Showing posts with label P Quinn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label P Quinn. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Coaching News!

So according to James Mirtle the Edmonton Oilers have hired a new (old) coach and it's the first guy that I profiled in this space, Pat Quinn. I said at the time that I thought he was a likely candidate and that he wouldn't be a bad choice and I'll stand my that assessment. Some of Black Dog's comments in that post have me hoping that Rick Ley doesn't come with him. Mirtle is saying that Tom Renney is apparently going to be one of the assistants and Jim Matheson had said that it's likely at least one of MacT's old assistants would be staying. So let's hope it's good-bye Bucky and that Huddy is sticking around which would mean no Ley! I guess we'll know in about five minutes so speculating isn't really worthwhile. Assuming it is Quinn at the top and that Renney is coming with him this could be a very good combination. Quinn teams are usually a gritty and fun to watch. Renney teams tend to outshoot but have lower percentages. Quinn isn't afraid to raise his voice and Renney is generally seen as a player's guy. The only downside: we're the Canucks... hopefully that means Luongo is next.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

The Search Begins

The firing of Craig MacTavish means one thing for sure: the Edmonton Oilers will have a new coach next year. As such, I thought it would be interesting to evaluate various coaches that might be under consideration. As Jonathan Willis points out in his debrief on the firing, we should probably be looking at people that (1) have some NHL experience, (2) are still coaching a playoff team somewhere, (3) are outside of the organization and (4) have some rapport with Tambellini already. I'd say that any coaching candidate should have at least two and more likely three of these criteria to be under serious consideration.

The first candidate I'll be looking at is Pat Quinn. Quinn fulfills three of the four criteria (he's not coaching a playoff team anywhere) which is pretty good. First, let's take a look at his NHL experience. In order to do this I'm going to compare Quinn's performance at the NHL level with the coaches that immediately preceded him and the coaches that immediately followed him. The idea here is that the situation in terms of players is similar enough to give a reasonable gauge of the coach's performance. The idea comes from the Contrarian Goaltender who used a similar system in trying to determine the effect of Pat Burns' coaching style on goaltending. Pat Quinn has been hired and fired five times each which gives us ten different situations to look at. If he was replaced midway through a year only that year's results are included. If he was replaced after completing a season, the next season's results are included. This gives us the following snap-shot:


The non-Quinn coaches are Mike Murphy (2 times, 120 games), Rick Ley (2 times, 114 games), Bob McCammon (3 times, 112 games), Tom Renney (1 time, 82 games), Paul Maurice (1 time, 82 games) and Roger Nielson (1 time, 28 games). There looks to be a real difference here between Quinn and the other coaches. In fact, out of the ten comparisons there isn't one where the replacement coach is decisively better. This is a pretty impressive record of past success. His last NHL coaching job came in 2005-06 so it's not as though he's far removed from the game. If NHL experience is important to Steve Tambellini, Pat Quinn passes the test.

The other criteria are all easily addressed. Pat Quinn is not coaching a playoff team, he is from outside the organization and he will be familiar to Tambellini from their time together in Vancouver when Quinn was the coach and Tambellini was the Director of Public and Media Relations from 1990-1996. Quinn and Tambellini also worked together with the gold-medal winning Canadian Olympic team in 2002 where Quinn was again the coach and Tambellini was the Director of Player Personnel. The two were together in the same roles for the World Cup in 2004 and the Olympics in 2006. They are certainly familiar with one another and worked well enough together that Quinn was chosen for three consecutive best-on-best tournaments.

Quinn's reputation is that of a coach who relies on an attacking forecheck, but who is generally not considered a particularly good tactician. It would certainly be a change from the style used by the Oilers this past season which was generally quite passive. As an added bonus, Quinn has connections to the Edmonton area, having played for the Edmonton Oil Kings in the 1960s. The biggest downside is that the man is really old. Seriously. I think there is a good chance that Pat Quinn could be the next coach of the Edmonton Oilers and I don't think it would be a bad choice.