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Coaches

Arizona Coyotes To Interview Todd Nelson For Head Coaching Job

June 27, 2017 at 2:14 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

After coming to a mutual agreement to part ways with long-time head coach Dave Tippett, the Arizona Coyotes are on the search for their next head coach. An early candidate is Todd Nelson of the Grand Rapids Griffins, who has been given permission from the Detroit Red Wings to interview for the position according to Helene St. James of the Detroit Free Press.

Nelson was previously the head coach of the Edmonton Oilers for a short time, and recently guided the Griffins to a Calder Cup victory in the AHL. Considered a top candidate for several jobs this spring, he’s been passed over so far for the chance to lead an NHL club again.

A fourth-round pick of the Penguins in his playing days, Nelson made it into just three NHL games throughout his decade-plus in professional hockey. Bouncing around the minor leagues and even Europe, he’s already found more success in the coaching ranks than he did as a player. He’s the first out of what will likely be many candidates connected to the job, as the Coyotes try as quickly as possible to install a new head coach. They’ll also be filling an associate coach role, as Sarah McLellan of AZ Central reports that another mutual termination has come between Jim Playfair and the team. Despite being at development camp, the long-time coach initiated the parting.

Dave Tippett| Detroit Red Wings| Utah Mammoth

1 comment

Coaching Notes: Woods, McFarland, Desjardins, Weight

June 25, 2017 at 6:18 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

Yesterday, while 217 individuals took their first step toward fulfilling their dreams of being NHL players one day, two others took a major step toward becoming NHL head coaches:

The Minnesota Wild announced that they have hired Bob Woods as an assistant coach for the 2017-18 season. Woods was an assistant for the Buffalo Sabres under Dan Bylsma in 2016-17, but was not retained by the Sabres after Bylsma and GM Tim Murray were fired and replaced with Phil Housley and Jason Botterill respectively. Buffalo was not Woods’ first NHL experience; he previously worked for the Anaheim Ducks and Washington Capitals as an assistant, both under current Wild head coach Bruce Boudreau. Woods also worked for Boudreau in the AHL, replacing him as head coach of the Hersey Bears when Boudreau was promoted to the Capitals open position. Woods led the Bears to Calder Cup championships in 2006 and 2009, before being called up to Washington himself. In the brief time after working alongside Boudreau for nine years and being hired by Buffalo, Woods was also the head coach and general manager of the Saskatoon Blade of the WHL. Equipped with years of experience coaching at all levels, as well as a prolific playing resume in the minor leagues – Woods is an ECHL Hall of Famer and holds the record for most career goals by a defenseman – Woods is a great addition for the Wild and should fit in perfectly alongside his long-time friend and mentor.

Not long after Minnesota tabbed their new assistant, the Florida Panthers named Paul McFarland as a new member of their coaching staff. On the other end of the spectrum to a guy like Woods, McFarland is relatively new to the coaching game. The 31-year-old was once an OHL prospect with dreams of being an NHL player, but upon realizing that his playing aspirations were a long shot, instead attended Acadia University, continued to play and study the game, and got into coaching after graduating in 2010. McFarland returned to the OHL served as an assistant coach for the Oshawa Generals for three years and then spent the past three seasons as the head coach of the Kingston Frontenacs. McFarland led the junior club to a 111-71-22 record, qualified for the playoffs all three years, and helped to develop highly-regarded prospects Lawson Crouse, Roland McKeown and Warren Foegele, as well as two second-round selections yesterday, Jason Robertson and Eemeli Rasanen. Panthers’ coach Bob Boughner, a rookie NHL head coach himself, is reportedly very excited about bringing McFarland aboard and his ability to assist with the development of young players in Florida.

  • Willie Desjardins might not be a head coach in the NHL for a while after being fired by the Vancouver Canucks back in April, but that doesn’t mean he won’t have an important team to lead. Desjardins has been tabbed as the head coach for Team Canada at the 2018 Winter Olympics, a great honor regardless of the fact that the NHL won’t be participating in the Games. Desjardins will be looked upon to lead a talented, young Canadian team against a similarly young and talented American team as well as several different European squads that will have veteran professionals on their rosters. However, Desjardins has had major success at the junior and AHL level and is a strong pick for the position. He likely left NHL assistant offers on the table to take the job, but his name will certainly be back up for NHL head coach consideration if he can get it done on the big stage come this winter.
  • New York Islanders’ coach Doug Weight made an exciting announcement today, as his son, 16-year-old Danny Weight, committed to powerhouse college hockey program Boston College. The Eagles will get Weight’s services beginning in 2019-20, after he plays for the U.S. National Development Program for the next two seasons. At 6’0″, 170-lbs. already, Weight projects to be a power forward just like his dad, but will have an edge in development at BC versus his father’s time at Lake Superior State University in the early 90’s.

AHL| Bob Boughner| Bruce Boudreau| Buffalo Sabres| CHL| Coaches| Doug Weight| Florida Panthers| Minnesota Wild| New York Islanders| OHL| Olympics| Team Canada| WHL Lawson Crouse

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Draft Day Notes: Ruff, Markov, Phaneuf

June 24, 2017 at 11:21 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

While the New York Rangers continue to select the next wave of talent in the NHL draft, the front office is also busy working on the NHL coaching staff. Larry Brooks of the New York Post is reporting that Lindy Ruff will join the team as an assistant coach, replacing Jeff Beukeboom who will move into a scouting role with the club.

Ruff of course has decades of experience as a head coach in the league, with his latest stint ending in Dallas at the end of the year. This will be the first time he takes an assistant role since 1997, and will be mostly in charge of the defense group.

  • Though it’s been clear there is interest between Andrei Markov and the Montreal Canadiens, Renaud Lavoie of TVA Sports is reporting that Markov now wants a two-year contract. That could be too long for the Canadiens, who are set to give Carey Price a huge raise next summer and have to make sure they spend every dollar appropriately. That’s not even mentioning that Markov will turn 39 this season, and at any point could fall off a cliff in terms of production. The cap hit would have to be very reasonable for the long-time Montreal defender to get those two years.
  • Before the Travis Hamonic deal went down, Bob McKenzie of TSN tweeted out some details about Dion Phaneuf continuing to draw trade interest from teams that aren’t on his approved list. Remember that Phaneuf would not waive his no-movement clause for the expansion draft, and though Pierre Dorion has had chats with his representation, there is no movement on the trade list as of yet.

Expansion| Lindy Ruff| Montreal Canadiens| New York Rangers| Pierre Dorion Andrei Markov| Bob McKenzie| Dion Phaneuf

1 comment

Early Notes: Tolvanen, Capuano, Hamonic

June 23, 2017 at 8:57 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Top draft prospect Eeli Tolvanen, a Finnish winger who has played hockey in the USHL for the past two years, was expected to go to Boston College in the fall. That will no longer happen, as according to USHR Tolvanen has failed to pass the admission standards for BC and will not be admitted. He’ll instead have to look for an opportunity elsewhere.

The Oshawa Generals own his rights in the CHL, or he could find a home at a lesser university or in Europe. He had been climbing up boards, even ranked 8th among North American skaters by CSS. He finished 17th on Bob McKenzie’s final list for TSN, but may end up in the bottom third of the first round after this news. Though it obviously looked bad from the outside, teams will have a much better insight from their meetings with him.

  • Darren Dreger of TSN confirms something that Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet has been chasing, that Jack Capuano will join the Florida Panthers as an associate coach. Capuano was fired from the New York Islanders midway through the 2016-17 season, the only organization he’s ever coached for. After coming up through the AHL system, Capuano took over in 2010-11 and led the Islanders to three playoff experiences. He’ll take care of the defense and penalty kill in Florida.
  • Discussion around Travis Hamonic continues, with Friedman saying on radio (via Chris Nicholls of FanRag Sports) that the Flames and Leafs are both interested. Friedman believes the Islanders are looking for two first-round picks for the defenseman, who has three years left at a reasonable $3.8MM cap hit. Hamonic’s actual salary is $4.9MM for the next few years, which may deter some teams from going after him.

CHL| Calgary Flames| Florida Panthers| Jack Capuano| New York Islanders| Oshawa Generals| Toronto Maple Leafs Elliotte Friedman| Travis Hamonic

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Arizona Coyotes Part Ways With Dave Tippett

June 22, 2017 at 10:36 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 6 Comments

In a shocking move less than 24 hours before the 2017 NHL Entry Draft, the Arizona Coyotes have parted ways with long-time head coach Dave Tippett. The team announced it was a mutual parting, and will start looking for a new coach immediately. The announcement was made by new sole-owner Andrew Barroway:

On behalf of the entire Coyotes organization, I would like to sincerely thank Tip for all of his hard work and the many contributions he made to our organization. Tip is a man of high character and we are very grateful for his leadership during his tenure as our head coach. Ultimately, we have some philosophical differences on how to build our team. Therefore, we mutually agreed that it is in everyone’s best interest to have a coaching change in order to move our franchise forward.

Tippett admits that it was a mutual decision, though the timing couldn’t be worse for the Coyotes. Not only is the draft just hours away, but every other vacancy around the NHL has already been filled. Though it comes much sooner than Patrick Roy’s unceremonious exit from the Colorado Avalanche last offseason, the announcement stings in the same fashion.  Dave Tippett

After coaching the Dallas Stars for several years, Tippett was hired by the Coyotes in September of 2009, just a month before the 2009-10 season started. At that point it had been Wayne Gretzky who had stepped down amid financial pressure from two potential buyers of the team. Tippett was hired just a few hours later, and has remained in the position ever since.

This is the third such surprising move from the Coyotes in the past week, as tenured captain Shane Doan was told he would not return and Mike Smith was traded less than two weeks after being called the team’s “rock” by GM John Chayka. Though there are obviously rational reasons for both of those moves with the team heading towards a young core, again the timing seems unfortunate.

As Craig Morgan of AZ Sports put it in a tweet:

“On eve of NHL Draft, Coyotes have no coach, no captain (yet), no president/CEO, no starting G, no No.1 C (still), no prez of hockey ops.”

The Prsident and CEO Morgan refers to was let go when Barroway bought out the minority owners earlier this month, and it is interesting that the announcements on Tippett and Doan have both come from him directly. There had been rumored differences in direction that had led to the buyout in the first place, and clearly Barroway had some strong ideas on the new path of the franchise.

So now, with Ken Hitchcock, Travis Green, Doug Weight, Bruce Cassidy, Bob Boughner and Phil Housley all securely hired away to teams around the league the Coyotes will begin a search from scratch.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Dave Tippett| John Chayka| Newsstand| Utah Mammoth

6 comments

Snapshots: Coach’s Challenge Penalty, Russell

June 22, 2017 at 9:00 pm CDT | by natebrown 6 Comments

The NHL is looking at a rule change that would certainly add a new wrinkle to things.  TSN’s Elliotte Friedman tweets that the NHL is kicking around the idea to assess two minute minor penalties to coaches who lose a challenge. Colleague Frank Saravelli tweets that it would be for challenges on offside calls, replace the loss of a timeout, and according to Vice President and Director of Hockey Operations Colin Campbell, makes coaches “careful” about when they challenge. The Scores’s Josh Wegman writes that the league is looking for a way to cut down on the number of challenges, as it would make coaches more timid in using that challenge. However, before any rules are changed, both the board of governors and competition committee would have to agree.

  • TSN’s Bob McKenzie reports that a deal between defenseman Kris Russell and the Edmonton Oilers could be finalized as soon as tomorrow. He adds that Russell could get close to $4MM AAV for four years. This confirms what was reported earlier in the day, but now includes a duration and dollar amount. Russell played in 68 games for Edmonton and notched a goal and 13 points for them. The 30-year-old defenseman is known less for his statistical contribution and more for his shot blocking abilities.

Coaches| Edmonton Oilers| NHL| Snapshots Bob McKenzie| Elliotte Friedman| Kris Russell

6 comments

Dallas Stars Hire Rick Wilson, Stu Barnes As Assistant Coaches

June 22, 2017 at 10:04 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Dallas Stars have decided who will join Ken Hitchcock behind the bench next season, hiring assistant coaches Rick Wilson and Stu Barnes. Curt Fraser will be a holdover from the previous staff. Hitchcock, hired after Lindy Ruff was let go at the end of the season will try and turn around what was an extremely disappointing club last year.

Wilson, 66, was around with Hitchcock during his first stint as head coach of the Stars, and is a life-long assistant in the NHL. He was first hired into the league in 1988 by the New York Islanders, and has been behind benches coaching defensemen ever since. His familiarity with Hitchcock and his systems will come in handy as the team looks to revamp the Stars play style.

Barnes on the other hand is still fairly green in terms of NHL coaching experience, only spending two years behind the bench under Marc Crawford during his Dallas stint. Barnes is a co-owner of the Tri-City Americans of the WHL (along with Olaf Kolzig) and has coached US prep academies. Just 46, Barnes is ten years removed from a playing career that took him all over the NHL. Suiting up for 1,136 games and registering 597 points, he made the transition from highly-touted young scoring threat to grizzled checking center quite smoothly.

Dallas Stars| Ken Hitchcock

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NHL Awards Recap

June 21, 2017 at 9:29 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

The NHL Awards were held Wednesday night and even though they were quite overshadowed by the simultaneous expansion draft selections, some interesting choices were made for the trophies. Below are the award winners, finalists and final voting totals:

Ted Lindsay Award — Most Outstanding Player (as voted by his peers)

Winner: Connor McDavid
Runners-up: Brent Burns, Sidney Crosby

Selke Award — Best Defensive Forward

Winner: Patrice Bergeron
Runners-up: Ryan Kesler, Mikko Koivu
Voting

Norris Trophy — Best Defenseman

Winner: Brent Burns
Runners-up: Erik Karlsson, Victor Hedman
Voting

Calder Trophy — Rookie Of The Year

Winner: Auston Matthews
Runners-up: Patrik Laine, Zach Werenski
Voting

General Manager Of The Year

Winner: David Poile
Runners-up: Peter Chiarelli, Pierre Dorion
Voting

Jack Adams Award — Coach Of The Year

Winner: John Tortorella
Runners-Up: Mike Babcock, Todd McClellan
Voting

Bill Masterton Award — Perseverance, Sportsmanship and Dedication

Winner: Craig Anderson
Runners-up: Andrew Cogliano, Derek Ryan

Lady Byng Trophy — Most Gentlemanly

Winner: Johnny Gaudreau
Runners-up: Vladimir Tarasenko, Mikael Granlund
Voting

Vezina Trophy — Goaltender Of The Year

Winner: Sergei Bobrovsky
Runners-up: Braden Holtby, Carey Price
Voting

Hart Trophy — Most Valuable Player

Winner: Connor McDavid
Runners-up:
Sidney Crosby, Sergei Bobrovsky
Voting

John Tortorella Auston Matthews| Brent Burns| Connor McDavid| Johnny Gaudreau| NHL Awards| Patrice Bergeron| Sergei Bobrovsky

3 comments

NHL Awards Preview

June 21, 2017 at 7:01 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 3 Comments

Caught up in the excitement of the Expansion Draft, it’s easy to forget that there is also an awards show tonight. Yes, the best trophy in all of sports, the Stanley Cup, has already been presented to the Pittsburgh Penguins, as has the Conn Smythe Trophy for playoff MVP to their captain, Sidney Crosby. Crosby also already locked up the Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy for the most regular season goals. Edmonton Oilers wunderkind Connor McDavid captured the Art Ross Trophy for the most regular season points as well. Braden Holtby locked up the William M. Jennings Trophy already too, as the Washington Capitals allowed the least amount of goals against in the regular season. Yet, all three of these players and many more still have a lot on the line tonight. Here are the nominees for tonight’s NHL Awards:

Hart Trophy – Most Valuable Player

Sergei Bobrovsky, Columbus Blue Jackets

  • Star goalie helped to lead the Blue Jackets to their best record in franchise history, all while topping the league in save percentage (.931) and goals against average (2.06)

Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins

  • The NHL’s leading goal-scorer and back-to-back winner of the Stanley Cup and Conn Smythe Trophy

Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers

  • 20-year-old phenom led the league in points and assists and took his team from the draft lottery to the second round of the playoffs

Norris Trophy – Best Defenseman

Brent Burns, San Jose Sharks

  • Not only led all defenseman in scoring with 76 points, but finished ninth overall among some of the league’s most dynamic forwards. Can check with the best of them as well.

Victor Hedman, Tampa Bay Lightning

  • A down year for the Bolts was a career year for Hedman, who finished just four points behind Burns with 72, and led all blue liners with 56 assists

Erik Karlsson, Ottawa Senators

  • If this award had been voted on after the playoffs, it might have been a different result. The NHL’s best puck-mover may still pull it off behind a 71-point campaign and an improved defensive game

Read more

Vezina Trophy – Best Goaltender

Sergei Bobrovsky, Columbus Blue Jackets

Braden Holtby, Washington Capitals

  • The Jennings winner also finished one goal against away from the league lead in goals against average – his GAA was 2.07 to Bobrovsky’s  2.06 – and was top five in save percentage (.925) and tied for first in wins (42)

Carey Price, Montreal Canadiens

  • It’s a two-horse race for the Vezina this year, as all-world Price was top ten in wins, save percentage, and goals against average, but can’t touch Bobrovsky or Holtby

Selke Trophy – Best Defensive Forward

Patrice Bergeron, Boston Bruins

  • Bergeron has won three of the past four Selke’s and hasn’t finished outside the top five in voting since 2008. He also led the league in face-off wins, winning over 60% at the dot, and trailed only McDavid in Expected +/-. Care to bet against him?

Ryan Kesler, Anaheim Ducks

  • Kesler finished third in face-off wins and played an important two-way role in the Duck’s playoff run

Mikko Koivu, Minnesota Wild

  • The Wild captain was top ten in +/- and fifth in face-offs, leading a strong two-way forward corps in Minnesota

Calder Trophy – Best Rookie

Patrik Laine, Winnipeg Jets

  • Finished just behind Matthews in goals (36) and assists (28), but had slightly better per-game production

Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs

  • Finished just ahead of Laine in goals (40) and assists (29), but had slightly worse per-game production

Zach Werenski, Columbus Blue Jackets

  • Led all rookie defensemen in scoring by a wide margin and drastically changed the Columbus power play

Lady Byng Trophy – Most Gentlemanly Player

Johnny Gaudreau, Calgary Flames

Mikael Granlund, Minnesota Wild

Vladimir Tarasenko, St. Louis Blues

Masterson Trophy – Dedication to Hockey

Craig Anderson, Ottawa Senators

Andrew Cogliano, Anaheim Ducks

Derek Ryan, Carolina Hurricanes

Jack Adams Award – Coach of the Year

Mike Babcock, Toronto Maple Leafs

Todd McLellan, Edmonton Oilers

John Tortorella, Columbus Blue Jackets

General Manager of the Year

Peter Chiarelli, Edmonton Oilers

Pierre Dorion, Ottawa Senators

David Poile, Nashville Predators

Anaheim Ducks| Boston Bruins| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Columbus Blue Jackets| David Poile| Edmonton Oilers| Expansion| John Tortorella| Mike Babcock| Mike Babcock| Minnesota Wild| Montreal Canadiens| NHL| Nashville Predators| Ottawa Senators| Pittsburgh Penguins| Players| San Jose Sharks| St. Louis Blues| Tampa Bay Lightning| Todd McLellan| Toronto Maple Leafs| Washington Capitals| Winnipeg Jets Andrew Cogliano| Auston Matthews| Braden Holtby| Brent Burns| Carey Price| Connor McDavid| Craig Anderson| Derek Ryan| Erik Karlsson| Johnny Gaudreau| Mikael Granlund| Mikko Koivu| NHL Awards| Patrice Bergeron

3 comments

Sabres Notes: Mueller, Coaching, Expansion

June 20, 2017 at 1:39 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

Mirco Mueller was dealt from the San Jose Sharks to the New Jersey Devils just before the expansion protection lists were submitted, but they weren’t the only team interested in him. Pierre LeBrun of TSN reports that the Buffalo Sabres were also in talks with the Sharks before they made the move for Nathan Beaulieu instead. It’s clear that the Sabres are looking for every opportunity to improve their defense after finding little consistency from the back end a year ago.

So far, the Sabres project to have some combination of Beaulieu, Rasmus Ristolainen, Zach Bogosian, Josh Gorges, Jake McCabe and Viktor Antipin in their regular group, with Justin Falk, Brendan Guhle and others fighting for the last few spots. That’s a group that could seriously use another upgrade, as various levels of inexperience and inconsistency flow throughout. With Vegas announcing that they’d have defensemen for sale after the expansion draft, it wouldn’t be surprising to hear Buffalo had picked up the phone to try and acquire one.

  • That is of course if Buffalo doesn’t lose a defenseman of their own in the draft. Though we expect the Golden Knights to go after Linus Ullmark (with William Carrier a close second), there is always the chance that Bogosian could be selected. After all, even though he’s been disappointing for the Sabres since coming from Winnipeg in the Tyler Myers trade, he is still just 26 and has the pedigree of a third-overall pick. His contract still has three years left at a $5.14MM cap hit (and actually costs more from a salary perspective) but if Vegas believes he can put his injury woes behind him and become the top-pairing two-way defender he was drafted as they could potentially take him off Buffalo’s hands.
  • John Vogl of the Buffalo News passes on a report that Phil Housley will hire an all-new assistant coaching staff for next season, with Terry Murray, Bob Woods and Tom Ward all not expected to be retained. New GM Jason Botterill is attempting to change the entire culture in the Buffalo organization, and that likely means wiping the coaching slate clean. Interestingly, Murray is the uncle of former Buffalo GM Tim Murray and is a career NHL coach who has held the head position in Florida, Philadelphia, Washington and Los Angeles.

Buffalo Sabres| Expansion| Phil Housley| Vegas Golden Knights Josh Gorges| Justin Falk| Mirco Mueller| Nathan Beaulieu| Zach Bogosian

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