New York Post

Labor Sec. offers help to end lockout

Quinn gets another chance with Team USA after Rangers firing

- By KEN DAVIDOFF kdavidoff@nypost.com

We’ve reached the “Government offers help” phase of the Major League Baseball lockout.

Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, the former mayor of Boston, revealed Monday that he has offered his services to end baseball’s labor turbulence which has all but officially delayed the start of spring training and, given the notable lack of progress in collective bargaining, already jeopardize­s the scheduled March 31 Opening Day.

“I have spoken to both the MLBPA and MLB about the ongoing contract negotiatio­ns and encourage both sides to continue engagement,” Walsh said in a statement, first reported by the Associated Press. “Like any contract negotiatio­n in any industry, I stand ready to help facilitate productive conversati­ons that result in the best outcome for workers and employers.”

Both the players’ associatio­n and MLB declined comment. The owners will convene in Orlando, Fla., this week, starting Tuesday, and the meetings will conclude Thursday with a news conference by commission­er Rob Manfred (who surely will announce the official delay of spring training). The players, meanwhile, will get together this week in Florida and Arizona. Those obligation­s will preclude the two sides from collective bargaining in person, with both sides strategizi­ng over where to go from here.

Late last week, rather than counteroff­er a players’ counter that featured modest tweaks of two ideas, the owners requested the usage of a third-party mediator to advance the talks. The players quickly turned down that suggestion. It wasn’t clear whether Walsh’s communicat­ion with Manfred and MLBPA executive director Tony Clark occurred before or after that developmen­t.

The two sides stand far apart on virtually every core economic issue, from servicetim­e manipulati­on to the luxury-tax threshold to salary arbitratio­n to revenue sharing and more.

When former managerial duo, John Davidson and Jeff Gorton, were abruptly dismissed before the third-to-last game of last season, David Quinn knew his days as the Rangers’ head coach were numbered.

He was not surprised when new president and general manager Chris Drury finished cleaning house and let him go a week after the initial firings and four days after the season ended. However, there wasn’t much time to dwell on it.

Just as his first NHL headcoachi­ng gig came to an end, Quinn was quickly presented with another opportunit­y — one that not only has sentimenta­l significan­ce, but could help him land his next chance in profession­al hockey.

Last summer, USA Hockey asked Quinn to be an assistant on Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan’s staff at the 2022 Beijing Olympics. But in discussing the possibilit­y of the NHL pulling its players in the same conversati­on, Quinn was also asked if he would step in as head coach should that come to fruition, to which the 55-year-old said “absolutely.”

Since he knew there was a good chance of that happening, which the NHL did at the end of December, Quinn said there wasn’t exactly a moment when he realized he was officially in charge of the storied USA hockey team.

The magnitude of the opportunit­y, however, seemed to hit him right away. Plus, it means just a little bit more in wake of his first job as an NHL head coach coming to an end.

“It does [have added significan­ce], it feels good,” Quinn told The Post in a recent phone interview. “Obviously, I missed it a lot over the last eight months. It was pretty, pretty good to get back on the ice the other day and coach a hockey team and be around a team and your coaches and the staff.

“It’s something I missed a lot, there’s a real hole in your life. I’m just grateful for this opportunit­y, that’s for sure.”

Around the second week of December, Quinn and Team USA general manager John Vanbiesbro­uck began preparing for the Games without NHL players. The team had its first practice on Jan. 31 and made the 18-hour journey to Beijing a couple days later. Their first preliminar­y game is against China on Thursday.

Quinn will get to live the Olympic dream he was robbed of back in 1987, when he learned he was a hemophilia­c and as a result, at age 20, he could never play hockey again. Despite not getting to play at the 1988 Calgary Games, Quinn agreed that coaching in Beijing somewhat fills that void.

That experience also helps the former Boston University coach relate to his players, who are coming from the NCAA, the American Hockey League, Kontinenta­l Hockey League and Swedish Hockey League. Although, after 15 seasons of coaching in some capacity at the college level, Quinn is seemingly back in his element.

The most notable difference between college and the NHL, according to Quinn, was the disparitie­s in the role. After feeling like the owner, president general manager and coach at BU, Quinn quickly realized how much goes on above him in an NHL front office. Learning how to manage and understand it with the Rangers took some time.

As for the actual coaching part, Quinn didn’t feel like there was a major difference because he was prepared to make the jump.

“I never looked at it as an adjustment, really,” he said. “I don’t say that to belittle the transition, I just felt I was ready for it. I thought that all of my coaching experience along the way prepared me for it. I just never felt that way. I never thought, ‘Oh my God, I’m coaching in the NHL.’ I just never felt that.

“You’ve got to coach to your personalit­y, you got to be true to yourself and I felt very good about the job we did for a long time. There were instances I wish I had done things differentl­y, that’s for sure.”

In reflecting on his three seasons behind the Rangers’ bench, when he compiled a 96-87-25 record, Quinn acknowledg­ed that he made mistakes — especially in his last year. While he declined to elaborate on the specifics of his regrets, one can assume that the apparent disconnect between the coach and the Rangers’ marquee forwards would be one of them.

It was apparent the Rangers needed a new voice in the locker room. But that’s not to say that Quinn didn’t help the organizati­on get to where it is today, sitting in playoff position over halfway through the season. He had the developmen­t touch that was needed during a rebuilding period, and Quinn was proud of how he and his coaching staff handled that.

“I just thought during a time where we were in a rebuild and it was — listen, it’s always about winning — but everybody understood the situation we were in,” said Quinn, who was a candidate to be the first coach of the Kraken before the expansion team went with Dave Hakstol. “That was not an easy situation. You’ve got an organizati­on to answer to because we’re rebuilding and we want to win. But I was proud of the fact that we were very competitiv­e.”

Still, Quinn mentioned a few times his firm belief in growing within the jobs you’re in.

“My experience last year certainly made me a better coach,” he said.

 ?? Reuters ?? ACT TWO: David Quinn watches over Team USA as the players prepare for the Olympic men’s hockey tournament.
Reuters ACT TWO: David Quinn watches over Team USA as the players prepare for the Olympic men’s hockey tournament.

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