Michel Therrien

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Michel Therrien

Therrien with the Penguins
Born November 4, 1963 (1963-11-04) (age 44)
Montreal, Canada
Other names Bulldog[1]
Occupation Head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins
Predecessor Ed Olczyk
Successor Incumbent

Michel Therrien (born November 4, 1963) is the current head coach of the National Hockey League's Pittsburgh Penguins, and a former head coach of the Montreal Canadiens.[2] Therrien coached the Canadiens for three seasons, taking them to the Eastern Conference semi-finals in the 2002 Stanley Cup Playoffs. During the 2006–07 season, he coached the Penguins to one of the most successful single-season improvements in NHL history, finishing with a 47–24–11 record (105 pts), a berth in the 2007 Stanley Cup playoffs, and a nomination for the Jack Adams Award, as the NHL's best coach.

Prior to his coaching career, Therrien played three years as a defenceman in the AHL, compiling a total of 86 points in 206 games and winning the Calder Cup in 1985 with the Sherbrooke Canadiens, on the same team as eventual Hall-of-Famer Patrick Roy. [3][4] Before coaching in the professional leagues, Therrien was a coach in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. He is a single parent of two children, Elizabeth and Charles.

Contents

[edit] Coaching Year by Year

[edit] 2000–2001

After stumbling out to a 5–13–2 record, the Montreal Canadiens fired their head coach Alain Vigneault and hired rookie Michel Therrien. The Canadiens went 23–27–13 under Michel and missed the playoffs.

[edit] 2001–2002

In his first full season as the Canadiens head coach, Michel led the habs to an impressive record of 36–31–15. A 16 point improvement from the previous year. In the playoffs, Therrien's Canadiens upset the top seeded Boston Bruins in 6 games before losing to the Carolina Hurricanes.

[edit] 2002–2003

After starting the season 16–12–6, the Canadiens slipped in the standings winning only 2 of their next 12 games. This prompted General Manager Andre Savard to fire Therrien with a record of 18–19–9. Therrien finished with the Canadiens with an overall record of 77–77–37.

[edit] 2003–2005

For two and a half seasons, Therrien was the head coach of the AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. He lead the Penguins to the Calder Cup playoffs in 2004 and 2005.

[edit] 2005–2006

After leading the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins to a franchise record start (21–1–2–1) in the 2005–06 season, Therrien was promoted by Pittsburgh on December 15, 2005 as a mid-season replacement for Ed Olczyk. The Pens, however, did not turn their season around going 14–29–8 under Therrien.

[edit] 2006–2007

The Penguins started the 2006–07 NHL season in mediocre fashion. However, they picked up play in January going 14–0–2 at one point. The streak led the Penguins to a 47–24–11 record, and a 5th place berth in the 2007 Stanley Cup playoffs. The Pens fell in 5 games to the Ottawa Senators.

[edit] Coaching Record

Team Year Regular Season Post Season
G W L T OTL Pts Finish Result
MTL 2000–01 62 23 27 6 6 (70) 5th in Northeast Missed Playoffs
MTL 2001–02 82 36 31 12 3 87 4th in Northeast Lost in Second Round
MTL 2002–03 46 18 19 4 5 (77) 5th in Northeast (fired)
PIT 2005–06 51 14 29 - 8 (58) 5th in Atlantic Missed Playoffs
PIT 2006–07 82 47 24 - 11 105 2nd in Atlantic Lost in First Round
PIT 2007-08 82 47 27 - 8 102 1st in Atlantic Lost in Finals
Total 405 185 157 22 41 .535

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Therrien's 2006 remarks have gone a long way", TSN, 2008-05-08. Retrieved on 2008-05-09. 
  2. ^ Michel Therrien: http://www.nhl.com/lineups/coaches/therrien.html
  3. ^ Therrien takes Pens coach talk in stride - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
  4. ^ http://www.pittsburghpenguins.com/team/staff/bio.php?id=50

[edit] External links