Rangers Fire Multiple AHL Coaches

After the AHL’s Hartford Wolf Pack finished last in the league this season, its parent club is making sweeping changes. The Rangers announced Sunday that head coach Grant Potulny, as well as assistants Paul Mara and Jamie Tardif, have been relieved of their duties.

Potulny’s run in charge of the Rangers’ next wave of prospects ends after just two years. A longtime assistant coach at the University of Minnesota before taking over Northern Michigan’s program, Hartford was Potulny’s first professional coaching job. The former Senators draft pick (fifth round, 2000) amassed a 56-71-17 record as Hartford missed out on the AHL’s 23-team playoffs on both occasions. Hartford’s 26 wins in 72 games this season gave them the league’s worst record.

It’s not as if Hartford’s roster is overflowing with high-end prospects, but their lack of scoring depth and defensive competency overall was striking. Only two players hit the 30-point mark: Trey Fix-Wolansky and Brendan Brisson. Not a single player with at least 25 games played for them logged a plus rating.

They’re now looking at a full minor-league coaching overhaul with both of Potulny’s assistants following him out the door. Mara, who played 156 games for the Rangers from 2007-09 as part of a 12-year NHL career, first joined the Blueshirts in a coaching capacity in 2023 on their development staff before being reassigned to the AHL staff later that year. All of his previous coaching experience had come in women’s hockey, winning a gold medal as an assistant on Team USA’s staff in 2018 while winning two NWHL/PHF titles with the Boston Pride in 2021 and 2022.

Tardif is the longest-tenured name among the group. The 41-year-old just wrapped up his fourth and final season as an assistant in Hartford. He’s yet to hold a head coaching gig at any level and was previously an assistant coach with the OHL’s Soo Greyhounds from 2018-22, as well as a player/coach with the ECHL’s Quad City Mallards in 2017-18.

Only former Coyotes draft pick Brendan Burke, son of longtime NHL netminder Sean Burke, remains among Hartford’s core coaching staff as their goalie coach. That makes sense given the success of Rangers third-stringer Dylan Garand there this season. Given Hartford’s struggles in front of him, Garand’s 16-15-2 record and .896 SV% in 36 outings stand out in a positive light.