Zee said:
Hilarious hearing and reading about how Carlyle put the Leafs through a "normal" practice and they were all dead tired and sucking wind at the end.
"Hey coach, why can't we play dodgeball in practice like we used to, this stuff is hard!"
;D ;D
There is also this from the Toronto Star:
But what?s far less flattering to Wilson?s legacy is that it took all of one game for his successor to pinpoint his team?s most fixable weakness. The way Carlyle appears to see it, the Leafs, along with being out of the playoff picture, are also out of shape. It?s as indefensible as it?s true.
I'm skeptical. Maurice said it when he arrived. Wilson said it when he arrived. And now Carlyle (or the media) are saying it when he arrived.
Every time a new coach arrives, they claim they need the players to get in to better shape. On the one hand, I'm sure it's true: the better the players conditioning, the harder and more continuously they can press the attack. On the other hand, all decent coaches know this and all decent coaches want their team to be in good shape. It isn't the case that Wilson, whatever faults he might have had, wasn't aware that good conditioning was a helpful component of team success.