The Buffalo Sabres made a significant change at the top of their hockey operations department yesterday, swapping incumbent GM Kevyn Adams for experienced former Blue Jackets GM Jarmo Kekäläinen. Kekäläinen spoke to the media today and outlined his vision for the Sabres, as well as how he plans on ending the franchise’s playoff drought, one that currently stands as the NHL’s longest.
Per Jeff Marek of Daily Faceoff, Kekäläinen did not offer a firm commitment to incumbent head coach Lindy Ruff, instead stating that all aspects of the club’s hockey operations — including its head coach — would need to be evaluated.
Ruff, 65, is currently in his second season of his second tenure as Sabres head coach, and his 17th season as the Sabres’ head coach overall. Ruff is the Sabres’ all-time winningest coach by a wide margin, his 621 career wins dwarfing second-place Scotty Bowman, who had 210 wins coaching the team in the 1980s.
When looking at Ruff’s second tenure as head coach of the Sabres, it’s difficult to speculate as to which direction Kekäläinen might go.
On one hand, Ruff failed to end the club’s playoff drought in 2024-25 and has the team currently sitting in last place in the Atlantic Division. On the other hand, there were larger personnel issues out of Ruff’s control that contributed to the losing the Sabres have experienced, as indicated by the fact that Ruff has retained his position while Adams lost his.
In addition, Ruff’s Sabres are just six points behind the Boston Bruins for the second Wild Card spot in the Eastern Conference, and hold a game in hand. It’s not inconceivable that the Sabres could go on a run and find their way into the postseason as soon as this spring, especially given how wide open the Eastern Conference’s playoff picture appears right now. That’s a sentiment Kekäläinen appeared to echo in his media availability, stating his belief that the Sabres could be a playoff team this season.
Beyond just the decision Kekäläinen has to make behind the Sabres’ bench, there are even more changes the new GM might make to the club’s overall hockey operations infrastructure. While Kekäläinen was running the Blue Jackets, the club drew widespread praise for its work in amateur scouting. Kekäläinen has long brought a specialization in talent identification to the table, which raises questions as to what Kekäläinen might want to do with the Sabres’ scouting staff. While a GM often receives the lion’s share of public credit or blame for their team’s draft choices, the reality is that there are lesser-known figures in a team’s front office that play a massive role in informing those draft choices as well, the chief figure being a team’s director of amateur scouting.
Kekäläinen himself served in that role earlier in his career, during his days with the St. Louis Blues, and when he was in Columbus, he brought along one of his trusted scouts, Ville Sirén, to operate as director of amateur scouting in Columbus. It’s entirely possible that Kekäläinen might try to see if he can bring Sirén into the fold in Buffalo, restoring a partnership that has worked so well in the past. The Sabres’ amateur scouting operation is currently run by Jerry Forton, who took up the position of director of amateur scouting in 2020-21.
He was promoted to assistant GM by Adams in 2024-25. Sirén does, of course, still work for the Blue Jackets, so right now it’s entirely speculative as to whether Kekäläinen might want to bring his old lieutenant to Buffalo, but it’s nonetheless worth bringing up as it relates to Kekäläinen’s future plans.
Kekäläinen might also, as part of the evaluations he’s pledged of the team’s operations, decide to retain Forton and keep much of the team’s amateur scouting staff intact. For all of the issues the Sabres have had in recent years, getting talent out of the draft has not been one of them. And it’s also not a foregone conclusion that if Kekäläinen were to want to bring Sirén to Buffalo, that would have to mean an exit for Forton; there is some precedent in the NHL for an incoming GM to bring in “his people” while also retaining the existing leadership.
When the Montreal Canadiens hired former New York Rangers GM Jeff Gorton to run their hockey operations department in 2021, he brought Nick Bobrov with him, someone who had served in a key scouting role during Gorton’s days with the Rangers. But Gorton also retained Martin Lapointe, a key existing voice in the team’s scouting department from the reign of former GM Marc Bergevin, and he now serves alongside Bobrov as co-director of amateur scouting. So it’s also possible Kekäläinen explores trying to add Sirén while also retaining Forton.
Fundamentally, the Sabres’ GM change has opened up a wide range of possibilities for its hockey operations department. When senior leadership changes, a trickle-down effect of changes typically follows, so it will be interesting to track what further staffing moves Kekäläinen makes, and how those moves might also impact other clubs.
Photos courtesy of James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images
Wouldn’t Ruff also be the coach with the most losses in Buffalo too?
Ville Siren, part of the trade that brought Larry Murphy to the Penguins. GM Craig Patrick had the magic back then!
He’s going to trade for Petterson with Tage isn’t he