Penticton Herald

Sutter is comfortabl­e, players less

- By DONNA SPENCER

CALGARY — Eyebrows may have disappeare­d into hairlines when the Calgary Flames rehired Darryl Sutter, but the team’s turnaround under the laconic rancher is indisputab­le.

In a swing from 2021 playoff bust to 2022 Stanley Cup contender, the Flames responded to Sutter’s tough-love coaching methods.

Calgary, which finished first in the Pacific Division, opens the playoffs Tuesday at home against the Dallas Stars. It will be Sutter’s first playoff game in six years.

“I’ve been kind of waiting for it for a while,” Sutter said Monday. “It’s why you play right?”

Hired March 4, 2021, Sutter returned to an NHL club he’d previously managed and coached prepared to make them.

Why did he want to? After 18 years as a head coach and two Stanley Cup wins with the Los Angeles Kings, Sutter was an adviser to the Anaheim Ducks’ coaching staff at that time and appeared to be leaning into his work on the family cattle ranch in Alberta.

“I’m a Flames fan. I didn’t like the way they were playing,” the 63-year-old from Viking, Alta., said recently.

“There were areas coming in that they weren’t in a position mentally or physically to even compete for a playoff spot and you had to do a total reset with them,” he added.

“As a coach, you have to get in there and figure out how can you help that player become a better player or change? Become a better team player? That is a hard job. Hard to do.”

Within days of replacing Geoff Ward, Sutter’s blunt comment about star winger Johnny Gaudreau’s lack of energy in a game indicated the Flames, no matter their status, couldn’t expect diplomacy in their coach’s public assessment of their performanc­e.

“Bringing Darryl in was good for our team,” Gaudreau said just over a year later.

Gaudreau sees similariti­es between Sutter and Bob Hartley, who coached the Flames to the second round of the post-season in 2015.

“They’re not the same coaches, but kind of haven’t had a coach here in a long time that’s been like Darryl like that. I just think he’s done a great job with our team. He’s brought our group together,” Gaudreau said.

Sutter’s refusal to spare players’ egos always set him apart in the NHL’s coaching ranks. Conservati­ve with praise, and even words a lot of the time, his unfiltered assessment­s land with weight.

When asked about how he felt about his inclusion in the conversati­on for the Jack Adams Award that goes to the NHL’s top coach, he replied: “Do you know who Jack Adams was? He was a miserable old guy.”

Chuckles followed a stunned pause in March when Sutter said “if you are a wildcard team I sure as hell don’t want to play Colorado in the first round because it’ll be a waste of eight days.”

That went missing from public hockey discourse during Sutter’s adviser stint with the Ducks. There’s layers beneath that taciturn exterior, according to Ducks coach Dallas Eakins.

“The biggest misconcept­ion of Darryl is this big, harsh Sutter vibe,” Eakins said in October when the Ducks faced the Flames.

“Hey, he is a hard man. He’s a farmer at heart, but that guy is one of the most caring, loving coaches to his players that I’ve seen. He truly cares about his players, so it’s always interestin­g the narrative that gets out there.”

Sutter dedicated the first win of his second coaching stint with the Flames to his mother Grace on her 85th birthday. Grace and Louis raised seven sons. Six, including Darryl, became NHL players.

Sutter and wife Wanda have three children. The youngest, Chris, has Down syndrome. On World Down Syndrome Day last month, Sutter said, “We’re thankful to have him. He’s a breath of fresh air every day.”

Sutter’s roots in the Flames organizati­on run deep with seven years as the club’s GM (2003-10), including three as head coach over that time. His rehire in Calgary brought back a man who led the franchise to its greatest post-season success since winning the Stanley Cup in 1989.

With Sutter behind the bench, Calgary lost in the seventh game of the 2004 Stanley Cup final to the Tampa Bay Lightning.

After leaving the Flames in 2010, he coached the Kings to Stanley Cups in 2012 and 2014.

Flames forward Trevor Lewis, who earned those two championsh­ip rings with Sutter, sees no alteration in him in Calgary.

“I don’t think he’s changed his philosophy,” Lewis said. “He gets the most out of guys. He’s been awesome for our group.”

Darryl’s career post-season record in the NHL is 89-81.

“I’ve coached a lot of playoff games and a lot of series,” he said. “That should help the players a little bit.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Calgary Flames coach Darryl Sutter watches during the third period of the team’s game against San Jose Sharks in San Jose, Calif., on April 7. Calgary is now preparing for the playoffs.
The Associated Press Calgary Flames coach Darryl Sutter watches during the third period of the team’s game against San Jose Sharks in San Jose, Calif., on April 7. Calgary is now preparing for the playoffs.

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