When the Schedule Stops Being Friendly
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About this listen
Sean Baligian and Mike Iavasile kick off the episode by leaning into what January hockey always does best: strip away illusions. Early-season excuses disappear, and what’s left is effort, structure, and whether teams can survive when things stop going their way.
The conversation moves through the current NHL landscape, touching on teams that keep finding points, others that look increasingly fragile, and why some rosters feel built for the grind while others feel one bad stretch away from unraveling. Detroit becomes part of the discussion — not as a scoreboard story, but as a case study in sustainability, physicality, and whether wins are covering up deeper issues.
They also zoom out to the league at large, debating contenders versus pretenders, the danger of chasing short-term heaters, and why certain teams inspire confidence even when they’re not perfect. Along the way, the guys hit on development, expectations, and the uncomfortable gap between where teams are and where fans want them to be.
Fast-moving, opinionated, and rooted in experience, this episode is about the stretch of the season where hockey finally tells the truth — whether teams are ready to hear it or not.