Kings Coach Terry Murray still unhappy with Marco Sturm
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.
Left wing Marco Sturm seems to have become the whipping boy for Kings Coach Terry Murray after two days of scathing comments from a coach who rarely singles anyone out for public chiding.
Before Thursdayās morning skate, Murray said he had talked to Sturm to criticize the playerās work ethic. He wasnāt any more complimentary after practice Friday, even though Sturm earned an assist Thursday with a shot that was rebounded for a goal by Kyle Clifford.
Murray repeated that Sturm is āstill in training camp modeā after undergoing surgery on the medial collateral and anterior cruciate ligaments of his right knee last May and indicated heās not happy with Sturmās play. Considering that General Manager Dean Lombardi likes Sturm -- Lombardi drafted Sturm into the NHL as the San Jose Sharksā general manager and pursued him a second time this season after medical concerns led the Kingsā doctors to be cautious on the first go-round -- it could become a point of contention between a general manager and a coach who are otherwise close.
āI understand it and I have that compassion that he has to go through it during the games,ā Murray said of Sturmās readjustment to the pace and rigors of the NHL. āThat heās got to get his game in order and heās coming to a new team, moving, very unsettled with everything thatās going on. Hotel, place to live -- itās hard. Very difficult. No matter how long youāve been in the league youāve just got to go through those situations and find a way to get your game in order and settle it in.
āIām dealing with it. Not comfortably but Iām going to keep pushing and keep talking and going to have to get his game back to the level of play that he knows he can play at. And quite honestly Iām waiting to see what that level is myself. I donāt know him well enough over the years to have put him under the microscope and say, āThis is exactly what Iām going to get every shift, what I need, and this is the expectation.ā So Iām waiting for him to show me. But I certainly have to see that high level of intensity and work every shift.ā
True, Sturm hasnāt exactly set the Kingsā world on fire since he was acquired from Boston. He has two goals and four points in nine games playing with an ever-changing array of linemates.
But is it realistic to expect Sturm, a seven-time 20-goal scorer, to have regained that form when heās barely eight months removed from such extensive surgery?
Murray thinks it is, and went back to his days as coach of the Florida Panthers to back up his argument.
āItās not unreasonable. Iāve had players come through this thing.ā he said. āIāve had Pavel Bure went through the second operation -- the same kind of operation on the same leg -- and heās back, right on top of his game and scored 57 goals for me that year [actually 58 in 1999-2000].
āAnd so itās very demanding. Youāve got to really push hard and go through a lot of pain on the off-ice part of things to get yourself ready to get on the ice and get going. But once you get on the ice youāve got to get to that hard work every time, every shift and thatās what I need from Marco. I think thereās times out there that thereās a skill element to his game and he wants to play that kind of a game but also we need now to add in that competitive side of it.ā
That applies to more than a few of his teammates, too.
Murray put Sturm with center Jarret Stoll and right wing Wayne Simmonds in practice Friday and likely will keep that trio together Saturday against Columbus, so he will have another chance to escape the doghouse.
--Helene Elliott