NHL

Vancouver Canucks fire coach Willie Desjardins after finishing 29th

AP

 

The Vancouver Canucks fired head coach Willie Desjardins on Monday.

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — The Vancouver Canucks have fired coach Willie Desjardins after missing the postseason for the second consecutive season.

The team announced the move Monday, a day after ending the season with its eighth straight loss.

Assistant coaches Doug Lidster and Perry Pearn were also let go.

In three seasons with Vancouver, Desjardins went 109-110-27. The 60-year-old led the club to the playoffs as a rookie NHL head coach in 2014-15, but the rebuilding Canucks took a big step backward last season and then finished 29th out of 30 teams in the NHL standings this season.

A news conference was scheduled for Monday afternoon.

"It's been a challenging season and we all share responsibility for the results," Canucks general manager Jim Benning said in a statement. "However, we felt this change was necessary as we continue to develop a young team and look ahead to the future."

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Vancouver started out fast, becoming the first NHL team ever to win its first three games of a season while never leading in regulation. They added a fourth straight win to start the season, but then collapsed with a nine-game losing streak (0-8-1). The Canucks fought back into the playoff race around midseason, but cratered again down the stretch, going 7-23-3 over their final 33 games.

Vancouver finished 30-43-9 overall.

Desjardins took heat for his deployment of superstar twins Henrik and Daniel Sedin, along with other players. This season, some questioned his loyalty to certain members of Vancouver's veteran core — he leaned heavily on Brandon Sutter, Luca Sbisa and Alexander Edler — as well as fringe NHLers like Michael Chaput and Jayson Megna.

The power play and penalty kill were also disasters, ranked 29th and tied for 28th, respectively.

Vancouver was already in the process of dismantling its aging core when Desjardins took over. That reconstruction continued in 2015-16, with younger players taking on bigger roles while the team tried to balance the present and future.

The plan didn't come close to the desired results. The team stumbled to 31-38-13 last season, good for just 75 points and a 28th-place finish, and this season was even worse.

Desjardins replaced John Tortorella after his one tumultuous season in 2013-14, when Vancouver missed the playoffs for the first time since 2008.