Just remember if the Blues go one of the newer coaches, it might not be an immediate success. DeBoer did not fare as well in his first coaching gig with the Panthers. DeBoer started off great in New Jersey his first season there reaching the Cup Finals, then tailed off the next few years. He's started off great in San Jose. Will that continue or not? Don't know.Toasted Oates wrote:Look at the remaining 3 teams. All coaching changes in the last couple years with little to no fan fare. A new voice can do wonders and it doesn't have to be a vet.
Pittsburgh tried going with the younger guy to start the season and had to change coaches mid-season, so they aren't the best example of the way to go unless the Blues have a 1 and 1A coach readily available should coach 1 fail.
Tampa Bay is the best example of a young coach hire and sticking with it. Yzerman is doing amazing work as the GM for them thus far.
One of the best coaching hires this season, while it didn't get them as far in the playoffs, was Hextall hiring Hakstol. The Flyers weren't even supposed to be competitive this season given the cap issues Hextall was saddled with before being hired as GM in 2014.
Hopefully, the Blues can find a coach who will maximize the offensive talent on this roster while not hurting them defensively. This season, the Blues actually regressed defensively allowing the 14th most shots in the league. 2014-15 2nd fewest shots allowed. 2013-14 3rd fewest shots allowed. 2012-13 2nd fewest shots allowed.
Yes, this season the Blues had to rely on their goaltenders more because they allowed the forwards to not be as aggressive defensively, but more aggressive offensively while leaning on the defenseman to handle d-zone breakouts without forward help coming deep into the d-zone. It impacted the Blues significantly defensively as evidenced by the dramatic increase in Shots Against - which the Blues had allowed the fewest of combined over the prior 3 seasons - ever since Hitchcock showed up and implemented his defensive zone first system. This system was dramatically changed this season, but the media barely recognizes this change and will lay on it the Blues being a "defense first" team which they clearly were not this season. This is one area in which the statistics point out how much more the Blues relied on their goaltenders than playing defense first as a team for the first time since Hitchcock arrived. He did adapt this season to allow for more offensive freedom - and the Blues reached the Conference Finals and got outworked by a mostly more experienced San Jose team.