Really? Ned and Robb, too? I thought they were positioned rather well as likable characters.
I liked Cat, but I understood why so many didn't.
Because she's a woman.
...Seriously, because she was mean to Jon Snow. That really is it....and she's a woman.
Really, she made the major mistakes that led to the downfall of the Starks.
I must have missed the part where Catelyn warned Cersei with enough time that she could murder Robert and destroy his evidence of the crime. Or that time that she convinced Robb to forsake his marriage vows to the Freys, leading to their betrayal and his death.
Look, I like Ned and Robb quite a bit as characters. And Cat made mistake. But this internet revisionism of her being responsible for the Stark family's fall has always struck me as bizarre. Robb and Ned dug their own graves.
Catelyn imprisoning Tyrion was a major mistake. Forget that it would piss off Cersei and Tywin, but it would mean that Ned, Arya, and Sansa would be trapped in Kings Landing.
And ontop of doing an already stupid thing, she finds herself in a position where her sister lets him go. So, she essentially started a war and watched her greatest bargaining chip waddle (that's how GRMM describes Tyrion walking, isn't it?) out the door.
Yet, the war was thwarted by Robert well enough. And at the end of the day, while Tyrion was innocent, the Lannisters (Jaime, Cersei, and [blackout]Joffrey with the knife[/blackout]) did try to kill her son. And if Ned hadn't gone to Cersei, Robert wouldn't have died, creating this power vacuum. Instead Cersei and Jaime, as well as their children, would have been hanged as traitors and Tywin would have to go to war with the six other kingdoms if he objected.
And then there's the thing with Jaime...
Who did that hurt though, really? If she hadn't freed Jaime Lannister, Karstark would have killed him in his cell, just as he did those distant Lannister boy cousins. In which case, Robb would have still executed him and still lost the Karstarks, and the Freys would still have betrayed him for the marriage slight. And if Karstark killed the Kingslayer, rest assured that Cersei would have immediately taken Sansa Stark's head. So, Cat's decision to free Jaime, while poor war strategy, ultimately did not precipitate any of the causes that led to Robb's downfall. In fact, it saved her daughter's life. So, in a sense, it was well played if by accident.