Ted Nolan was fired Sunday. ©2015, Dan Hickling, Olean Times Herald

Former Sabres coach Ted Nolan and GM Tim Murray never meshed

BUFFALO – The odds, of course, were stacked against Ted Nolan succeeding in his second run as Sabres coach, which ended with his firing Sunday night, less than a day after a 30th-place finish.

Nolan wasn’t truly Tim Murray’s guy. Sure, the general manager awarded him a three-year contract late last season. But old friend Pat LaFontaine hired Nolan as interim coach early in 2013-14 before leaving months later.

Perhaps Murray felt obligated to keep the popular coach for a trial or good public relations. Considering the Sabres’ were undertaking a deep rebuild, it was a low-risk move.

By early November, when the Sabres started 2-9-1, it appeared Nolan could be one-and-done.

“I’ve said all along I want to improve this team every day,” Murray said at a hastily called news conference inside the First Niagara Center. “Today, I came to the conclusion a change may help us improve.”

Murray reached that conclusion after six hours of exit interviews with players, who cleaned out their lockers Sunday.

“Every player, to a man, believes that Ted Nolan is a good man, and they were sure to tell me that,” Murray said. “But I went in with an open mind.”

Murray and Nolan never found the right chemistry together.

“I don’t think it was a bad fit,” Murray said. “I don’t think it was a great fit. We both said after it’s too bad it didn’t work out. Is it chemistry? Maybe it’s just chemistry, maybe it’s just two different personalities. You need chemistry on the ice, and you need chemistry off the ice.”

Murray thanked the 57-year-old Nolan and his staff for working under “less-than-ideal circumstances.”

The Sabres also let go of assistant coaches Bryan Trottier, Tom Coolen and Danny Flynn. For now, goalie coach Arturs Irbe, who has one year left on his contract, is still with the team. Murray might recommend the new coach interview Irbe.

Out of respect for Nolan, Murray wouldn’t comment on his coaching search or put a timetable on it.

“Today’s today,” he said. “A good man loses his job. We’ll look to the future tomorrow.”

Expect to hear AHL Binghamton Senators coach Luke Richardson, who has strong Ottawa ties with Murray, and Detroit Red Wings coach Mike Babcock mentioned as potential candidates.

The new coach will almost certainly have a better roster than the one Nolan worked with this season. Many observers believe the Sabres’ higher-ups tanked 2014-15 to get the first or second pick in the upcoming draft.

Nolan had some notable veterans. Murray made a slew of acquisitions during the summer, although they often looked past their primes or downright terrible.

“We decided to go with young guys in the rebuild and surround them high-character veterans,” Murray said. “We’ve done that. We still finished in 30th place. There’s been a lot of changes, and that’s on me.”

The Sabres only got hot once, going 10-3 in November and December. A 14-game losing streak soon followed.

By the end, after trades decimated the lineup, Nolan was forced to skate several AHL players.

Would Nolan, who finished his second run 40-87-17, have been dismissed if the Sabres had finished, say, 24th or 25th?

“Maybe, I can’t answer that,” Murray said. “I didn’t foresee us being a 30th-place team. Certainly after the trade deadline, I had a big part in that and I own that, but up until the trade deadline I was open to keeping guys. I was opening to discussing contracts with guys that were coming due. But the place we were in is the place we were in.”

Murray and Nolan, who coached the Sabres from 1995-97, never found a good place in their relationship. They tried to make it work.

“It was never about that he wasn’t my guy,” Murray said. “It was, ‘Can we have a great relationship?’ … I take a lot of the blame. We didn’t have a great relationship, we had a decent relationship. We didn’t hate each other.”

They never had any big arguments or fights, Murray said. There was a lack of communication, but Murray blamed himself as much as Nolan. Murray said he never micromanaged him.

“So there was no incident that caused me to make this decision,” Murray said.

Murray wasn’t sure if Nolan expected to have input on trades, which he didn’t. Nolan might’ve wanted a specific player to be recalled a couple of times, but he never expressed any disappointment.

Nolan’s development of some youngsters, most notably defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen, pleased Murray. Others didn’t make the strides he wanted.

One thought on “Former Sabres coach Ted Nolan and GM Tim Murray never meshed”

  1. The Ownership, Management, Coaching Staff, and players will need to pull in the same direction for the Sabres to build a winning program. It was an odd year where you had the organizational goals being long term, and the players playing everyday like it was their last. I’m glad the Sabres were able to hang onto 30th, because it would have been a worse feeling …Ted fired and 29th overall. Coach Nolan was not suited to today’s NHL game, aside from his usual problems with management.

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