
An NHL Head Coach wouldn't be doing their job if they weren't whining about the officiating, given that it's their job to help absolve their players of responsibility. Since the refs can't respond, they are a very easy target.
Still, one wonders exactly how refs must feel when a coach calls them out for 'unfair treatment'. Wouldn't you expect the refs to pay an extra bit of attention to that coach's team?
Perhaps not, but it doesn't help that Ducks' coach Randy Carlyle is whining about 'unfair treatment'.The Ducks, who lead the NHL with 654 penalty minutes, further enhanced their reputation as an undisciplined team by taking 12 more penalties in Monday night's 4-3 overtime win over the Columbus Blue Jackets.
"For whatever reason, we seem to be found guilty more often than the opposition that we play and we don't feel that we commit the same amount of crimes," Carlyle said
Yes, Randy, I'm sure the refs get together before the game and scheme, "
We gotta get them Ducks and call lots of penalties against them!".
The Ducks play an extremely physical/thuggish style of game. When you have a roster that includes Brad May, Chris Pronger, Ryan Getzlaf, Travis Moen, George Parros, Shane Hnidy, Todd Bertuzzi, and Corey Perry, you should expect to be shorthanded more often than the opposition.
For Carlyle to sit there and cry about officiating indicates that he fails to see that his group of players is all about the crashing and bashing, and that the coach is responsible for the style of play the Ducks bring to the rink on a nightly basis. If you are going to play with fire, expect to get burnt once in awhile. Instead of crying like Britney Spears on a badly-shot home video, how about telling your players to smarten the hell up, huh?