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Cole Caufield just pointed the finger after the loss to Carolina and it's causing major backlash

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Vincent Carbonneau
June 2, 2026  (6:28)
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May 21, 2026; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Montreal Canadiens right wing Cole Caufield (13) leaves the ice after warmups before game one of the Eastern Conferene Final against the Carolina Hurricanes of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Lenovo Center.
Photo credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images

Cole Caufield and Martin St-Louis did not hide from the hardest truth after Montreal's playoff run ended.

Caufield said it himself.

«I sucked, plain and simple.»

That quote hit hard because players do not usually go there.

Not star players.

Not right after elimination.

Not in a market like Montreal, where every bad shift already gets replayed a hundred times.

But Caufield went straight at it anyway.

No soft landing.

No talk about bounces.

No hiding behind systems or matchups.

That is why the reaction around his quote has been so strong.

Fans notice honesty.

So do teammates.

And inside a room like the Canadiens' room, a star winger saying that out loud can carry real weight.

"I sucked, plain and simple."

Cole Caufield didn't sugar coat his playoffs performance.

Cole Caufield's honest assessment of the Carolina series has the hockey world buzzing

This was accountability.

Real accountability.

Caufield did not try to spin a weak playoff stretch into a learning lesson dressed up as progress. He looked at his own performance and called it what he thought it was.

That matters because Montreal is still building.

The Canadiens are young, emotional, and still trying to figure out which players can carry pressure when the games get tighter and the space disappears. In moments like that, honesty from core players matters almost as much as offense.

And Caufield's quote tells you something important about where his head is.

He knows the standard.

He knows he did not hit it.

That should matter to Martin St-Louis too. Coaches can push players all they want, but when a player starts pushing himself publicly like that, it usually means the message already landed deep.

That is a good sign for Montreal, even if the quote itself sounds brutal.

Because the worst thing a scorer can do after a quiet playoff run is talk like nothing happened.

Caufield did the opposite.

He owned it.

And yes, that probably will get compared to other high-profile players around the league who duck that kind of direct blame. Fair enough. Caufield opened the door for that by being this blunt.

But for the Canadiens, the bigger point is simpler.

This is a star player showing he is not comfortable with almost.

Not comfortable with a decent regular season.

Not comfortable with a playoff exit.

Not comfortable pretending his own game was good enough.

That is how leaders start sounding, even when the words are ugly.

Caufield's playoffs may not have been what Montreal needed.

His response afterward was.