Misguided Fans Who Think They Know How A Locker Room Feels
Over the course of my career, I’ve worked directly for two NHL franchises as a statistical assistant to a coaching staff and as a broadcaster. I’ve done radio shows for a quarter of a century on a daily basis. I’ve been in my fair share of locker rooms but never as frequently as print media who cover teams.
Never once have felt that I could speak to my audience as to what a locker room “culture” is or how they feel about things unless I was directly told. Yet, every day I read on X or some team fan blog site a reference to “locker rooms” and what the players feel or what is going on in them. If it’s not a beat writer or someone with direct knowledge, I laugh at it. Here are just a few reasons why;
The Pat Bev trade won’t hurt the locker room.
Search X, and you will find dozens of these opinions. I don’t go in the 76ers locker room, but I have spoken to people who do frequently. Yes, Pat Bev will be a loss.
Is it going to hurt the team? He was described to me as a floor teacher and respected teammate. Is that going to cause the team to lose a game in April? Nonsense! Especially if they need a three ball, the 76ers upgraded. No players are going to sulk and turn on the organization over him moving on.
The Eagles “locker room” didn’t help avoid the collapse of 2023.
All I ever hear about is how the Eagles needed those veteran leaders to help create a winning culture. Instead of getting younger like in previous Eagles generations, the team decided to bring back the elder statesman for another ride in 2023.
The bottom line is that it meant nothing when it mattered. The team lost complete fight and focus and played as poorly as any team in the NFL after their 10-1 start. Having those veteran leaders did nothing, and some of them were anonymous and quiet as the building burned.
John Tortorella will burn out the players in the Flyers locker room.
This is the classic take of the hockey novices who have no knowledge of the reality and history of John Tortorella. He’s had three different tenures of five seasons or more in his NHL career. The average NHL coach lasts about three seasons in one place.
Yes, he can be abrasive with the media. I observed his work in Tampa Bay firsthand frequently. His locker room, however, seemed to have a good time with the guy. You don’t last that long by being a constant negative force.
Advice
Like I do, unless I have first hand information, leave all the “locker room” analysis to those who are actually in them.