Blues fire head coach Craig Berube, who guided them to their lone Stanley Cup title | CBC Sports
Hockey

Blues fire head coach Craig Berube, who guided them to their lone Stanley Cup title

St. Louis Blues GM Doug Armstrong announced the firing of head coach Craig Berube hours after a 6-4 defeat to the Detroit Red Wings on Tuesday night. The loss was the season-worst fourth straight for the Blues, who are off to a 13-14-1 start to the NHL season.

AHL bench boss, ex-NHLer Drew Bannister takes over 13-14-1 club on interim basis

NHL head coach stands on bench behind the Blues' players looking at the play on the ice during game action.
The Blues dismissed head coach Craig Berube after Tuesday night's loss to the Red Wings. The 13-14-1 club ranks 26th in the NHL in goals per game and has the second-worst power play. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

The St. Louis Blues fired Craig Berube on Tuesday night, severing ties with the head coach who led the team to its only Stanley Cup title.

Blues general manager Doug Armstrong announced Berube's firing hours after a 6-4 loss to the Detroit Red Wings.

The loss was the season-worst fourth straight for the Blues, who are off to a 13-14-1 start to the NHL season.

St. Louis is in sixth place in the Central Division, nine points behind division-leading Colorado. The Blues are in 10th place out of 16 teams in the Western Conference.

The Blues rank 26th in the NHL in goals per game (2.82). and have the second-worst power play (7-for-83) in the league at 8.4 per cent.

The 57-year-old Berube guided the Blues to the Stanley Cup championship in 2019. He replaced Mike Yeo as coach Nov. 20, 2018, as the interim coach and led an amazing turnaround. He led St. Louis to a 38-19-6 record in 2018-19.

Berube, in his sixth season with the Blues, had a mark of 206-131-44. His win total ranks third in team history. He registered 24 playoff victories in 51 post-season games.

St. Louis led 4-3 going into the third period against Detroit on Tuesday night before giving up two goals and an empty-net goal late, losing for the fifth time in six games.

'You've got to do the little things right'

"You've got to earn everything, right? It's not just going to happen," Berube said after the game. "You've got to earn it. You've got to play the right way to earn it. You've got to do the little things right. We did a lot of good things tonight. We scored enough goals to win the game, but in the end, we didn't take care of the front of our net very well tonight."

The Blues named Drew Bannister, coach of the Springfield Thunderbirds of the American Hockey League, as interim coach.

The 49-year-old Bannister has been the Springfield coach for three seasons. He led the team to a 93-58-19 regular-season record. The Belleville, Ont., native also guided the Thunderbirds to consecutive playoff appearances, including 2021-22, when they won the Eastern Conference and reached the Calder Cup final.

Bannister will be behind the bench on Thursday night, when the Blues host the Ottawa Senators.

A right-handed defenceman, he played 164 NHL regular-season games for the Tampa Bay Lightning, Edmonton Oilers, Anaheim Mighty Ducks and New York Rangers.

The Blues' coaching change marks the fourth time Armstrong has fired a head coach during the season. He fired Davis Payne in 2011, Ken Hitchcock in 2017 and Yeo in 2018.

The Blues are the third team to make a coaching change this season. The Edmonton Oilers fired Jay Woodcroft in mid-November and replaced him with Kris Knoblauch. And, the Minnesota Wild named John Hynes coach just over two weeks ago after firing Dean Evason.

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