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Tuesday, June 7, 2022

For Some Stupid Reason, The Bruins Decided That Firing Bruce Cassidy Was The Right Thing To Do

 

    Nothing lasts forever in life, especially when you are the head coach of a professional sports team. You are always on borrowed time and in almost every situation, your job will end in one of two ways: either you will get fired or you will retire. Bruins head coach Bruce Cassidy is a very good hockey coach and a nice guy to boot so today's news that he had been fired with a year and three million dollars left on his contract was disappointing to say the least. Rather than get rid of GM Don Sweeney or President Cam Neely, two guys who you could question way more, the Jacobs family that owns and occasionally pays attention to the B's decided that Cassidy deserved to go after his teams reached the postseason in all six years that he was in charge of the Black and Gold. 
    After a first-round playoff exit in seven games against Carolina last month, you knew that something was bound to change for the B's as they fade further away from Stanley Cup contention with each passing year. Again, they were eliminated over two weeks ago so the lag time for this rash move seems like they had no conviction behind it. You can argue how much the head coach even matters in the NHL but for what it's worth, Cassidy did win the Jack Adams Award in 2020 which is given to the top head coach in the league. This is most likely a case of the best players on the Bruins (Brad Marchand, Patrice Bergeron, David Pastrnak, Charlie McAvoy, etc.) getting tired of hearing Cassidy constantly being critical of them for six years. He is brutally honest with the media which makes you believe that Bruce is likely even more blunt with his players if that's possible. Still, it's hard to argue with his results that included a Presidents' Trophy in 2020 (for the best record in the NHL) and an epic choke job in Game 7 of the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals vs. St. Louis. 
    Cassidy is only 57 years old meaning that he will likely be unemployed for a very brief period of time. Still, he has young kids and a family so uprooting them cannot be a fun thing to think about. If he wants to take a break from the daily grind of coaching, he would be a welcome addition to ESPN, TNT or the NHL Network's TV coverage. In 399 regular season games with Boston, Cassidy was 245-108-46 with a respectable 36-37 record in the postseason. In his four full seasons here (excluding when he took over mid-season in 2017 and the Covid shortened 2020-21 campaign), his teams all earned 100+ points even when there were only 70 games (damn you pandemic!) in 2019-20. 
    All eyes will be on Sweeney and Neely to see who they choose to succeed Cassidy. It'll be tough to top him and you'll remember that Cassidy quickly made people forget about Claude Julien who nevertheless won the last Cup for the Bruins back in 2011. Will Boston go with an experienced and veteran head coach like Barry Trotz or Peter DeBoer or do they go off the board with an assistant coach, minor league or college head coach that nobody has heard of before? Who knows but with so many injured players heading into the 2022-23 regular season including Marchand, McAvoy and Bergeron (if he decides to come back), this gives us even more reason to not pay much attention to the B's in the near future. 

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