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Dale Hunter Resigns: Washington Capitals Coach Steps Down After Playoff Exit

By HOWARD FENDRICH 05/14/12 07:51 PM ET AP

Dale Hunter
Washington Capitals head hockey coach Dale Hunter, rear, looks on during the first period of an NHL hockey game against the Florida Panthers, in Sunrise, Fla. Hunter is finished as coach of the Washington Capitals after less than one full season, telling the team he wants to return to his family in Canada. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee, File)

ARLINGTON, Va. — For quite some time, Washington Capitals general manager George McPhee tried to persuade former player Dale Hunter to return to the team as its coach. This season, McPhee finally got his man – just not for very long.

Hunter quit as Washington's coach on Monday after less than six months on the job, saying he wants to return to his family, his farm and the junior club he owns in Canada.

"It was the right thing to do," Hunter said.

He is the owner of the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League, and he was the coach until McPhee beckoned in late November after firing Bruce Boudreau. Hunter's brother Mark took over as head coach of the Knights then, and one of Hunter's three children is an assistant. Hunter's 76-year-old father scouts for London; his sisters go to the games; another son lives nearby while attending college; his daughter is in the area, too.

Plus, Hunter and his brother own about 2,000 acres of farmland near his hometown of Petrolia, producing mainly wheat along with corn and soybeans.

"I'm going home," Hunter said at the Capitals' practice facility, a couple of hours after delivering the news to McPhee. "I've got a good thing going there with the family, so I'll stay home."

Hunter said he doesn't plan on returning to the NHL.

He was a successful forward in the league for 19 seasons – one of only four men whose jersey numbers were retired by the Capitals; the only player with 1,000 points and 3,000 penalty minutes in the NHL – but never won a Stanley Cup. Never before an assistant or head coach in the NHL, or even the AHL, Hunter was sought by McPhee in hopes he could bring his on-ice "tough guy" persona to a roster filled with stars more likely to make a pretty pass than drop to the ice to stop a puck.

"He said, `There's one way to play, and that's the right way to play, and I'll get them playing the right way.' He thought he could, and he accomplished what he thought he could do with them," McPhee said, "and now they're on the right path."

Hunter met with McPhee on Monday morning, two days after the Capitals were eliminated from the playoffs in the Eastern Conference semifinals with a 2-1 loss to the New York Rangers in Game 7.

"We could have very easily won that series," McPhee said.

The GM said he didn't even attempt to change Hunter's mind, because "there's no gray in Dale's life."

"I'd rather have him for six months than not at all, because he had quite an impact on this club," McPhee said. "He really taught this club the `how' of how to win. They all wanted to win. They just didn't know how. The `how' is being a team and sacrificing, and he sure got that out of this club."

Hunter went 30-23-7 – a .500 record – in the regular season after agreeing to a one-year deal to take over for Boudreau, helping the Capitals squeeze into the playoffs. Playing a defense-first, possession-oriented system with an emphasis on blocking shots, Washington eliminated reigning Stanley Cup champion Boston in seven games in the first round.

"He got everything out of this team that he could," McPhee said.

Another key move by Hunter was limiting captain Alex Ovechkin's minutes, saying it was dictated by game situations and the opponent's line changes. But it was clear that Hunter wanted players to focus on preventing goals more than scoring them.

Used to playing more than 20 minutes a night, every night, Ovechkin wound up with a career-playoff-low 13 1/2 minutes in one game, and also had only his second zero-shot postseason performance.

"For me, personally, it was pretty hard, to be honest with you," Ovechkin acknowledged Monday.

The two-time NHL MVP and team captain called it a "hard year, mentally."

Other players generally said they understood Hunter's motives for moving on – and generally expressed that they would have liked if he'd stuck around.

"I just had a little short chat with him and shook his hand and said thank you. I asked him if there's anything I can do to convince him to stay," forward Brooks Laich said. "He taught us as much about leadership and team aspects and respect amongst players and trusting your teammates as he did about hockey. He was like having another veteran in the locker room. He changed the culture around here a little bit, which the rest of us really enjoyed. He's leaving the team in a better state than he found it."

Whether Hunter's lessons will be followed when a new coach arrives remains to be seen.

"I know it's a long summer here, but hopefully guys remember that to win in the playoffs you have to sacrifice, block shots, do the right things," forward Troy Brouwer said. "That's just what he tried to instill in us the entire time he was here and the entire stretch down the playoffs."

Here's how Hunter summed it up: "You put skill with a hardworking, gritty team, and you've got a winner."

McPhee doesn't have a specific timetable for finding a replacement, saying it might happen by the NHL draft in June or perhaps not until August.

"I'm not in any rush," McPhee said.

NOTES: G Tomas Vokoun said he won't be back. Injuries to him and Michal Neuvirth allowed Braden Holtby to become the starting goalie for all 14 playoff games. "I wasn't planning on being back here anyway. It was never my intention to be here more than a year," Vokoun said. ... F Jay Beagle broke his foot while blocking a shot in Game 5 against the Rangers and stayed in that game, but couldn't balance enough on the ice to play in Games 6 or 7 and needed surgery. He said he expects to be able to skate again within 2 1/2 months. ... McPhee said D Tom Poti, who missed all season injured, "may have played his last game in the NHL." ... Among the team's unrestricted free agents: F Alexander Semin. Among the restricted free agents: D Mike Green. "I believe that we're going to win a Cup here," Green said, "and I want to be a part of it."

___

Howard Fendrich can be followed at http://twitter.com/HowardFendrich

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ARLINGTON, Va. — For quite some time, Washington Capitals general manager George McPhee tried to persuade former player Dale Hunter to return to the team as its coach. This season, McPhee finall...
ARLINGTON, Va. — For quite some time, Washington Capitals general manager George McPhee tried to persuade former player Dale Hunter to return to the team as its coach. This season, McPhee finall...
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linton
Perseverance is one short race after another.
02:31 PM on 05/16/2012
Defense is what wins championships, the Caps players need to understand that. Playing great regular season hockey and flaming out early in the post season does not win championships.
Some like Overchkin and the other big names have to play some serious defense or let others come in to do that. All the complaints about ice-time is not necessary. Anyway, I don't recall the last time a pro team won something in the DC metro area.
10:11 PM on 05/15/2012
Adios goon coach. Go back to obscure life and think about all players you crippled with your sneak attacks and sticks over the years.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Food for thought tastes like chicken
10:38 AM on 05/16/2012
Why don't you point us to one single player that he crippled.

Thanks in advance.
09:10 PM on 05/16/2012
http://www.sbnation.com/nhl/2011/11/28/2592726/dale-hunter-cheapshot-washington-capitals

You're welcome...'sad' no-nothing too/
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09:23 AM on 05/15/2012
Thanks to Coach Hunter for taking this team as far as he was able to. Tough situation and group of players to inherit -- and he managed to get them playing hard and minimize a lot of the mental mistakes they make all too often. It's telling, I think, some of their take-aways were how to be 'respectful' and how to play as a "team". I love the Capitals, but that team has a bunch of Prima Donnas on it. Boudreau tried much the same thing as Hunter and got fired for his trouble after his players whined. Ovie had a "tough year" mostly because he didn't get his way.

Caps need to get over themselves; they have all the talent they need to win, but, sadly, lack the heart to be champions, I think. They are, generally, a soft team. Hunter's brilliance was that, for about two months, he hardened them up a good deal.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Food for thought tastes like chicken
09:00 AM on 05/15/2012
Ovechkin is a cancer. He will inevitably destroy any coach that chooses to try and tame this mess of a team. Hunter managed to get them to play some defense for a change, but I'm sure rangling the likes of Alex, Backstrom, and Semin was just too much of a risk to his sanity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Food for thought tastes like chicken
09:02 AM on 05/15/2012
*wrangling
08:33 AM on 05/15/2012
Wow, this came as a shock, especially since Hunter showed that he could coach at this level while taking his team (that barely made the playoffs) all the way to the quarterfinals, in which they should have beat the Rangers.

I guess the real question McPhee has to ask is, what type of coach does he want in Washington? One like Hunter who tried to implement a system that finally started to come together (leading to more wins), or one who will be a "YES" man and play Ovie, whose talent had drastically dropped this season. He can play 25 minutes per game, but if he doesn't buy-into the TEAM concept and realize that there are other players on the ice with him, they will go nowhere. Ironically, he wears the "C" only due to his stature, not because of his leadership skills.

How about making Laich captain?? A guy who gives 110% everygame and doesn't piss and whine about ice time because what matters to him is the score at the end of the game, not where he sits in the league leaders.

Hey George, trade him now and get something in return before he becomes more of a cancer to your team.
10:56 PM on 05/14/2012
Caps please hire Paul Maurice so that the Carolina Hurricanes will not re hire him in the foreseeable future.
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canpete
09:08 PM on 05/14/2012
hunter has his priorities right, good for him and best wishes..
05:51 PM on 05/14/2012
I applaud him for doing what he wants, he has nothing to prove.
05:47 PM on 05/14/2012
Im not a caps fan but they deserve better. Ovechkin might not be the best Defensive forward but you need to keep a top 10 skater on the ice.
tpartynitwit
Don't Read to Me!
05:16 PM on 05/14/2012
Good. It was irritating to watch a one-dimensional team that couldn't (or wouldn't) checks its' hat reined in, block shots, play disciplined two-way hockey and nearly get to the Conference Finals. That Hunter was responsible is even more galling. With any luck, they'll hire another coach who won't limit Ovie's ice time, and I can go back to dismissing them. When Hunter was hired, I showed my sons the youtube clip of Dale Hunter taking out Pierre Turgeon after Turgeon picked his pocket and sent the Caps packing in the 1993 Patrick Division Semi-finals, one of the most outrageous and unsportsman-like acts you'll ever see.
06:15 PM on 05/14/2012
You got that right. That hit was criminal.
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CommunistMold
Maryland > Virginia
09:57 PM on 05/14/2012
It was 20yrs ago. Get over it. A team that b-a-r-l-e-y made the play-off's took out the defending champs and it took the #2 seed seven to close them out. How can anyone complian about limiting Ovi's ice time? When it mattered he got all the top guys to play hard. Green/Back/Ovi/Semin ect. Did anyone watch these games? Listen to the game analysis from the pros on NHL tonight? We were two goals away from the Estern Conference Finals. The Caps players and coaches gave it EVERYTHING they had. New York just had a little more.
tpartynitwit
Don't Read to Me!
10:38 PM on 05/14/2012
Granted, the Caps played great, and Hunter was the reason. He was very good in the situation he inherited, and owning the cash cow London Knights helped him not give a flying etc. and do what was necessary. Curbing Ovie's ice time sent the message to do what it takes to win in the playoffs (2-way-hockey) or pick pine out of your butt. Face it, Ovie's a selfish player, the Caps have a tradition of playing the type of game that facilitates a low handicap, and now that Hunter's gone, they're toast.
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KeepNIt2Real
Hey, don't blame me! I'm a 2-fer-1 guy.
05:16 PM on 05/14/2012
This sounds like: "I was told I MUST win a championship or firing Bruce would make management look like idiots. Soooooooooooooooo, you know the rest..."
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AliveInNYC
Moved on to DC but still having fun!
08:49 AM on 05/15/2012
Not true at all. They wanted to sign Hunter to a multi year contract but he only wanted a one year deal and said then that he would decide at the end of the season if he wanted to return.

No one should be surprised by this decision, he was very clear about his intentions on the day they hired him.
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CommunistMold
Maryland > Virginia
04:26 PM on 05/14/2012
Now we just float in limbo...