It seems whenever a coach makes a bad and illogical decision, the default response from apologists is that was done so that the coach wouldn't lose the lockerroom. Most common version of this: Popular but bad player can't get scratched it will lose the lockerroom! Since the decision doesn't make sense on merits of actually playing hockey and fans know nothing about anything happening behind the scenes, this is the default catch all response. He did it to not lose the lockerroom! What losing the lockerroom is ambiguously defined. Are players not going to play hard because they will revolt against the coach? Will they all lose focus at the same time? Are they all going to lose confidence at the same time? Nobody knows what it even means. But hockey culture reveres intangible nonsense and focuses more on "toughness" and "leadership" and poorly defined nonsense most of the time than actual hockey stuff in order to have the sport reach mystical levels. BTW, toughness is a thing and leadership is a thing but they're also ambiguous enough that you can use them to make any poorly defined argument that you want without having to actually verify anything. What I find most ludicrous is that part of this mythical NHL player, they are the physically toughest player in the NHL, but these millionaires who have accomplished more than 99.99% of the world are also the weakest mentally apparently as every decision made has the lockerroom teetering on collapse.
There are legit lockerroom toxicity issues such as with Babcock that we trivialize by saying "popular player got scratched will lose the lockerroom".
Thoughts?
There are legit lockerroom toxicity issues such as with Babcock that we trivialize by saying "popular player got scratched will lose the lockerroom".
Thoughts?