The Columbus Blue Jackets have announced that assistant coaches Mike Haviland and Scott Ford, as well as video coach Aron Augustitus, won’t be returning to the team for the 2026-27 season. This decision will allow recently-extended head coach Rick Bowness to bring on his own staff for his first full season with the team. Among the candidates to earn an assistant role with Columbus will be Cleveland Monsters head coach Trent Vogelhuber per Aaron Portzline of The Athletic.
Notably, these decisions will keep former Blue Jackets player Jared Boll in his assistant coach role. Boll retired from his playing career after the 2017-18 season and joined the Blue Jackets as an assistant development coach in the following year. He held onto that role until he was promoted to the Blue Jackets bench ahead of the 2023-24 season. Boll has played an integral role in developing many of the Blue Jackets’ young stars and should continue to oversee their paths next season.
Haviland will enter the coaching market with a substantial amount of experience under his belt. His coaching career began in the ECHL where he took home two Kelly Cups across four seasons as a head coach – one on each side of the rivalry between the Trenton Titans and Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies. He was promoted to the AHL with the Norfolk Admirals in 2006 and earned the league’s ‘Coach of the Year’ award in 2007. That accolade preceded a move to the Rockford IceHogs, which would represent a path into Haviland’s first NHL coaching role – as an assistant coach with the Chicago Blackhawks. He filled that role for four seasons, including Chicago’s Stanley Cup-winning 2009-10 campaign. Haviland was dismissed by Chicago in 2012 and returned to the AHL for two seasons, before taking on the head coach role at Colorado College for seven seasons. It was that role that Columbus pulled Haviland out of, first to serve as an AHL associate coach for two seasons and then to serve as an NHL assistant for the last two seasons. He will now search for a new gig with the ability to fill numerous roles.
Ford began his coaching career in 2015, after a minor-league career that spanned 552 AHL games and 172 ECHL games. He served as an assistant coach for eight seasons with the Milwaukee Admirals – a run that was briefly interrupted by one season with the Chicago Wolves. Ford earned his first NHL role – and his first NHL regular season game behind the bench – when he was hired as an assistant by Columbus in 2024. His hiring marked a reunion with then-head coach Dean Evason, who coached over Ford from 2012 to 2015, then coached alongside him from 2015 to 2018. Evason, like Ford, is on the open market after being dismissed by the Blue Jackets.
This will also mark a quick change for Augustitus. The 30-year-old coach was promoted to the Blue Jackets’ head video coach role last summer, after four years as an assistant video coach with the club. He first joined the organization in 2018.
Vogelhuber could be the first to take on a role on Columbus’ refreshed bench. The 37 year old has served as Cleveland’s head coach for the last four seasons, after four years as an assistant coach with the team. He has led the Monsters to a winning record, and three playoff appearances, in his time overseeing the bench. He was also named a coach at the 2024 AHL All-Star game. Cleveland’s performances under Vogelhuber have represented a quick turnaround for a team that posted a 68-76-23 record in the three seasons leading up to his promotion.
These changes will mark a turnover of the Blue Jackets’ bench after posting a 40-30-12 record and missing the postseason by six points. Bowness will have his chance to build a staff capable of making up that gap next season. How the Blue Jackets choose to assemble their new bench crew could tip off their plans for Bowness’ future with the club. The 71 year old is currently the oldest head coach in the NHL and came out of retirement to replace Evason earlier this season. He has signed a one-year extension with Columbus but may not have many seasons left beyond that. Columbus’ hires could suggest if a strong staff can support a few more years, or if they will lead to a warm handoff of head coaching duties.
Photo courtesy of Kyle Terada-Imagn Images.
