The Sharks have relieved head coach David Quinn of his duties, per a team announcement Wednesday. San Jose’s head athletic trainer Ray Tufts will also not return next season, per Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News.
GM Mike Grier issued the following statement:
After going through our end of the season process of internal meetings and evaluating where our team is at and where we want our group to go, we have made the difficult decision to make a change at the head coach position. David is a good coach and an even better person. I would like to personally thank him for his hard work over these past two seasons. He and his staff did an admirable job under some difficult circumstances, and I sincerely appreciate how they handled the situation.
Quinn, 57, lasted two seasons behind the San Jose bench. His 41-98-25 record was poor but not much worse than expected for the rebuilding club. He’d signed a three-year contract with the club in 2022 to replace Bob Boughner, who was canned after guiding the club to three straight seasons under the .500 mark, the franchise’s longest such stretch since their first season above the mark in 1999-00.
This season was exceptionally difficult for Quinn and the Sharks. With a 19-54-9 record, San Jose became the first team in the salary cap era not to reach 20 wins in an 82-game season. Despite having near league-average goaltending from Mackenzie Blackwood and Kaapo Kähkönen, who combined for 68 starts, the Sharks allowed 326 goals – the third most in the salary cap era behind last year’s Blue Jackets and Ducks squads. Considering their top four defenders by average time on ice this season were Mario Ferraro, Henry Thrun, Jan Rutta and Kyle Burroughs, though, it’s difficult to make an argument that Quinn’s coaching was the primary cause.
Quinn’s lone previous role leading an NHL bench was with the Rangers from 2019 to 2021, leading their retool in the first few seasons of Alexis Lafrenière’s and Kaapo Kakko’s careers. The team hovered around the .500 mark throughout his time there, posting a 96-87-25 record, including two COVID-shortened seasons. After missing out on a playoff spot by 11 points in 2020-21 in the temporary East Division, the Rangers sacked him with two years left on his contract. He was earning cashflow from both New York and San Jose last season.
More to come…