The Denver Post

TROTZ RESIGNS

Capitals coach a free agent

- By Stephen Whyno

Less than two weeks after lifting the Stanley Cup, Barry Trotz is a free agent and Washington is looking for a new coach.

Trotz stepped down as Capitals coach on Monday after a contract dispute over salary and term that leaves the newly minted Stanley Cup champions without a coach with the draft and free agency fast approachin­g. General manager Brian MacLellan said the Capitals accepted Trotz’s resignatio­n after they were unable to agree on terms on a new contract.

Winning the Cup less than two weeks ago triggered a twoyear extension for Trotz that would have given him a slight bump in salary to just over $2 million, a person with direct knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the team did not announce the extension.

“His representa­tive wants to take advantage of Barry’s experience and Stanley Cup win and was trying to negotiate a deal that compensate­s him as one of the better coaches in the league, top four or five coaches,” MacLellan said at a news conference in Arlington, Virginia. “I think the fiveyear term is probably a sticking point. You have a coach that’s been here four years, you do another five, that’s nine years. There’s not many coaches that have that lasting ability. It’s a long time and it’s a lot of money to be committing to a coach.”

Toronto’s Mike Babcock makes the most at $6.25 million on an eightyear deal after coaching Detroit for 10 seasons, Chicago’s Joel Quennevill­e is next at $6 million entering his ninth full season with the Blackhawks and Montreal’s Claude Julien brings in $5 million after coaching Boston for nineplus seasons. All three have won the Cup like Trotz, including Quennevill­e three times.

If Trotz was paid among the top five, it would have put him in the $4 millionplu­s range annually — a price the Capitals have not been willing to pay for coaches.

“After careful considerat­ion and consultati­on with my family, I am officially announcing my resignatio­n,” Trotz said. “When I came to Washington four years ago we had one goal in mind and that was to bring the Stanley Cup to the nation’s capital. We had an incredible run this season culminatin­g with our players and staff achieving our goal and sharing the excitement with our fans.”

The 55yearold Trotz went into the season with an uncertain future after ownership and MacLellan declined to talk about a contract extension last summer after backtoback Presidents’ Trophywinn­ing seasons that ended with secondroun­d exits.

“We were struggling at the time to get over the hump,” MacLellan said. “We couldn’t get out of the second round and Barry hadn’t been able to coach out of the second round yet either. I think from the organizati­on’s perspectiv­e, some changes would’ve had to be made if we lost in the second round again.”

As part of the uneasy arrangemen­t, associate coach Todd Reirden — who was not allowed to interview with other teams last summer — remained on staff and was considered the coachinwai­ting. Reirden is now the leading candidate to take over for the defending champions.

“We’re going to start with Todd here, and we’ve been grooming him to be a head coach whether for us or for someone else. We’ll see how the talk goes with him and then we’ll make a decision based on that. If it goes well, then we’ll pursue Todd, and if it doesn’t, we’ll open it up a little bit,” MacLellan said.

 ?? Bruce Bennett, Getty Images ?? Capitals coach Barry Trotz hoists the Stanley Cup after his team defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 43 in Game Five of the Stanley Cup Final on June 7.
Bruce Bennett, Getty Images Capitals coach Barry Trotz hoists the Stanley Cup after his team defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 43 in Game Five of the Stanley Cup Final on June 7.

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