After missing the playoffs in each of the first two seasons after moving from Atlanta, the Winnipeg Jets expected to be on course for a postseason berth in 2013-14. An inconsistent start to the season and a recent slump has left the Jets far from the playoff picture, so it was time for a big change. The Jets fired coach Claude Noel and replaced him with Paul Maurice, the team announced Sunday. Assistant coach Perry Pearn was also let go. Assistant coaches Charlie Huddy and Pascal Vincent, goaltending coach Wade Flaherty and video coach Tony Borgford remain on the Jets' coaching staff. The Jets have lost five straight games, are 19-23-5 and in last place in the Central Division.
"It's certainly a very difficult day for
[Noel and Pearn]," general manager Kevin
Cheveldayoff said at MTS Centre on Sunday. "I appreciate
all the hard work and effort."
Cheveldayoff met with Noel and Pearn on Sunday
morning before meeting with his players. According to Cheveldayoff,
he initiated contact with Maurice to gauge his interest this past
Tuesday after a 4-2 home loss against the Tampa
Bay Lightning in which the Jets managed 14 shots. Maurice, whom
Cheveldayoff knows via "mutual acquaintances," will arrive
in Winnipeg on Sunday night and conduct his first morning skate
before the Jets' home game against the Phoenix
Coyotes. Maurice will serve as Jets coach through the end of the
2013-14 season, but Cheveldayoff indicated that both parties will
discuss their plans beyond this season soon.
"We don't have [an agreement] on paper,"
Cheveldayoff said. "We have a handshake over the phone."
But getting Maurice behind the Jets' bench as
quickly as possible and beginning the team's overhaul was crucial for
Cheveldayoff.
"The task at hand is something we all
wanted to get at very quickly," Cheveldayoff said.
Maurice, 46, has more than 1,000 games of NHL
coaching experience with the Hartford Whalers/Carolina
Hurricanes and Toronto
Maple Leafs, and he led the Hurricanes to the Stanley Cup Final
in 2002 and then to the Eastern Conference Final in 2009 during a
second stint with the organization. Maurice most recently coached
Metallurg Magnitogorsk of the Kontinental Hockey League, guiding that
team to a 27-13-12 record during the 2012-13 season.
"[Maurice] has coached a lot of different
types of teams," Cheveldayoff said. "He has had
experience with both veteran players and young players, and has had
success with both. He has experienced success; he has experienced
failure. He's battle-hardened, and he is energetic and chomping at
the bit to get back into the NHL."
In doing his background checks on Maurice across
the hockey world, Cheveldayoff said he emerged with a consensus
report on his new hire.
"There was one common theme of extremely
professional, extremely prepared, extremely knowledgeable about the
game, and a guy that is very direct and one-on-one with his people
and his players," Cheveldayoff said. "[Maurice] does
carry himself very well and does have the confidence of someone with
[1,084] games at the [NHL] level."
The Jets named Noel their coach when the
organization moved to Winnipeg from Atlanta. He had 24 games of NHL
head coaching experience before that appointment as an interim boss
for the Columbus
Blue Jackets at the end of the 2009-10 campaign. Noel spent the
2010-11 season as coach of the Manitoba Moose in the American Hockey
League. The Moose were the Vancouver
Canucks' American Hockey League affiliate, but the team played in
MTS Centre and was owned by True North Sports and Entertainment, the
group that eventually brought the Jets to the city. The Jets failed
to make the playoffs in Noel's first two seasons. Cheveldayoff
continued to lock up the core of the team this past summer, and the
Jets have eight players signed through at least the 2015-16 season
that count at least $3.9 million against the salary cap. But this
season the Jets have hovered near the .500 mark until the recent
skid. The high-water mark to this point was Nov. 15, when a third
straight shootout win pushed Winnipeg's record to 10-9-2. Goal
prevention has long been an issue for the franchise even dating back
to its days in Atlanta, and Noel was never able to correct that
problem. The Jets are tied for 25th in the League in goals against at
3.00 per contest this season. The franchise hasn't finished above
tied for 24th in that category since its only Stanley Cup Playoff
appearance in 2007. Desperate to snap the Jets out of their funk,
Noel shuffled all four of his forward lines before the team's game
Saturday night against the Columbus
Blue Jackets. The headline move was Dustin
Byfuglien, the team's top defenseman, going to the wing on the
first line. Columbus defeated the Jets 6-3 in what proved to be
Noel's final game. Did Cheveldayoff provide Noel with enough help?
"If I'm being honest, I would say no,"
Cheveldayoff said.
Though the Jets have struggled lately in their
tumble to the bottom of the Central Division, Cheveldayoff said their
five-game losing streak was not the only factor that went into his
decision to replace Noel.
"It really wasn't one single thing,"
Cheveldayoff said. "I think collectively over a period of
time there was certainly levels of expectations that we had
collectively for our group of players and individually for our
players. It just became apparent over the last little while here that
things were not trending in the right direction and that we were
going to have to do something to try to and move things back into a
fashion of moving forward."
Cheveldayoff also recounted the meeting with his
players.
"We talked about the life of being in
professional sports and the accountability and levels that people are
held to in those regards," he said.
It is possible that Maurice will only be the first
in a series of moves for the Jets, who have not progressed as
Cheveldayoff had expected. Noel and his players stated that
contending for a berth in the Stanley Cup Playoffs was a goal for
this season. So, Cheveldayoff will also be counting on Maurice to
provide a critical and detached look at a franchise that has not
reached the playoffs in nearly seven years.
"I believe that having Paul coaching our
group is going to help push us, and I mean us as [in] our management
staff as well," Cheveldayoff explained. "There are
going to be some outside eyes coming in critically evaluating our
roster, and that's going to help us make decisions moving forward."
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