Oh, so which is it? The broadcasters reflect the coaches or the other way around? This is hilarious stuff. Again, you keep cycling between the two arguments about in-group tendencies and broadcasters implanting narrative arcs in people's heads.
Is this supposed to be some sort of “gotcha”?
Yes, Devils fans and broadcasters share the same in-group tendency as the Devils coaches and players. It’s literally a fandom attached to a brand.
If your initial argument was "fans and team-affiliated people" are biased, great. It would have the same level of informational value as saying "grass is green", but hey, at least it would be cogent. Trying to spin this as some long-winded transitive process from broadcaster to fan is comical. We saw what we saw, and we aren't the only ones, much as you'd like to pretend that's the case.
Well, the observation was simply that the Devils fans who decided to die on this particular internet hill were getting their perspective entirely from the way their team’s broadcast built a Jack Edwards esque moral narrative around the last 10 minutes of that game (conveniently making this about a guy not being injured enough for their satisfaction, rather than about their team imploding in a game they were favored to win).
Later in the thread someone brought up the coaches and players parroting the same narrative, which rightfully got mocked as a “counterpoint”.
This is how conversations work sometimes. People get attached a dumb idea that conveniently supports their biases, then they reach for any weak evidence they can find to support it so they don’t have to do the hard work of walking it back.
Again, imagine a Rangers broadcast saying “that Trouba hit was actually pretty clean” and a bunch of Rangers fans flooding the internet to parrot that point. Then when they get mocked by the rest of the league, they bring up that Rangers coaches and players are also defending Trouba. That’s the argumentative level that you’re at right now. It’s a bad look, but also completely consistent with how fanbases behave when they’re mad. So go off, I guess.
I find that pretty hard to believe about the Canes broadcasters considering posters in this thread were already mentioning they were campaigning for a major on Haula's hit. They managed to purse their lips with Necas laying on the ice? Interesting.
I mean, the broadcast is available online. It’s easy enough to get out of your bubble and watch it.
Here's three right off the bat quickly cycling through the thread:
But who's to say, they may all have been watching the Devils broadcast.
Only the last of those (which is the one I referred to earlier) directly said they felt Necas took a dive. The other two were airing grievances from other games. I’ll leave it to them if they want to put on clown shoes and go down that path, but otherwise you have one guy who thought it was a dive, other than the one who thought it was a major penalty even
if it was milked.
So… one guy who agrees with your position. On the internet, that’s a dismal performance.
Edit: And as a follow up to your "group psychology" point, which I'm sure you've also seen, I took a quick gander at your GDT and you have multiple different people on your board celebrating (seriously) Haula's wife's miscarriage. So this is clearly a phenomenon that hasn't escaped the Canes fandom.
Obviously anyone celebrating a personal tragedy is going too far and letting competitive bias go to their heads.
See? That’s not so hard.