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Hours before the Philadelphia Flyers were set to take on the Montreal Canadiens on Tuesday night, the organization announced that coach John Tortorella had been relieved of his duties.

The move shouldn’t come as a shock to anyone. After the last Flyers’ game, he was quoted as saying:

I’m not really interested in learning how to coach in this
type of season.

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If that’s not walking straight on the plank to be pushed at sea, I don’t know what is. His stay in Philadelphia lasted less than three complete seasons. In 237 games, he had a 97-107-33 record with the Flyers, his second-shortest stint in the NHL; he only stayed in Vancouver for a single season.

While Tortorella was a very effective coach in the past, his style doesn’t really fit in today’s NHL. The days of the tough coaches are long gone in the NHL. Martin St-Louis often tells the media that a significant part of his job is selling his teachings to the players.

Once upon a time, hockey players were like robots and would do as the coach ordered them. Athletes want to understand why they must do or act a certain way. Juraj Slafkovsky didn’t start playing a more physical game because he was told to do so. It was explained to him why the organization needed him to play that way to become the best player he could be.

Don’t get me wrong—the man once was a great coach. He’s ninth in all-time wins among NHL coaches with 770 wins (12 short of Al Arbour in eighth place). He won the Stanley Cup with the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2004 and captured the Jack Adams Trophy in 2017 with the Columbus Blue Jackets and in 2004 with the Bolts. The Canadiens coach has repeatedly said he has learned a lot from his former coach, but it’s obvious to anyone watching him interact with his team that he didn’t take all the leaves out of Tortorella’s book

The game has evolved, and the coaching has as well. St. Louis is a perfect example of it, and Tortorella is part of a near-extinct species. It will be interesting to see if another team is willing to take a gamble on the 66-year-old bench-boss.


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