two-game winning streak with a 2-0 loss to the Islanders. I keep thinking at some point the top two lines will produce offense, but the season is now one-fifth over and they have yet to do so. When are they going to end this drought?

Here are 10 thoughts on the Rangers.

1. When the Rangers lose it’s always painful. Not because they can’t afford to lose games in a 56-game season at the rate they have been (they can’t), but because it’s actually painful. Aside from the Rangers’ season-opening blowout loss to the Islanders, they don’t just lose, they have to lose in the most excruciating way possible. Whether it’s trailing early and coming back only to fall one goal sort of completing the comeback, or blowing a two-goal lead, or blowing a third-period lead, or having a chance to break open a 0-0 game with breakaways and odd-man rushes and failing to do so only to eventually lose, the Rangers have mastered the art of losing in the worst ways in 2021.

2. You can place blame all around the team for their 4-5-2 start to the season, (well, it’s no longer a “start” since 20 percent of the season is over), however, the majority of the blame has to be placed on the top two lines. Within that blame, David Quinn takes partial blame for his top-six combinations which change by the shift and rarely ever include the No. 1 overall pick from the 2020 draft or the No. 2 overall pick from the 2019 draft. Instead, spots are filled by veterans as if it’s a high school team and seniority matters. Quinn keeps using the same players in different combinations and he keeps getting the same result: a lack of offense.

3. Artemi Panarin and Mika Zibanejad are always locks for the top six and nothing should ever change that. (They should be on the same line, but I have learned to semi-accept that is never going to happen on a permanent basis, and will only happen when the team trails in the third period and desperately needs a goal.) After them, the other four spots could go to anyone at anytime under Quinn.

4. Pavel Buchnevich has earned one of the spots with the way he has played this season. That leaves three spots. Unfortunately, the Rangers’ lack of a second center with Filip Chytil out means either Ryan Strome or Brett Howden has to take one of the three remaining spots by default. That leaves two spots.

5. One of them has to go to Alexis Lafrenière. The kid did things in the Q that only Sidney Crosby has. He was the most anticipated No. 1 pick since Connor McDavid, and he’s playing third-line and second-power play minutes. How is that responsible? How has no one from the front office stepped in and override Quinn’s idiotic usage of the star in waiting? The other needs to go to Kaapo Kakko. The No. 2 pick from the 2019 draft needs to be allowed to show what made him the second overall pick.

6. If it were up to me, the lines at full strength would be:

Panarin-Zibanejad-Buchnevich
Lafrenière-Chytil-Kakko
Kreider-Strome-Gauthier
Lemieux-Howden-Di Giuseppe/Blackwell/Rooney

7. Those lines make winning a priority and also help with the ongoing rebuild, which is the line Quinn needs to toe. If he’s coaching for results right now then he’s doing a horrible job and should be replaced. If he’s coaching for the future and to progress the rebuild then he’s doing a horrible job and should be replaced. The Rangers aren’t winning (they have lost seven of 11 games) and they are stunting the development of their young players by giving them limited ice time and close to no special teams time.

8. Quinn needs to pick a side or he won’t be the Rangers coach at some point in 2022. Barring an internal or cultural issue, the Rangers could finish in last place and Quinn will be back for 2021-22. This season can easily be categorized as yet another rebuilding year and a weird shortened season with no training camp and every other odd element this year. But next year, results will matter. Next year, the Rangers will have to have arrived. Quinn will have been given three years to figure it out, and if he doesn’t have it figured it out next year, that will be it for him.

9. Quinn could do himself a favor if he were to stop relying on players who aren’t getting it done. At times, he has shown he can make the intelligent move like removing Kreider from the top two lines or playing Lafrenière with one of the two already superstars or removing Strome from the first power play. Eventually, though, he reverts back to his comfort zone, which is playing veterans, letting Lafrenière and Kakko waste away on the bench while they watch Kreider and Strome turn the puck over the power play and doing things like pairing Jack Johnson with Tony DeAngelo in a real game.

10. The Rangers’ next three games are against the Bruins (twice) and Flyers. These three games over the next five days will be an enormous test for this Rangers team. Last season, the Rangers made their miraculous run with 16 wins in 22 games against non-playoff and mainly non-contenders. Of the 16 wins, only the first win against the Avalance in Igor Shesterkin’s NHL debut was against a truly elite opponent. (Yes, the 2019-20 Rangers beat the crap out of the Islanders and they went to the Eastern Conference Finals, but that Islanders team overachieved in a weird tournament four months afer the season was stopped.) The East doesn’t allow for any soft parts in the Rangers’ schedule this seaosn. If they want to go on the type of run they did a year ago at this time, they will need to do it against the league’s best, and that starts on Wednesday.


Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New Rangers episodes after every game throughout the season.

Read More

PodcastsRangersRangers Podcast

Rangers Podcast: Top Six Have to Be Better

The Rangers have played the Islanders three times this season and in all three games there was a shutout.

The Rangers have played the Islanders three times this season and in all three games there was a shutout. The Rangers have been on the wrong end of the shutout in two of three games and they were on Monday night in a 2-0 loss. Once again, the Rangers’ top two lines were unable to produce any offense.


Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New Rangers episodes after every game throughout the season.

Read More

Yankees Trivia

Scavenger Hunt Yankees Trivia: April 15, 2021

About Scavenger Hunt TriviaUsing your own knowledge of the Yankees and any other resource (Baseball-Reference, MLB.com, friends, family, etc.), answer 20 questions related to the team. These aren’t ordinary questions with simple answers like “What

About Scavenger Hunt Trivia
Using your own knowledge of the Yankees and any other resource (Baseball-Reference, MLB.com, friends, family, etc.), answer 20 questions related to the team. These aren’t ordinary questions with simple answers like “What number did Derek Jeter wear?” These questions are layered and will involve some research to answer. Here is a sample question:

Of the last five players to wear Number 2 before Derek Jeter, which player had the highest career on-base percentage?

Be the first to answer all 20 questions correctly and win $500.

How to Play
The entry fee is $10 per team. (Sign up and enter your team here.)

You can play by yourself or have as many teammates as you would like. You can enter until 7 p.m. ET on Thursday, April 15, which is one hour before the event begins.

At 8 p.m. ET on Thursday, April 15, the 20 questions will be posted HERE on the page you are on right now: https://keefetothecity.com/yankees-trivia/. You will submit your answers on the same page along with your team name.

After you have answered all 20 questions, submit the Google Form for your team (only one answer form per team). Once you submit, your answers are final. No edits are allowed. You can submit your answer form up to 24 hours after the game has started. Even if you send your answers in after a few hours or the next day, you could still win if earlier submissions didn’t answer all 20 questions correctly.

The results and winning team will be posted on Keefe To The City (https://keefetothecity.com/yankees-trivia/) as soon as there is a winner.

Prizes
1st Place: $500
2nd Place: Free entry into a future Keefe To The City Scavenger Hunt Trivia
3rd Place: Free entry into a future Keefe To The City Scavenger Hunt Trivia

Enter your team
Sign up and test your Yankees knowledge on Friday, April 2 here.

Questions
Have any questions about Scavenger Hunt Trivia? Email: keefetothecity@gmail.com

Read More

BlogsYankeesYankees Offseason

I’m Ready for Yankees Baseball to Return for 2021

The moment Gio Urshela lined out to third to end Game 5 of the ALDS, I was ready for next season. I’m always ready for next season. I hate the offseason.

The moment Gio Urshela lined out to third to end Game 5 of the ALDS, I was ready for next season. I’m always ready for next season. I hate the offseason.

The 59-day winter gauntlet that is January and February was rather tame in the first month of 2021, but freezing temperatures and snow have become daily fixtures in the second month. Punxsutawney Phil didn’t help matters by seeing his shadow last week, and there’s still more than a month until the clocks get set forward.

We’re close to baseball, even if it’s just beat writers live-tweeting intrasquad games and batting practice. Reading about pitchers’ fielding practice and back-field infield drills and watching videos of bullpen sessions recorded on a phone through the spacing of a chain-link fence never sounded so good. After the 2020 season was delayed by four months, I said I would never complain about the monotony of spring training again, and I meant it.

I welcome the daily updates and the overreatctions to Gary Sanchez’s every move and every second of the upcoming season. I look forward to Aaron Boone once again unnecessarily batting Aaron Hicks third because he’s the Yankees’ only left-handed hitter and because Boone thinks he has to break up the right-handed bats in the middle of the order. I’m eagerly awaiting the storeis about all the players who reported to camp in the “best shape of their life.” I want to lose it over the last position player and last reliever selected for the 25-man roster and I want to be irrationally upset over the order of the rotation to open the regular season. That’s how ready I am for baseball.

The wait is almost over. Even if there is snow in the forecast for seven of the next 10 days, we’re close. The sun is once again setting after 5 p.m., pitchers and catchers officially report next week and position players the week after that.

I’m more than ready for the return of Yankees baseball. I have been since Oct. 9.


Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New episodes every Monday and Thursday during the offseason.


My book The Next Yankees Era: My Transition from the Core Four to the Baby Bombers is now available as an ebook!

Read More

PodcastsYankeesYankees OffseasonYankees Podcast

Yankees Podcast: One Last Roster Move?

The Yankees have one move left to make this offseason and that’s to bring Brett Gardner back.

The Yankees have one move left to make this offseason and that’s to bring Brett Gardner back. In order to stay under the luxury-tax threshold, it’s the only remaining move they “can” make. It’s now just a waiting game until pitchers and catchers report next week.


Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New episodes every Monday and Thursday during the offseason.


My book The Next Yankees Era: My Transition from the Core Four to the Baby Bombers is now available as an ebook!

Read More