ST. LOUIS -- The St. Louis Blues fired coach
Joel Quenneville on Tuesday and replaced him with assistant Mike Kitchen.
Quenneville, the winningest coach in franchise history and the NHL's
coach of the year for the 1999-2000 season, was let go as the Blues
scrambled to avoid missing the playoffs for the first time in 25 years.
The Blues are in ninth place in the Western Conference with a 29-23-7-2
record. Only the top eight teams make the playoffs.
Quenneville was the second NHL coach to be fired Tuesday. The Phoenix
Coyotes fired Bob Francis earlier in the day and replaced him with
assistant Rick Bowness. Phoenix has won just two of their past 14 games
and, at 20-24-15-3, are in last place in the Pacific Division and 13th
in the Western Conference.
Kitchen, 48, was given a multiyear contract. He has been with the Blues
as an assistant since 1998. He was an assistant with the Toronto Maple
Leafs for eight seasons before that.
Quenneville took over as Blues coach on Jan. 6, 1997, and has led St.
Louis to at least 40 wins in five of his six full seasons with the team.
Joel Quenneville led the Blues to five 40-win seasons in his six years with the team.(AP)
The Blues won 307 games during his tenure, but went just 34-34 in the
postseason, including a trip to the 2001 Western Conference finals --
where they lost to Colorado in five games.
He won his 300th game Jan. 1 against the New York Rangers.
"Somebody's got to take the heat when the team's not playing very well,
and it's pretty tough to fire a whole team," said
Chris Pronger, the MVP and Norris Trophy winner as the league's top
defenseman in 2000. "Obviously, the coach is the easiest guy to let go,
but at the same time we as players haven't played very well."
At times this season, Pronger said, "at times we seemed lackadaisical
out there and not really put our best foot forward. For Joel to take the
heat for that is kind of sad."
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