The Friday morning after Dylan Larkin’s request for a trade was made public has yielded a significant amount of the “blame game” going around the internet and sports talk radio.
Whose fault is it that the Red Wings’ home-grown captain has chosen to leave his team? Is it Larkin’s fault for being a 29-year-old turncoat, if not someone for whom the rebuild has passed him by? Is it Steve Yzerman’s fault for not bringing the rebuild to fruition sooner? Is it the fault of Larkin’s teammates, good or bad, for not holding up their end of the performance bargain? Or could it even be the fault of the coaching staff for not getting the best out of their players for two Marches in a row?
Folks, when a player-and-team divorce of this magnitude happens (and there are few divorces that are uglier than this one in terms of professional sports), everybody has egg on their faces, and there’s more than enough blame to go around. Attempting to dump all one’s frustrations and disappointment on one party just isn’t useful.
Is Larkin at fault for losing patience with the rebuild and wanting “out” for selfish reasons? Of course.
Is Steve Yzerman’s laconically slow rebuild to blame, given that Larkin was 19 when he joined the Red Wings, and is 30 years old on a still-rebuilding roster? Of course.
Continue reading There is no such thing as a no-fault divorce