Toronto Star

Coach carousel spins again

The Oilers’ McLellan is the fourth bench boss to be fired this month

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Following a rare season without any in-season coach firings, NHL teams have been quick to drop the axe in 2018-19.

The decision by the Edmonton Oilers to sack Todd McLellan on Tuesday marked the fourth change behind the bench of the young campaign as struggling clubs look to shake things up.

McLellan joins John Stevens (Los Angeles Kings), Joel Quennevill­e (Chicago Blackhawks) and Mike Yeo (St. Louis Blues) as coaches handed their walking papers this month.

The dismissals of Yeo and McLellan came less than 12 hours apart, with both of their former clubs finding it difficult to gain traction.

The four moves come in stark contrast to the 2017-18 campaign when no coaches were fired in-season for the first time in more than 50 years.

Edmonton general manager Peter Chiarelli said after hiring Ken Hitchcock to replace McLellan that parity across the NHL — one or two points can be the difference between making or missing the playoffs — is part of the reason for so much movement a quarter of the way into the schedule.

“You win a couple games and you’re back in it,” Chiarelli said. “I just felt it was time.”

“Unfortunat­e as it is, that’s the way it’s trending,” he continued later. “All of us like parity in the league ... the margins are thin and you look for edges.”

St. Louis GM Doug Armstrong echoed those sentiments in explaining his decision to replace Yeo with associate coach Craig Berube on an interim basis a few days before U.S. Thanksgivi­ng.

The holiday south of the border is often viewed as an unofficial measuring stick for teams in the playoff chase.

“Ultimately, it comes back to our record,” Armstrong said. “When (Yeo) came in, he was able to jell the team and we went on a nice run. We won a playoff round. We had a good feeling about ourselves.

“That carried over to the next 25 games of (last) season. Then we hit a rut in December and quite honestly we haven’t gotten out of it.”

Big expectatio­ns and GMs starting to feel some heat of their own are common threads in the four coach firings.

Edmonton is led by superstar captain Connor McDavid, but had lost six of seven in regulation heading into Tuesday’s game in San Jose against the Sharks.

While the Oilers missed the playoffs in two of McLellan’s three seasons in charge, he was far from the only one responsibl­e for the franchise’s issues.

For his part, Chiarelli has made a number of questionab­le personnel decisions — trading Taylor Hall and Jordan Eberle, and signing Milan Lucic among them — that have failed to give McDavid the support he needs.

Armstrong remade the Blues’ forward group this summer by dealing for Ryan O’Reilly and signing Tyler Bozak, Pat Maroon and David Perron in free agency after watching his team miss the playoffs by a point last season.

But St. Louis — which has lost four of five, including consecutiv­e shutout defeats that sealed Yeo’s fate — sits 30th in the overall standings, two points up on last-place Los Angeles.

Edmonton, meanwhile, entered Tuesday in 26th.

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