Mercifully, itās over.
It had been speculated for weeks that Vancouver Canucks Head Coach Bruce Boudreau would be relieved of his duties and the move finally took place this past Sunday when Rick Tocchet was introduced as the 21st head coach in the franchiseās history during a press conference at Rogers Arena.
For the last fortnight, it was widely reported that Tocchet, the 58-year-old former head coach of the Coyotes and Lightning, would take over in Vancouver.
The whole thing stunk ā including the press conference.
The media availability session started off with Canucks General Manager Patrik Allvin setting the tone by stating that āas of this morning I decided to do a coaching change.ā
That in itself was comical as everyone knows that itās team president Jim Rutherford who calls the shots on every major decision in conjunction with the ownership group led by Francesco Aquilini.
It is, however, a concentrated effort by the organization to make Allvin look like the decision-maker but it sure didnāt fool the media, who then directed a barrage of questions towards Rutherford ā not Allvin.
Rutherford then took ownership of being too open with some of his comments regarding his teamās play and the lack of structure associated with it. He apologised to Boudreau for being so transparent and even added that he needed to āzip itā when it comes to his comments in the future.
But when pressed on how Boudreau was left to hang in the wind for a couple of weeks, Rutherford took a right turn and indirectly blamed the media for the situation.
āIt was played out in way that was out of our control. We can only do our business the way we see fit. We canāt change our business based on speculation. Thereās all kind of speculation out there. Itās not any different than most situations in professional sports,ā explained Rutherford, then using Boudreauās hiring in Vancouver as an example.
Thatās pure garbage.
How did Tocchetās name surface in the first place?
The media ā particularly the so-called insiders ā get the vast majority of their information from hockey executives and agents.
Either someone from the Canucks organization leaked that info or Tocchet did so himself.
Jeff Marek of Sportsnet even reported on Saturday that Tocchet would be named head coach on Monday. He was a day late with that call, but again, ask yourself the question - where did he get the information?
Then there was the press conference last Monday that was supposed to be an update on the Tanner Pearsonās medical situation but quickly delved into Boudreauās status.
When pressed by TSNās Farhan Lalji on whether or not the organization had spoken to potential replacement candidates, Rutherford responded that āI have ā and Iām not going to get into namesā¦and this is even going back a couple of months agoā¦that I have called a few peopleā¦yes.ā
Thatās not speculation.
Thatās you telling everyone youāre looking for a replacement for Boudreau, so own it.
Sorry Jim but Iām not buying what youāre selling, and if you took a look at social media, I donāt think Canuck fans are either.
What the organization did to Boudreau was classless.
As soon as the āspeculationā got to ridiculous levels, the Canucks should have relieved Boudreau of his duties and appointed someone such as assistant coach Mike Yeo to take over the reigns until Tocchetās alleged commitment to TNT as a studio analyst was observed.
When questioned on why that scenario didnāt play itself out, Rutherford answered by saying that Boudreau was āunder contractā until June 30.
That response was complete rubbish as well.
Boudreau was also under contract when he was dismissed this past Sunday.
Rutherford isnāt stupid.
The Canucks were going through a tough stretch in their schedule with five road games back east and then returning home to face Tampa, Colorado and Edmonton.
They let Boudreau be the fall guy.
Tocchet, meanwhile, takes over the team as it heads into an extremely soft part of their schedule as only four of their next dozen games are against teams that currently qualify for the playoffs.
No one is arguing that Bruce Boudreauās job should not have been on the line.
Professional sports are about winning and Boudreauās team wasnāt getting it done this year.
And it is managementās prerogative to make changes but there is a right way and wrong way to do things.
The Canucks embarrassed themselves on this one and no organizational spin can change that.
Veteran B.C. sports personality Bob āthe Mojā Marjanovich writes twice weekly for Black Press Media. And check out his weekly podcast every Monday at or your local Black Press Media website.
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