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Maple Leafs fire coach Mike Babcock

Babcock has won a Stanley Cup and Olympic gold medals, but he could not end Toronto’s championship drought.
The underperforming Toronto Maple Leafs fired Coach Mike Babcock on Wednesday (20) and replaced him with Sheldon Keefe.

Babcock had a record of 9-10-4 this season for the struggling Leafs, who are 0-5-1 in their last six games, including five straight losses in regulation.

“Over parts of the last five seasons, Mike has played an integral role in changing the direction of our franchise”, the Maple Leafs’ president, Brendan Shanahan, said in a statement. “Mike’s commitment and tireless work ethic has put our organization in a better place and we are extremely grateful and appreciative of the foundation he has helped us build here. At this time, we collectively felt that it was best to make a change to Sheldon Keefe”.

Hired as part of Toronto’s massive rebuild in the spring of 2015, Babcock, 56, went 173-133-45 in his four-plus seasons with Toronto. After signing the richest coaching contract in N.H.L. history at $50 million over eight years, Babcock got Toronto to the playoffs the last three seasons but was unable to advance beyond the first round.
Babcock came to Toronto with an impressive résumé, having won the Stanley Cup with the Detroit Red Wings in 2008 and back-to-back Olympic gold medals with Canada in 2010 and 2014. He has a career record of 700-418-19 with Toronto, Detroit and Anaheim.

Keefe, 39, who has a long history with Leafs General Manager Kyle Dubas, was in his fifth season as coach of the American Hockey League’s Toronto Marlies.

Keefe led the Marlies to a 199-89-31 record and was twice named the A.H.L. coach of the year. He helped the Marlies capture the franchise’s first Calder Cup championship in 2018.

Babcock’s Leafs stumbled this season despite a star-studded forward group led by Auston Matthews, John Tavares, Mitch Marner and William Nylander, a defense led by Morgan Rielly, Tyson Barrie and Jake Muzzin, and goalie Frederik Andersen.

Toronto was unable to find traction after a summer of change that saw a number of Babcock’s trusted veterans leave town as part of a salary-cap crunch precipitated by big-money contract extensions handed to Matthews and Marner.

Toronto’s Big Four chewed up nearly half of the $81.5 million cap, leaving Dubas to try to fill in the roster around the edges with young players and discount veterans.

NY Times/MS

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