Calgary Herald

New coach is not sort to beat around the bush

- WES GILBERTSON wgilbertso­n@postmedia.com

The Calgary Flames’ new head coach originally hails from about 90 minutes northeast of the Saddledome, from a speck on the map known as Three Hills.

That’s the official word, right there in Bill Peters’ bio.

“It’s Three Hills, but it’s actually two hills and a mound, as he puts it,” quipped Flames general manager Brad Treliving after introducin­g Peters to the media Monday, a quick and unsurprisi­ng resolution to a coaching search that lasted all of six days.

“When you meet him, he’s a small-town values guy. He’s direct. You want to know an answer? Just ask him a question. There will be

When you meet him, he’s a small-town values guy. He’s direct. You want to know an answer? Just ask him.

no fluff . ... He’s direct and straightfo­rward.”

Which means, some of his loved ones — specifical­ly, any who’ve been spotted or photograph­ed in the past in copper and blue — should brace for a blunt reply to their ticket requests.

While Peters has been on an extended road-trip, working in Spokane, Wash., and then Rockford, Ill., and then Detroit and, for the past four seasons, as bench boss of the Carolina Hurricanes, his prairie roots have remained.

His parents still live in the Wild Rose Province.

His in-laws, too. Same goes for two sisters. There’s more. Nieces. Nephews. “I know who the real Flames fans are, and they can have my tickets,” Peters said with a wink. “The rest can buy tickets.”

On paper, Peters’ stint in Carolina was underwhelm­ing.

He posted a combined record of 137-138-53 in four campaigns. He missed the playoffs in each of those, freed up to coach Canada’s winning entry at the IIHF World Hockey Championsh­ip in 2016 and to go for gold again May 4-20 in Denmark at the latest instalment of the internatio­nal spring showdown.

Still, the 53-year-old made a heck of a first impression at Monday’s announceme­nt, probably winning over a lot of skeptics who were hoping for a bigger name to take command of this bunch.

Peters vowed that his troupe will play with pace and also emphasized puck possession, stressing faceoffs are important “because that’s the first 50-50 battle of your shift.”

His goal is that the Flames will rank among the Top-10 on both the power play and penalty kill.

With “a lot of talent and a lot of good pieces” on the existing roster, he already has his sights higher than simply squeaking into the post-season in 2018-19.

“I want to be a team that gets off to a good start, sustains that quality start and has a playoff spot wrapped up and then you’re fighting for home ice,” Peters said. “That’s what I would love to see.”

That’s a lofty goal for a squad that parachuted out of the playoff race during the month of March, ultimately finishing 11 points out of the final wild card slot in the Western Conference and costing former head coach Glen Gulutzan his job.

If Peters can pull it off, though, his popularity will stretch far beyond Three Hills or Killam, Alta., another of his whistle-stops as a youngster.

“Obviously, if you ever get a chance to come home, in whatever job you’re doing, you’re going to probably do it,” said Flames alternate captain Sean Monahan, one of five skating staffers in attendance at Monday’s unveiling. (The others? Captain Mark Giordano and fellow defencemen TJ Brodie, Travis Hamonic and Michael Stone).

“So him being an hour and a half from home, I’m sure he’s going to have a lot of support and I’m sure he’s going to feel some pressure. As we all do. I think everybody on this team now, we’re at a point where losing is not acceptable. Not being in the playoffs, that’s not acceptable. I think he feels the same way.”

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