The Peterborough Examiner

Struggling Flyers fire GM Hextall

- DAN GELSTON

PHILADELPH­IA — The Philadelph­ia

Flyers fired general manager Ron Hextall on Monday, with the National Hockey League team struggling and coming off a 6-0 loss to Toronto.

Hextall was dismissed after 4½ seasons on the job. The Flyers have a 10-11-2 record under coach Dave Hakstol and already have used five goalies this season.

Flyers president Paul Holmgren thanked Hextall for his “many significan­t contributi­ons, but it has become clear that we no longer share the same philosophi­cal approach concerning the direction of the team.”

He added that an immediate change was in the team’s best interests and he hopes to have a new GM “as soon as possible.”

The Flyers play Tuesday against Ottawa at home where a once-rabid fan base has stayed away from Wells Fargo Center in droves, and the ones that come serenade a listless loss chanting “Fire Hakstol!”

Holmgren and Comcast Spectacor chair and CEO Dave Scott said they will not comment until a Tuesday news conference.

Hextall played 13 seasons in the NHL and had two stints covering 11 years with the Flyers. He also spent seven seasons as assistant GM with the Los Angeles Kings.

His ouster could be tied in to his steadfast support of Hakstol, the coach he hired with no NHL experience out of North Dakota in 2015. The move stunned the NHL and Hextall seemingly staked his career on Hakstol handling the grind of coaching in pressure-packed Philadelph­ia. The Flyers haven’t won a championsh­ip since capturing the Stanley Cup in 1974 and ’75. They have reached the final and lost six times over that span.

Hextall had wanted to ease off the franchise’s win-now mode that had been a hallmark since the 1970s under late owner Ed Snider.

Hextall inherited a salary cap mess from Holmgren, his predecesso­r, and inherited a talented nucleus of stars that included Claude Giroux, Wayne Simmonds and Jake Voracek.

But taking a page from their Wells Fargo Center neighbours, the 76ers, Hextall wanted his own process.

That meant patience and building through the draft and restocking a farm system in disarray.

Sean Couturier, Shayne Gostisbehe­re, Travis Konecny, Ivan Provorov and Nolan Patrick, the No. 2 pick of the 2017 draft, are among the crop of young players the Flyers counted on Hakstol developing into key cogs on a championsh­ip team. The Flyers now have roughly US$7 million in salary cap space.

“I think Ron has establishe­d a philosophy that is probably long overdue,”

Snider said when he hired Hextall.

“I have probably been a little too anxious to win another Cup.”

The Flyers did make the playoffs twice under Hextall, but that seemed more of a quirk than a true step toward Eastern Conference contention.

The Flyers won 10 straight games in 2016-17 and missed the playoffs; they lost 10 straight last season and made them. The Flyers went 42-26-14 (98 points) last season.

The new GM will make the call on the fate of the coaching staff — putting Hakstol firmly on the hot seat.

Former Chicago Blackhawks Stanley Cup champion coach Joel Quennevill­e is available after he was fired this season.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Flyers fired general manager Ron Hextall after 4 1/2 seasons on the job.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The Flyers fired general manager Ron Hextall after 4 1/2 seasons on the job.

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