Sheik: you're right you are odd...but that Jacques Martin idea might fly.
As far as Quinn goes, I like Pat quinn hockey. It's wide open and fast moving when played properly. It can be frustrating at times because it can expose weaknesses in you defensemen if you don't get proper support from the forwards on the back check, but all in all I'd rather have that then a trap or even a defense-first approach. What it also means is that you generally need more mature, experienced players who are more skill focused than the bangers that Toronto falls in love with. I think the Leafs have had a good balance of bangers with skill over the past few years.
As far as his loyalty to certain players, I don't know of any coach who doesn't exibit the same characteristic and if you look at Ottawa the Jason Spezza issue is the primary reason why Martin got fired.
parang: didn't you retire? Anyway, given they playoff structure, the percentage of coaches with good playoff records is rather low. Generally coaches who get to the playoffs regularly have weaker records. The playoffs are a crap shoot (just ask Vancouver, Colorado, Boston and Detroit) so getting there in a reasonably good spot gives you as good a chance as anyone.
That said, when the expectation every year is a Stanley Cup then Quinn is a failure. I don't think he should go and not because of the money. If he does go, it will be due to the belief that there are younger and better coaches available. But just remember, these same coaches Martin, Quennville, Lewis (premature?) etc who are available, have also just recently been fired for not meeting the expectations of their organizations. Would I be disappointed in having Martin or Quennville behind the bench? Probably not, but that doesn't mean Quinn did a terrible job or that I want Quinn to go.