Cape Breton Post

Flyers eye new approach in GM, unlike ‘unyielding’ Hextall

- BY DAN GELSTON

The Philadelph­ia Flyers fired general manager Ron Hextall because – to swipe a page from their glory days – he was Broad Street Bullheaded. Hextall preached patience. The Flyers want to win now. That clash of ideology turned toxic in Philadelph­ia’s front office, and it cost Hextall his job in his fifth season as GM. Paul Holmgren, the Flyers’ loyalist and team president, had few solid answers Tuesday as to why he made the move, other than to repeatedly call Hextall “unyielding.”

Hextall’s arrival signalled a new era in Flyers history, one where short-term fixes, bigbudget spending and mortgaging the farm system were no longer in vogue. He gamely tried to restock the farm system and refused to make a major trade for a star that could instantly inch the Flyers closer toward contention.

And when all that got the Flyers were a pair of first-round

playoff exits and a 10-11-2 record this season, Hextall got the boot.

“He was unyielding in his plan and remained that way,” Holmgren said. “Good for him. He’s a well-thought out, deepthinki­ng guy.”

The deep thoughts included packaging draft picks and prospects for All-Stars capable of carrying Claude Giroux, Wayne Simmonds, Jake Vorcek and James van Riemsdyk at least into May.

The Flyers expect to hire a GM in weeks and he’ll have to make an urgent decision: keep or fire coach Dave Hakstol.

“I hate to say Dave Hakstol’s fate is in the next GM’s hands but it is,” Holmgren said. “I’m not going to make that decision.”

Hakstol, 132-97-40 in three— plus seasons, was set to coach the Flyers on Tuesday night against Ottawa.

Holmgren said he never asked Hextall to fire the coach he hired with no NHL experience out of North Dakota. But Holmgren said Hextall had told him “of course, I’m thinking about it.”

But, Holmgren added, “he never did it.”

The Flyers did at least discuss the potential of adding Joel Quennevill­e after the Chicago Blackhawks fired the three-time Stanley Cup champion coach.

“I can tell you his name came up right away when he was let go,” Comcast Spectacor CEO Dave Scott said. “I think Ron was set on, stay the course.”

With his biggest backer gone, and the Flyers wallowing, Hakstol’s job is in serious danger.

“I like Hak. I think he’s done a decent job under the circumstan­ces he’s coached under,” Holmgren said.

“Decent” isn’t exactly an encouragin­g vote of confidence. Hakstol has had his issues – the Flyers are last in the NHL in the penalty kill (69.7 per cent) – but Hextall’s decision to enter the season with two oft-injured goalies haunted the team. The Flyers have matched a franchise-high with five goalies this season while prized prospect Carter Hart lingers in the minors.

“Is he our long-term solution? I don’t know that,” Holmgren said. “I’m not prepared to answer that. That’s another topic for the next GM.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Philadelph­ia Flyers President Paul Holmgren speaks with members of the media during a news conference Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.
AP PHOTO Philadelph­ia Flyers President Paul Holmgren speaks with members of the media during a news conference Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.

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