Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Firing Hextall signals concerning shift for Flyers


The only thing consistent about the Flyers at the quarter turn of the NHL season was their inconsistency. A stellar performance one night would lead to a pair of clunkers later in the week. A blowout loss last weekend on Hockey Night in Canada against the Toronto Maple Leafs was the latest lopsided defeat. Fans were growing impatient as a season, and apparently so were the men upstairs.  On Monday, President Paul Holmgren and Comcast Spectacor Chairman and CEO Dave Scott made the decision to relieve Ron Hextall of his duties as the team’s Executive Vice President and General Manager.

On Tuesday, the team found another way to losing in embarrassing fashion allowing three goals in the third period against Ottawa to watch what was a 3-1 lead after 40 minutes become a 4-3 loss in regulation. The more things change, the more they stay the same. Hextall’s dismissal was an indication that Holmgren and Scott were fed up with the same middling results that had the Flyers on the playoff bubble in each of the previous four seasons Hextall was in charge. Unsurprisingly, two of those seasons ended with first-round exits, while the other two ended without playoff berths.

Before Hextall took over in 2014, Holmgren was the general manager and these kinds of seasons were equally as common. Yes, the Flyers made a run to the Stanley Cup Final in 2010 but that team needed a shootout victory in the final game of the regular season just to get into the postseason so it’s not exactly like Holmgren had built a beast. Surely enough, they would lose in the second round in 2011 and 2012 and have not won a playoff round since.

Despite the results being largely the same under both general managers, their styles could not have been more different. Holmgren was super aggressive and one to always go for it, while Hextall opted for a more conservative approach. That the results were not much different under each man probably says more about Holmgren than it does Hextall. Sure, the team won several playoff rounds under Holmgren, but the expectations were always to be in the Stanley Cup conversation and they fell short far too often. This resulted in a flawed roster with lots of bad contracts and a depleted farm system. Time and time again, Holmgren would look to fill the team’s biggest holes even if it meant overpaying in a trade or in free agency. Coming up short just meant the Flyers had less roster flexibility and salary cap space.

The Flyers were trapped in mediocrity upon Hextall’s arrival. They were good enough to get into the playoffs most years but bad enough to not do anything once they got there. The only way to get out was to peel the band-aid off. That’s what Hextall did and the focus shifted from a win-now mentality to hoarding draft picks and collecting prospects. In doing this, it’s hard to remain competitive, and it usually leads to fielding one of the league’s worst rosters though the Flyers managed to remain somewhat watchable. For as bad as they looked at times in last year’s opening round playoff series against Pittsburgh, they held a two-goal late in the second period on home ice in the sixth game with a chance to send things back to the steel city for a game seven against the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions.

                                                           Tom Gralish/Philly.com
Scott and Holmgren ran out of patience on Hextall (left)
and fired him on Monday.
None of this is to say the Flyers were close to becoming a serious contender, but there was progress being made. The Flyers had one of the deepest prospect pools in the NHL, lots of cap space for the first time in years and it looked like the results were starting to come through on the ice after a 98-point season in 2017-18. Hextall then dished out the second biggest contract of the summer in the NHL, bringing James van Riemsdyk back to Philadelphia for five years and 35 million dollars. Though, for a lot of the good things he did, ignoring the horrendous penalty kill and lackluster goaltending situations in the offseason are probably the biggest reasons the former Flyers goalie is now also a former general manager.


For a while it seemed like Hextall’s coach Dave Hakstol was the one bound for the guillotine. Another potential drawback of Hextall in charge was that many felt he was loyal to a fault when it came to Hakstol and wouldn’t pull the trigger on a coaching change. Regardless, Hextall is out and in listening to Holmgren and Scott speak yesterday, it sure seemed like other than a lack of patience, they had no other reason to fire Hextall now. Scott referenced the trade deadline at the end of February, and seemed to give off a vibe that Hextall would have been content to stand pat. Hextall’s methodical approach was necessary but so out of the norm for the organization that they assumed he would stay this way forever.  

Flyers fans should hope that Hextall’s successor shares a similar vision, because if he doesn’t, the franchise may be headed right back to the way things were under Holmgren, which could undo lots of Hextall’s good work. Maybe Holmgren and Scott will be proven correct and Hextall was not the guy to see his own plan through. But the only reason he did not have the opportunity to do so was because he operated in a way the organization was not used to.


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