Mike Keenan | |||
---|---|---|---|
Born | October 21, 1949 Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada | ||
Coached for | Philadelphia Flyers Chicago Blackhawks New York Rangers St. Louis Blues Vancouver Canucks Boston Bruins Florida Panthers Calgary Flames Metallurg Magnitogorsk Kunlun Red Star | ||
Coaching career | 1984–2017 |
Michael Edward Keenan (born October 21, 1949) is a Canadian former professional hockey coach. Previously, he served as head coach and/or general manager with several NHL teams between 1984 and 2009. He currently ranks fifth in playoff wins with 96. He is noted for his early career success in coaching Team Canada to win the 1987 Canada Cup round-robin tournament in a thrilling best-of-three series finale against Viktor Tikhonov's Red Army team. [1] He is one of three coaches to coach in a playoff Game 7 ten times, for which he won five times. [2] Keenan was the third person to lead three different teams (Philadelphia, Chicago, New York) to the Stanley Cup Finals; only one coach has accomplished the feat since Keenan. [3] [4]
Keenan won a Stanley Cup championship as coach of the New York Rangers in 1994. He also won the Gagarin Cup while coaching Metallurg Magnitogorsk in 2014, and he became the first head coach to have won championships in both the NHL and KHL, later to be joined by Bob Hartley after his win in 2020–21. [5]
Currently, he is 15th all time in National Hockey League wins as one of 23 head coaches with 600 wins in NHL history. In each of his first eleven seasons, Keenan led his team to the Stanley Cup playoffs; in the subsequent nine seasons that followed, his teams only made it to the playoffs twice. His tough coaching style and attitude towards his players have earned him the nickname "Iron Mike".
His first coaching job was at Forest Hill Collegiate Institute in Toronto, Ontario, where he coached the varsity hockey team. In 1977 he became the coach of the Oshawa Legionaires of the Metro Junior B Hockey League, where he led them to back-to-back championships in 1979 and 1980. The following year he began his junior coaching career with the Peterborough Petes before moving on to the Rochester Americans, which he guided to the American Hockey League championship in 1983. He returned to the University of Toronto to lead it to the CIAU title.
Keenan landed his first high-profile job with the Philadelphia Flyers in 1984. [6] From the 1988-1989 through the end of the 1991-1992 season, Keenan coached the Chicago Blackhawks, [7] nearly to the pinnacle of hockey in 1992, losing the Stanley Cup to the Pittsburgh Penguins. His time with the Blackhawks was full of glory, with, for example, Mike Peluso accruing a remarkable 408 PIM in only 63 games in Keenan's last year as coach. In 1993, he became the New York Rangers head coach and led the team to its first Stanley Cup win since 1940, something the Flyers haven't done in nearly 50 years. Prior to the 1993 season, he was also a candidate for the Detroit Red Wings head coaching job that eventually went to Scotty Bowman. [8]
The 1994 season saw Keenan become the first to coach two teams to a Game 7 in the Stanley Cup Finals, having previously coached the Flyers in a losing effort against the Edmonton Oilers in 1987. He was followed in this feat in 2009 by Mike Babcock of the Detroit Red Wings. [9] In winning the 1994 Stanley Cup, Keenan managed to avoid becoming the first coach in NHL history to lose Game 7s with two teams (the fate which would befall Babcock in losing to the Pittsburgh Penguins [9] ).
After leaving the Rangers, Keenan went on to serve as coach and general manager of the St. Louis Blues (1994–96), [10] and coached the Vancouver Canucks (1997–98), and the Boston Bruins (2000–01). He was named head coach of the Florida Panthers on December 3, 2001, before becoming its general manager. On September 3, 2006, Keenan resigned his position and was replaced by head coach Jacques Martin.
On April 24, 2007, Keenan would take his next role as senior advisor to the Swedish Ice Hockey Association. This role would not last long as he was named head coach of the Calgary Flames on June 14, 2007. Keenan would go on to pass Pat Quinn for 4th on the all time NHL coach win list (648 wins) on February 12, 2009.
On May 22, 2009, after two consecutive first round playoff losses, Keenan was fired as head coach of the Calgary Flames; he had one year left on his contract. [11] He recorded his 600th win as an NHL coach with the Flames. [12]
On October 1, 2009, MSG Network announced that Keenan would join the Rangers MSG Network broadcast team of Sam Rosen, Joe Micheletti, Al Trautwig, John Giannone, Dave Maloney, and Ron Duguay as a regular guest analyst for pre-game, intermission, and post-game reports on the network. He's also an analyst on MSG Hockey Night Live with Trautwig, Duguay, Maloney, Ken Daneyko, and Butch Goring.
On May 13, 2013, Keenan signed a contract with Metallurg Magnitogorsk of KHL. [13] On April 30, 2014, Keenan's Metallurg team won the KHL championship with a game seven victory over HC Lev Praha. In winning the team's first Gagarin Cup, Keenan became both the first North American coach to win a KHL championship and the first coach to win both the Gagarin Cup and the Stanley Cup. [14] On October 17, 2015, Keenan was fired by Magnitogorsk.
On March 16, 2017, Keenan was announced as the new head coach of HC Kunlun Red Star, the KHL's first Chinese based team. [15] After a disappointing start to the 2017–2018 season, Keenan was fired by Kunlun Red Star on December 3, 2017. [16]
On October 18, 2022, the Italian Ice Sports Federation named Keenan as the head coach of the Italian men's national ice hockey team. [17]
Despite Keenan's coaching record, his inability to maintain working relationships with players and team organizations has resulted in a lack of long-term coaching positions. [18] His coaching resume includes abrupt terminations or resignations from coaching or general manager positions, sometimes at bafflingly inopportune, or peak, moments of his career.
He was fired from the Philadelphia Flyers a year after leading them to the 1987 Stanley Cup Finals. After taking the Chicago Blackhawks to the 1992 Stanley Cup Finals, Keenan was forced to focus solely on his GM duties when longtime Blackhawk player and assistant coach Darryl Sutter was being courted by other teams to be their head coach. Owner Bill Wirtz did not want to lose Sutter, especially since Keenan had stated, in July 1992, that he wished to focus solely on his duties as general manager after the 92–93 season. Keenan lost a power struggle with Senior V.P. Bob Pulford after the 1992–93 season, resigned his position, and was soon hired by the New York Rangers. Keenan managed to coach the Rangers to the Stanley Cup in his first and only year as head coach, but was unable to coexist long enough with general manager Neil Smith and resigned weeks later, citing a violation of his contract by the Rangers. [19] [20] [21] [22]
Stops in St. Louis and Vancouver saw conflict with team stars; both Brett Hull [10] and Trevor Linden [23] had major personality conflicts with Keenan. In one instance while the Blues were playing the Buffalo Sabres at The Aud, Dale Hawerchuk's dying grandmother, who lived in nearby Fort Erie, Ontario, Canada, came to see him play one last time while she was alive. Keenan deliberately benched Hawerchuk for the game, and an unhappy captain Brett Hull screamed at Keenan, who then responded by stripping Hull's captaincy.
Keenan was even willing to publicly criticize Wayne Gretzky after he acquired the superstar in an early 1996 trade with the Los Angeles Kings. Keenan had previously coached Gretzky in Canada Cup play, and his refusal to moderate his attitude and style even when coaching a team full of stars meant his relationship with the league's all-time leading scorer was never particularly warm. Gretzky refused to consider re-signing with St. Louis during the 1996 off-season and opted instead to finish his playing career with Keenan's former team, the Rangers.
In September 2006, Keenan again attracted headlines when he abruptly resigned as general manager of the Florida Panthers. Keenan's resignation came shortly after he dealt Florida Panthers' franchise goaltender Roberto Luongo along with defenceman Lukas Krajicek and Florida's 2006 sixth-round draft pick (Sergei Shirokov) to the Vancouver Canucks for struggling forward Todd Bertuzzi, goaltender Alex Auld, and defenceman Bryan Allen. It was speculated that Keenan had lost a power struggle with head coach and longtime friend, Jacques Martin, over personnel decisions. Martin succeeded him as general manager upon his resignation.
He was also notorious for pulling or switching his goaltenders, sometimes multiple times in a period. Before the 1987 playoffs, he used Ron Hextall as the regular starting goalie. However, he pulled goaltenders Hextall and Chico Resch a total of five times in a single game (the fifth time to gain a man-advantage in the last minute of play) in game 4 of the first round of the 1987 playoffs. Three years later, he pulled goaltender Greg Millen in favor of Ed Belfour a total of four times in 8 games. That system was discontinued when he became the New York Rangers head coach and used Mike Richter as the regular starting goalie.
Goaltender Roberto Luongo said the following regarding Keenan's penchant for pulling his goaltenders while a member of the Florida Panthers in 2002:
Keenan has a wife and a daughter. [1]
Derek Keenan, the head coach and general manager of the Saskatchewan Rush of the National Lacrosse League, is Keenan's third cousin. Derek's wife, Wendy, is a sister of Hockey Hall of Famer, Joe Nieuwendyk.
In 2018, Keenan went public with being diagnosed with prostate cancer, and was then undergoing treatment. [25]
Regular season points (Pts) contained in brackets () denote the team's standing after the full season, not the number of points accrued at the time Keenan was fired.
Team | Year | Regular season | Post season | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G | W | L | T | OTL | Pts | Finish | W | L | Win % | Result | ||
PHI | 1984–85 | 80 | 53 | 20 | 7 | – | 113 | 1st in Patrick | 12 | 7 | .632 | Lost in Stanley Cup Finals (EDM) |
PHI | 1985–86 | 80 | 53 | 23 | 4 | – | 110 | 1st in Patrick | 2 | 3 | .400 | Lost in Division semifinals (NYR) |
PHI | 1986–87 | 80 | 46 | 26 | 8 | – | 100 | 1st in Patrick | 15 | 11 | .577 | Lost in Stanley Cup Finals (EDM) |
PHI | 1987–88 | 80 | 38 | 33 | 9 | – | 85 | 2nd in Patrick | 3 | 4 | .429 | Lost in Division semifinals (WSH) |
PHI Total | 320 | 190 | 102 | 28 | – | 408 | 32 | 25 | .561 | 4 playoff appearances | ||
CHI | 1988–89 | 80 | 27 | 41 | 12 | – | 66 | 4th in Norris | 9 | 7 | .563 | Lost in Conference finals (CGY) |
CHI | 1989–90 | 80 | 41 | 33 | 6 | – | 88 | 1st in Norris | 10 | 10 | .500 | Lost in Conference finals (EDM) |
CHI | 1990–91 | 80 | 49 | 23 | 8 | – | 106 | 1st in Norris | 2 | 4 | .333 | Lost in Division semifinals (MIN) |
CHI | 1991–92 | 80 | 36 | 29 | 15 | – | 87 | 2nd in Norris | 12 | 6 | .667 | Lost in Stanley Cup Finals (PIT) |
CHI Total | 320 | 153 | 126 | 41 | – | 347 | 33 | 27 | .550 | 4 playoff appearances | ||
NYR | 1993–94 | 84 | 52 | 24 | 8 | – | 112 | 1st in Atlantic | 16 | 7 | .696 | Won Stanley Cup (VAN) |
NYR Total | 84 | 52 | 24 | 8 | – | 112 | 16 | 7 | .696 | 1 playoff appearance 1 Stanley Cup title | ||
STL | 1994–95 | 48 | 28 | 15 | 5 | – | 61 | 2nd in Central | 3 | 4 | .429 | Lost in Conference quarterfinals (VAN) |
STL | 1995–96 | 82 | 32 | 34 | 16 | – | 80 | 4th in Central | 7 | 6 | .538 | Lost in Conference semifinals (DET) |
STL | 1996–97 | 33 | 15 | 17 | 1 | – | (83) | 4th in Central | – | – | – | (Fired) |
STL Total | 163 | 75 | 66 | 22 | – | 172 | 10 | 10 | .500 | 2 playoff appearances | ||
VAN | 1997–98 | 63 | 21 | 30 | 12 | – | (64) | 7th in Pacific | – | – | – | Missed playoffs |
VAN | 1998–99 | 45 | 15 | 24 | 6 | – | (58) | 4th in Northwest | – | – | – | (Fired) |
VAN Total | 108 | 36 | 54 | 18 | – | 90 | – | – | – | |||
BOS | 2000–01 | 74 | 33 | 26 | 7 | 8 | (88) | 4th in Northeast | – | – | – | Missed playoffs |
BOS Total | 74 | 33 | 26 | 7 | 8 | 81 | – | – | – | |||
FLA | 2001–02 | 56 | 16 | 29 | 8 | 3 | (60) | 4th in Southeast | – | – | – | Missed playoffs |
FLA | 2002–03 | 82 | 24 | 36 | 13 | 9 | 70 | 4th in Southeast | – | – | – | Missed playoffs |
FLA | 2003–04 | 15 | 5 | 8 | 2 | 0 | (75) | 4th in Southeast | – | – | – | (Resigned) |
FLA Total | 153 | 45 | 73 | 23 | 12 | 125 | – | – | – | |||
CGY | 2007–08 | 82 | 42 | 30 | – | 10 | 94 | 3rd in Northwest | 3 | 4 | .429 | Lost in Conference quarterfinals (SJS) |
CGY | 2008–09 | 82 | 46 | 30 | – | 6 | 98 | 2nd in Northwest | 2 | 4 | .333 | Lost in Conference quarterfinals (CHI) |
CGY Total | 164 | 88 | 60 | – | 16 | 192 | 5 | 8 | .385 | 2 playoff appearances | ||
Career Total | 1386 | 672 | 531 | 147 | 36 | 1,527 | 96 | 77 | .555 |
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