No, I'm a fan, and "our control" refers to the Leafs. For example, we did not have control over losing a #1C to a kick in the head in his first shift. Same goes for losing our top pairing defenseman, and having our best player, complimentary 1st liner, top deadline addition, etc. all playing injured. We didn't have control over Price turning into Hasek for the first 3 series of that playoffs. Etc. There were of course things that were in our control too. I didn't say nobody was responsible. In a series where you lose by one shot, there are a thousand different things you could point to in hindsight that could have got a win, and everybody holds some responsibility, but there is no one person to blame. We had a great team (better than we have now). We had a good strategy (better than we have now). We outplayed them (more than we are now). We lost by one shot. It happens. Trying to play the blame game 4 years later doesn't seem like the healthiest way to manage disappointment.
The Carolina game was really nothing like a play-off game, and we've had much bigger issues than our top players recently. In fact, they and our goalies have been largely carrying us this year.
Not remotely as much as people like to think. Most players are pretty similar to what they are in the regular season. We see bigger discrepancies in things like production because there are bigger discrepancies in what a team faces/experiences, and we're looking at small samples.
That's ridiculous. We just glorify the memory of past players, even though they didn't even win anything either.
All last night showed was that all players and teams have off games; especially in random games in the middle of January. If it showed anything more, it was that we may have made a mistake hiring Berube.
No it doesn't. You just want there to be an easy problem that "fixes" everything, and don't seem to understand that correlation =/= causation.