Flyers give head coach the boot

The Associated Press
Stephen Whyno

It took less than two weeks as general manager of the Philadelphia Flyers for Chuck Fletcher to see what he needed to see with coach Dave Hakstol.
The Flyers still were making too many mistakes, still not playing up to their talent level, and it was all too clear the message wasn’t getting across from their fourth-year coach.
With the team mired in a four-game losing streak, Fletcher fired Hakstol yesterday and named Scott Gordon as interim replacement.
“To my eyes, there was a disconnect between what he was preaching and how the players were playing,” Fletcher said.
“We need a new voice,” he stressed. “We need to have the coaching staff [give] the message to the players, and hopefully have the players receive that message, and that’s why I decided to make the move.”
Not much has improved since the team fired general manager Ron Hextall just after Thanksgiving.
The Flyers have lost five-of-six, 11-of-14, and are in last place in the Eastern Conference.
They went 1-3-1 on the road trip Fletcher said he would use to evaluate Hakstol, the rest of the coaching staff, and the team in general.
Hakstol is the fifth coach fired this season.
Hired by Hextall from the University of North Dakota in 2015, Hakstol took the Flyers to the playoffs twice in his three full seasons, but they lost in six games in the first round each time.
The Flyers under Hakstol in 2016-17 became the first team in NHL history to miss the playoffs after having a 10-game winning streak, and last season also were the first to make the playoffs after a 10-game losing streak.
The inconsistency ultimately cost Hakstol his job.
“He’s a great guy,” winger Jakub Voracek said. “We made the playoffs two of three years. We had ups and downs.
“He was a new coach, first time coaching in the NHL,” Voracek added. “You learn obviously over the span of those years.
“It’s always tough when somebody’s let go.”
It was not immediately clear when the Flyers would hire a full-time coach, though Fletcher indicated he expects Gordon to work through the remainder of this season.
Three-time Stanley Cup-winning coach Joel Quenneville was fired by Chicago last month, but Fletcher said he has not gotten permission from the Blackhawks to speak with Quenneville and hasn’t talked to him in roughly two years.
Gordon is an NHL head coach for the second time after parts of three seasons leading the N.Y. Islanders.
He has spent the past three-plus seasons as coach of the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms, Philadelphia’s top affiliate.
“He’s got some creative ways of thinking [about] the game,” said defenceman Andrew MacDonald, who played for Gordon with the Islanders.
Hextall’s inability to turn things around was among the reasons he was unexpectedly dismissed Nov. 26. Hakstol at the time got a reprieve while team president Paul Holmgren searched for a GM.
Hakstol’s final game was a 5-1 loss at Vancouver on Saturday night. The 50-year-old coach from Warburg, Alta. said he felt his players battled all the way through the blowout loss.
He added it’s “not good enough, obviously, because the end result is what matters.”
“It’s been four years and you build relationships,” captain Claude Giroux said yesterday.
“I think for one guy to kind of pay the price for what’s going on, it’s not fair, but it’s the business side of it.”
Philadelphia hasn’t won the Stanley Cup since 1975 and was ready to try to contend after several years of retooling.
The Flyers went 134-101-42 under Hakstol, who coached the third-most games in franchise history behind Fred Shero and Mike Keenan–and the most without winning a playoff series.