Ruff Named Head Coach, Fitzgerald Official GM

Today, the New Jersey Devils made their decision on a new head coach and confirmed an old face as general manager.

Lindy Ruff, most recently an assistant coach with the New York Rangers, will serve as the Devils’ new bench boss – the 19th in team history. The announcement was made official this morning after a day of speculation from NHL insiders on Twitter and other media.

Ruff comes into the job with 736 regular season wins as an NHL head coach. He won the Jack Adams Award as NHL coach of the year in 2005-06 while serving as coach of the Buffalo Sabres and won Olympic gold twice as an associate coach with Team Canada in 2010 and 2014.

According to the press release put out by the Devils, Ruff has been a head coach in the NHL for 19 seasons with the Sabres and the Dallas Stars.

His resume is impressive on its own, as he ranks seventh in NHL history among head coaches in games coached with 1,493. He trails some iconic names: Scotty Bowman, Joel Quenneville, Al Arbour, Barry Trotz and Ken Hitchcock.

In the playoffs, he “ranks sixth all-time in regular-season wins as a head coach in the NHL” with 736. He is 66-54 in 120 games for a .550 winning percentage. He took the Sabres to the Stanley Cup Final in 1999 where they lost to the Stars.

As the Devils’ press release mentioned, Ruff brought some stability to the Sabres as they have not qualified for the playoffs since he left the organization in 2013. With Buffalo, the Sabres won 50-games in back-to-back seasons in 2005-06 and 2006-07.

Ruff’s association with the Sabres goes back to his playing days as he played the majority of his 691 games (over 12 NHL seasons) with Buffalo. He was “selected by Buffalo in the second round of the 1979 NHL Entry Draft” and recorded 105 goals and 195 assists in the NHL totaling a nice round 300 points. He also racked up 1,264 penalty minutes over his playing career with the Sabres and Rangers.

In 2013, Ruff moved on to the Dallas Stars, whom he coached from 2013-14 to 2016-17. The Devils’ press release notes that he was a finalist for the Jack Adams Award again in 2015-16. That season, the Stars finished first overall in the Central Division and Western Conference with a 50-23-9 record.

Internationally, he has helped Canada to several tournament medals. He won a silver medal in 2009 with Canada at the IIHF World Championship. He was Canada’s head coach in 2013 at the same tournament. As mentioned, he won gold with Canada at the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver and the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Russia as an associate coach. He was also an assistant coach for Canada at the 2019 World Championship, where he coached Devils defenseman Damon Severson and goaltender Mackenzie Blackwood.

The press release pumps up some of Ruff’s coaching strengths, noting that when he was the head coach in Dallas for four seasons, the Stars “ranked second in the NHL in goals per game (2.97)” over that time.

Ruff is a good choice as head coach, but is kind of a head scratcher when guys like Peter Laviolette and Gerard Gallant were out there. Reportedly, Gallant did not want the job so there is that. Hopefully, Ruff is the guy these players need and he can get them going.

He told the Devils’ official website: “I am excited to get back in the lead chair and guide the future of this team. This is a fantastic opportunity to lead a group of great young talent and strong leadership to the next level. Tom and I will sit down together and build a plan for the coaching staff and I will start to get to work on familiarizing myself with the players and staff. I look forward to bringing this core together, developing our players and putting us on a trajectory that can lead to sustained success in a timely manner. It’s an exciting time to be a part of the Devils’ organization, and I have the desire and fire to get us on the road towards the Stanley Cup Playoffs and beyond.”

In another move today, the Devils took the interim tag off of Tom Fitzgerald and named him Executive Vice President and General Manager of the team. The announcement was made official by managing partners Josh Harris and David Blitzer.

Fitzgerald was made interim GM when Ray Shero was fired in January of 2020.

Harris and Blitzer said that they went “through the process of interviewing various candidates, including Tom, and reviewing his work in the interim.” They said “we feel that he is the best fit for the New Jersey Devils moving forward. Our decision was solidified by his ability to stabilize the organization, get solid returns at the trade deadline, make impressive plans for player development and hire a new coach in Lindy Ruff.” They continued that “we are very optimistic about our future and know we have great deal of talent, both on and off the ice. Together, we are excited to start a new chapter and are committed to becoming a consistent contender, which our fans deserve.”

One thing is very certain with this hiring/promotion: at least the Devils will be prepared for the Draft and to move forward from there. In any other season, this would have seemed a haphazard way to do all of this. But not this year. With the COVID-19 pandemic wreaking havoc on the NHL landscape, what is up is down and the Devils did what they could. I think Lindy Ruff could do a very good job with the Devils’ roster. I do not know what kind of a coach he is in terms of a “player’s coach” or what, but he has a very talented roster who needs guidance in front of him. We will also see what kind of staff he surrounds himself with.

As for Fitzgerald, I am inclined to agree with Harris and Blitzer here. He showed he could do a good job at the trade deadline. Getting Nolan Foote for a soon-to-be free agent Blake Coleman was a great move and one that Devils fans should be very excited about.

Overall, the results will do the talking. If and when the 2020-21 season gets started, we will see how the hiring/promotion pan out. Until then, it’s on to the Draft to find out who the next piece of the Devils’ future is.

Brodeur Not Interested in Devils’ GM Job

The NHL put out an article on their official app stating that Martin Brodeur is not interested in taking the Devils’ General Manager position “right now, even if the job were available.”

The report comes from The Hockey News, specifically Matt Larkin, who spoke to Brodeur directly.

He told the publication that he is “happy with his job as executive vice president of hockey operations and senior advisor with the Devils.”

Marty told THN’s Larkin: “I know what it takes to be a GM. I’ve been around Doug Armstrong (with the St. Louis Blues) for a long time and Lou Lamoriello (with the Devils). I’m just not ready for the commitment, regardless of whether it would be offered to me.”

The article notes that Brodeur, the Devils’ legendary goaltender who won three Stanley Cups as a player and lead the Devils to five Stanley Cup Finals, “moved from a Devils business position to hockey operations after Ray Shero was fired as GM on Jan. 12 and replaced by Tom Fitzgerald.”

Fitzgerald is still in the position of GM, albeit as an interim. It was mentioned in the article that he has been interviewing coaches, among them former Islanders, Hurricanes, Flyers and Predators coach Peter Laviolette (who has been linked to the Devils in various outlets) and Alain Nasreddine, the interim who took over from John Hynes on December 3. The NHL news piece said that Brodeur and Fitzgerald have been working closely in preparation for the 2020 NHL Draft Lottery, where the Devils have a 7.5 percent chance to gain the first overall pick.

When Marty retired after the 2014-15 season (he played the final seven games of his career as a Blue), he stayed in St. Louis “as a special adviser to Armstrong.” He currently lives in St. Louis and has a ten-year-old son there, which, the article notes is why “he said he’s not ready to take on the rigors of being an NHL general manager.”

Brodeur told THN’s Larkin: “the reason why I went back to New Jersey is because I was able to control my time, because I’m not moving from St. Louis yet, and I have a 10-year-old at home who does all the activities in the world. I’m not saying that one day I won’t say, ‘You know what? This is the time for me to do it, maybe.’ But right now, I value my time off too much to get myself involved.”