Times Colonist

After just one season, Fenton is out as Wild GM

- DAVE CAMPBELL

ST. PAUL, Minnesota — Less than 15 months after hiring Paul Fenton as general manager, Minnesota Wild owner Craig Leipold changed his mind.

Still confident he has a contending team, Leipold decided to fire Fenton on Tuesday despite the unusual late-summer timing to try to redirect the franchise before it drifted further off track. The Wild’s six-year streak of making the playoffs ended in the spring.

“Our organizati­on and our culture were a little different than the way Paul wanted to handle things. We just felt this was the time to do it,” Leipold said.

There was no “final straw,” the owner said, but rather a series of “smaller issues” that stacked up prior to the surprising move.

“It wasn’t a good fit. That was really it. The culture wasn’t the same,” Leipold said. “I didn’t have the same vibes with our employees in hockey ops, and I think the attitude of some of the players and all the people and the coaching and in the locker-room and in the training room, it was just a feeling that we didn’t have the right leader for our organizati­on.”

When Leipold picked Fenton to replace Chuck Fletcher there was no desire in the front office to embark on a significan­t rebuild, particular­ly in the NHL with a championsh­ip that is the most attainable of the major sports given the annual unpredicta­bility of post-season play. Fenton initially obliged the owner’s belief that “tweaking” was all that needed to be done, but the three forward-forforward trades he made before the deadline neither boosted the team’s chance of qualifying for the playoffs nor restocked the prospect pool while disassembl­ing the once-promising core.

Ryan Donato showed flashes of productivi­ty in his arrival from Boston for Charlie Coyle. Kevin Fiala is 4 ⁄ years younger, at least, than Mikael Granlund, the player who was shipped to Nashville in that deal.

Coyle thrived as the Bruins reached the Stanley Cup final, though, as did Nino Niederreit­er during Carolina’s surge to the Eastern Conference final. Victor Rask, the underperfo­rming centre acquired from the Hurricanes for Niederreit­er, still has three years at $4 million US each remaining year on his contract.

Leipold, however, said he didn’t factor those deals that have added angst to a frustrated fan base into the decision, even acknowledg­ing they could wind up benefiting the Wild over time. The owner, instead, described Fenton and his no-nonsense personalit­y as entirely overmatche­d for the job, with the exception of his “tremendous” scouting ability.

“It was the other portion of being a general manager, the organizati­onal part, the strategic part, the management of people, the hiring and motivating of the department­s,” Leipold said. “When I talk about not being a good fit, that’s what I’m referring to.”

Fenton came from Nashville, where he was the long-time lieutenant under general manager David Poile. Leipold, of course, once owned the Predators. So why couldn’t he have avoided the misstep in the first place?

“That’s a great question. I missed it, and this is on me,” Leipold said. “I don’t like the fact that it didn’t work out. Paul is a really strong, strategic scout. He identifies talent, understand­s developmen­t, but there were parts of his role that just wasn’t working out to my satisfacti­on.”

Assistant general manager Tom Kurvers was named acting general manager, until a replacemen­t is hired.

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Paul Fenton came to Minnesota from Nashville, where he was assistant GM.
BRUCE BENNETT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Paul Fenton came to Minnesota from Nashville, where he was assistant GM.

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