Flames fire Mike Keenan

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  • DwightShrute
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 01-17-09
    • 103241

    #1
    Flames fire Mike Keenan


    Flames fire Mike Keenan
    TODD KOROL/REUTERS FILE PHOTO
    Calgary Flames coach Mike Keenan and his bench look on in the final moments of play against the Chicago Blackhawks in Game 6 of their NHL Western Conference quarter-final hockey game in Calgary April 27, 2009. The Flames fired Keenan on May 22, 2009.




    Donna Spencer
    THE CANADIAN PRESS
    CALGARY – The Calgary Flames didn't accept that injuries were to blame for the NHL club's first-round playoff exit and fired Mike Keenan on Friday.
    Keenan, nicknamed Iron Mike, expected to be back to fulfil the final year of his contract in 2009-10 because he felt a season-ending rash of injuries was the reason for a poor finish.
    The Flames thought otherwise and dismissed the 59-year-old from Bowmanville, Ont.
    "Our team did not meet expectations," general manager Darryl Sutter said in a statement issued late Friday afternoon. "We believe this is a necessary change required to allow our team to continue toward our objective of winning the Stanley Cup."
    Calgary lost in six games to the Chicago Blackhawks in a series that ended April 27 with a 4-1 defeat. It was the fourth consecutive season the Flames were ousted in the first round with the last two exits under Keenan.
    The Flames have yet to live up to expectations raised by a run to the Stanley Cup final in 2004, when the Flames lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning in seven games.
    Sutter coached the team that year and in 2005-06 before stepping aside. Keenan's firing will raise speculation that Sutter could coach the team again. The GM won't address Keenan's firing with the media until Tuesday.
    If Sutter opts to hire a new coach, his next choice will be critical as the franchise is impatient for more than six or seven playoff games a year.
    Keenan, a surprising hire by the Flames on June 14, 2007, was the only man on the Flames coaching staff with any time left on his contract.
    The status of associate coach Jim Playfair, who coached the team the season before Keenan's arrival, assistants Rich Preston and Rob Cookson and goalie coach David Marcoux remains under review, the Flames said in the release.
    Calgary spent up to the US$56.7-million salary cap this season to ensure there would be depth for a long playoff run, but that price tag didn't get the Flames any further in the post-season than the previous three years.
    The Flames led the Northwest Division by 13 points in January. Injuries and inconsistent play eroded that cushion and cost Calgary home-ice advantage in the post season. The Flames finished fifth in the Western Conference with a 46-30-6 record.
    Calgary was Keenan's eighth NHL club as a head coach. Two days after the loss to the Blackhawks, Keenan was asked what he would have done differently.
    "I would have called for the medical team to make better improvements," he said. "I've had a lot of experience with playoff-ready teams. This team was going to be in that position.
    "In the end, they weren't given a fair opportunity because of medical and health reasons. There's never excuses, but there are reasons."
    Defencemen Robyn Regehr (knee) was absent from the playoffs and Dion Phaneuf (back, rib) and Cory Sarich (ankle) were not able to play to full capacity.
    Daymond Langkow (hand) and top penalty killer Rene Bourque (ankle) were hampered down the stretch and into the playoffs.
    Flames management felt the team was capable of more despite those limitations in firing Keenan.
    Sutter said at the season's conclusion that goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff's 76 games were too many.
    "There is a point also where the reduction of minutes or games played and the development of another goalie is very important," he'd said.
    Keenan leaves Calgary with an 88-60-16 regular-season record, while his 672 career victories ranks him fourth all-time among coaches. After 20 years of coaching in the NHL, Keenan may surface elsewhere in the league.
    "I don't need long-term contracts at my age to decide whether I want to coach or not," he'd said.
  • Slim
    SBR MVP
    • 11-13-08
    • 4722

    #2
    Bad move
    Comment
    • DwightShrute
      SBR Aristocracy
      • 01-17-09
      • 103241

      #3
      ya, he never stays around long anywhere he goes but I disagree with his firing at this time
      Comment
      • mathdotcom
        SBR Posting Legend
        • 03-24-08
        • 11689

        #4
        They're making room for MacT
        Comment
        • Brock Landers
          SBR Aristocracy
          • 06-30-08
          • 45359

          #5
          maybe he'll end up coaching every team in the NHL by the time he's done, pathetic
          Comment
          • DwightShrute
            SBR Aristocracy
            • 01-17-09
            • 103241

            #6
            Originally posted by Brock Landers
            maybe he'll end up coaching every team in the NHL by the time he's done, pathetic
            he hasn't yet?
            Comment
            • BrentCrude
              SBR MVP
              • 11-16-05
              • 4665

              #7
              Flames could hire Pat Burns to a short term contract!

              OK,just a joke because I like the guy and have sympathy for him where he's going to die soon of cancer.Why don't the Flames just hire Pat Burns and that way if he does as well as Keenan did,they won't have to fire him because he will just die.

              Anyone see the CBC interview of Pat living on the golf course in Florida with his wife making the most of the time he has left.Once in awhile a person has to watch that kind of stuff to put life in perspective where you don't sweat the small stuff.

              You have to admit though,when Burnsey was a cop in Quebec when he was young I'll bet he beat the hell out of more than one juvenile delinquent behind the cop shop.

              Not sure if Pat was getting alot of chemo?It would be interesting to know how that went and if it affected him if he was taking it.Lots of people are coming forward that beat cancer with alternative medicine in the last few days over the chemo kid sensation going on.I think Pat had bouts with a few cancers and the pancreatic is 100% death whether you take chemo or alternative medicine.
              Comment
              • DwightShrute
                SBR Aristocracy
                • 01-17-09
                • 103241

                #8
                Originally posted by BrentCrude
                OK,just a joke because I like the guy and have sympathy for him where he's going to die soon of cancer.Why don't the Flames just hire Pat Burns and that way if he does as well as Keenan did,they won't have to fire him because he will just die.

                Anyone see the CBC interview of Pat living on the golf course in Florida with his wife making the most of the time he has left.Once in awhile a person has to watch that kind of stuff to put life in perspective where you don't sweat the small stuff.

                You have to admit though,when Burnsey was a cop in Quebec when he was young I'll bet he beat the hell out of more than one juvenile delinquent behind the cop shop.

                Not sure if Pat was getting alot of chemo?It would be interesting to know how that went and if it affected him if he was taking it.Lots of people are coming forward that beat cancer with alternative medicine in the last few days over the chemo kid sensation going on.I think Pat had bouts with a few cancers and the pancreatic is 100% death whether you take chemo or alternative medicine.

                I agree. I like Keenan also. Love him when he was the Canuck's coach but unfortunately in this world of multi-millionaire players, the hard nosed demanding coaching style of his seems to have a short shelf life. Lots of guys love to play for him because they understand accountability for the organization, their teamates and the fans that pay huge $ to go see them perform.

                All Keenan wants to do is win! He expects his players to give a 100% every shift and dedicate themselves to the cause.

                A lot of these players have been told how great and special they are for so many years and are treated with "kid gloves" and basically sucked up to for so long that when they get an 'old school coach' like 'Iron -Mike', they whine and whine and the GM can't fire the whole team of course, the coach become the fall guy.

                Let's face it, a lot of players are in it for the paycheck and though they say winning the cup is their only goal.

                The ugly side of sports.

                Mike Keenan is a millionaire, assuming he never invested with Bernie Madoff.
                Comment
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