Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Blackhawks fire 3-time Stanley Cup-winning coach Quennevill­e

- By Jay Cohen AP Sports Writer

Joel Quennevill­e knew the deal. After three Stanley Cup titles and nine playoff appearance­s with the Chicago Blackhawks, the longtime coach figured this was a big season for him.

“I only think we’re in the winning business and we better win,” Quennevill­e said on the first day of training camp.

Two months later, it was over.

The Blackhawks fired Quennevill­e on Tuesday, ending a wildly successful run that returned the franchise to the top of the NHL after years of heartache.

“This is certainly a very difficult decision,” general manager Stan Bowman said in a statement. “But I believe it is in the best interests of the Blackhawks organizati­on. We need to maximize each and every opportunit­y with our playoff goals in mind and create continued growth and developmen­t throughout our roster at the same time.

“After much deliberati­on the last several days, with great respect to what Joel has meant to the Blackhawks, we knew we had to make a change.”

Assistants Kevin Dineen and Ulf Samuelsson also were let go. Jeremy Colliton was hired as the 38th head coach in franchise history, and Barry Smith, 66, moved from Chicago’s front office to the bench as an assistant coach.

Colliton moves from Chicago’s American Hockey League affiliate in Rockford, Illinois, and is now the NHL’s youngest head coach at 33. Blackhawks forward Chris Kunitz, defenseman Duncan Keith and goaltender­s Corey Crawford and Cam Ward are older than Colliton, and defenseman Brent Seabrook also is 33.

“All of those associated with Jeremy strongly believe he possesses many of the tools that will make him a successful head coach in this league,” Bowman said. “He has been very impressive as a communicat­or, a leader, and coach. He knows the Blackhawks system, understand­s our players and our culture and we believe he gives us the best opportunit­y to have success and grow as a team.”

The 60-year-old Quennevill­e had another year left on a three-year contract extension he signed in 2016 that pays him $6 million per year, second highest in the NHL behind Mike Babcock in Toronto.

He was the longest-tenured head coach in the NHL and the second coach fired in the past three days after the Los Angeles Kings dismissed John Stevens on Sunday.

Whenever Quennevill­e wants to get back to work, he likely will have plenty of suitors.

The former NHL defenseman has 890 wins in 22 years as a head coach with St. Louis, Colorado and Chicago. Scotty Bowman, Stan’s father and a senior adviser with the Blackhawks, is the only man with more regular-season victories.

Quennevill­e took over Chicago four games into the 2008-09 season, replacing Denis Savard after the Hall of Famer was let go by former general manager Dale Tallon. What followed was an unpreceden­ted run for one of the NHL’s Original Six franchises.

Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane and Keith blossomed with Quennevill­e behind the bench, and the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup in 2010, 2013 and 2015. They also made it to the conference finals in 2009 and 2014.

 ?? G-JUN YAM - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this July 21, 2017 file photo, Chicago Blackhawks’ head coach Joel Quennevill­e speaks at a news conference during the NHL hockey team’s convention in Chicago. The Blackhawks have fired the three-time Stanley Cup winning coach.
G-JUN YAM - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this July 21, 2017 file photo, Chicago Blackhawks’ head coach Joel Quennevill­e speaks at a news conference during the NHL hockey team’s convention in Chicago. The Blackhawks have fired the three-time Stanley Cup winning coach.

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