herman
Well-known member
More flame to the fire.
I think Carlyle would still be the coach today if he focused on developing the young players and their in-game thinking processes (Gardiner!), and didn't worry about the results. It wasn't the wins and losses that sealed his fate. Unfortunately, he thought his seat security came from the final results, and not the underlying metrics of coaching (process, communication, teaching vs. preaching).
I am a bit disappointed his apparent attitude towards the younger players was so sink-or-swim, as now we've lost critical development time on assets. However, the (new) coaching staff now has a strong negative example to play off of to motivate players to try different things.
Hope_Smoke @Hope_Smoke
Kypreos also said Carlyle didn't do a lot of 1 on 1 teaching and communicate with players. That's something others have mentioned too.
In fact, big reason for the assistant coaching changes was to create more communication for the players. Goes also back to Dubas' comments where he said it was the team's responsibility to help young players develop rather than just telling them it's all on them.
Ppl want to rip Leafs leadership/character, but it was obvious (from player personnel changes & deployment) RC liked one way & stuck with it
Never adapted and continuously tried to hammer a square peg into a round hole. It hindered development & depreciated assets.
Repeated reports about how Carlyle didn't like Holland and therefore wouldn't play him (Leafs wasted a 2nd rnd pick bc Holland sat on bench). Ray Ferraro came out and said it was because he thought PH was soft cuz of the lace bite
Throughout Carlyle's tenure he has also mentioned over and over again how he doesn't understand why players aren't playing through injuries
Carlyle said he was not here to develop but to win games. Damning considering org pushed "young, developing team" angle
I think Carlyle would still be the coach today if he focused on developing the young players and their in-game thinking processes (Gardiner!), and didn't worry about the results. It wasn't the wins and losses that sealed his fate. Unfortunately, he thought his seat security came from the final results, and not the underlying metrics of coaching (process, communication, teaching vs. preaching).
I am a bit disappointed his apparent attitude towards the younger players was so sink-or-swim, as now we've lost critical development time on assets. However, the (new) coaching staff now has a strong negative example to play off of to motivate players to try different things.