4:55pm: Chris Hine of the Chicago Tribune is reporting that Quenneville is “upset and surprised” by the firing, implying that it was not his decision. He also writes that the two are “best friends”. Hine points to the 2012 incident between Quenneville and Bowman over director of player personnel Barry Smith’s presence at practices as a similar example of perceived dysfunction in the Chicago organization. It will be interesting to see what other changes are instituted by the front office in the coming weeks.
11:53pm: After being swept in the first round of the playoffs, Blackhawks’ GM Stan Bowman promised there would be changes in Chicago and the first decision has come down. The team has fired Assistant Coach Mike Kitchen, and released this statement:
We believe this decision is best for our organization moving forward. We appreciate his many contributions.
Kitchen has been with the team since 2010 and goes all the way back to 1998 with head coach Joel Quenneville when they were both behind the bench in St. Louis. Kitchen actually replaced Quenneville as head coach of the Blues when he was fired in 2004, and remained with the club after the lockout until being fired himself during the 2006-07 season. Even before that, the two played together from 1979 through 1983 with the Colorado Rockies and New Jersey Devils.
Chicago ranked in the bottom half of the league in both powerplay and penalty kill this year, the latter of which Kitchen was responsible for. While they weren’t the only reason for their early exit, special teams did play a role in the Blackhawks not living up to expectations. Even in 2015-16 the Hawks’ PK had dropped to 22nd in the league, and someone eventually had to pay the price.
The ’Hawks now find themselves in a troubling cap situation once again, this time without the elation of a long playoff run to fuel their offseason. They’ll have to look long and hard at the core of this team and see if it is good enough to compete in the playoffs going forward, despite once again holding the top seed going in. Four games can do a lot of damage to the psyche of a franchise, and this is the first signal that the expected changes are coming fast.
jd396
If you can’t take the heat, get Kitchen out of the… uh… get the Kitchen out… uh… I’m sure there’s a joke there somewhere but I can’t find it.
Doc Halladay
Get the Mike out of the Kitchen? I dunno but that’s the best I could up with using less than 10 seconds of time lol
ChiSoxCity
This article is a joke. You’re attempting to put negative spin on an organization that won 3 Stanley Cups in a five year period. They would have won 5 Cups straight if the league allowed it. It’s a miracle the Hawks are still winning despite losing most of their young talent to a salary cap that punishes teams for prolonged success.