Hockey

Penguins fire Burke, Hextall after missing playoffs for 1st time since 2006

After missing the playoffs for the first time in 17 years, the Pittsburgh Penguins are shaking up the team's front office. The Penguins announced on Friday that president of hockey operations Brian Burke, general manager Ron Hextall, and assistant general manager Chris Pryor have all been dismissed.

Pittsburgh also relieves assistant GM Chris Pryor of duties in front-office shakeup

This composite image shows two men wearing suits and looking off-camera.
Brian Burke, left, and Ron Hextall, right, were dismissed by the Pittsburgh Penguins, the team announced on Friday. (Getty Images/File)

The Pittsburgh Penguins asked Ron Hextall and Brian Burke to thread an impossibly thin needle when they were hired in February 2021.

Hextall, the general manager, and Burke, the director of hockey operations, were asked to find a way to prop open the championship window for stars Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang without sacrificing the club's long-term future.

A little over two sometimes turbulent years that produced a significant lack of progress on either front, Hextall and Burke are out of a job.

The team fired Hextall, Burke and assistant general manager Chris Pryor on Friday after the Penguins failed to reach the playoffs for the first time in 17 years.

The decision to part with the trio came less than 24 hours after the end of a wildly uneven season in which Pittsburgh went 40-31-11 and finished ninth in the Eastern Conference to end the longest active post-season streak in major North American professional sports.

Fenway Sports Group owner John Henry and company chairman Tom Werner said in a joint statement that "the team will benefit from new hockey operations leadership."

They added they "believe in our core group of players and the goal of contending for the Stanley Cup has not changed."

Hextall and Burke were hired shortly after the abrupt midseason resignation of former general manager Jim Rutherford, who built a team that won back-to-back Stanley Cups in 2016 and 2017.

While Hextall did manage to sign Malkin and Letang to team-friendly deals last summer rather than let them walk in free agency, the majority of the roster decisions to build around the club's core backfired.

Pens struggled

Pittsburgh struggled to generate much offence outside of its top two lines and the defence provided little stability outside of Letang and Marcus Pettersson. Goaltending also became an issue, as injuries and inconsistent play at the position cost the Penguins dearly in the 2021 and 2022 playoffs.

The search for a new general manager will begin immediately, with several members of the club's American Hockey League affiliate in Wilkes Barre/Scranton taking over day-to-day operations in the interim.

Pittsburgh's longtime coach Mike Sullivan will also assist during the transition, a sign the club has no intention of moving on from Sullivan, who signed a contract extension last fall that will run through the 2026-27 season.

Whoever takes over will have some difficult decisions to make. Pittsburgh has several undesirable contracts for aging players like centre Jeff Carter, forward Mikael Granlund and defenceman Jeff Petry, all of whom were brought in during Hextall's tenure.

Carter performed well immediately upon his arrival in the spring of 2021 and appeared a good fit at the time his extension was announced in January 2022. Yet the 38-year-old had just 29 points this season despite playing 79 games and his minus-16 rating was the third-worst of his lengthy career.

Petry, flipped for defenceman Mike Matheson last summer, had issues staying healthy and didn't become an offensive threat the way Pittsburgh imagined. The 35-year-old still has two years left on a deal that will pay him $6.25 million.

Minimal impact

Granlund, acquired at this year's trade deadline from Nashville, made a minimal impact with the Penguins, collecting just one goal and four assists in 21 games. The 31-year-old still has two years to go on a contract that pays him $5 million a season.

Hextall said shortly after the All-Star break he believed there were many teams that could win the Stanley Cup and that the Penguins were one of them.

Pittsburgh, however, stumbled down the stretch, mixing solid victories over teams like Colorado with baffling losses to the NHL's also-rans. The nadir came on Tuesday night at home against Chicago.

Needing only victories over Chicago and Columbus to extend the club's playoff streak to 17, Pittsburgh instead let Chicago pull away for a 5-2 victory and the Penguins were eliminated a night later when the New York Islanders topped Montreal.

Chants of "Fire Hextall" sprouted briefly late in the third period against Chicago with Pittsburgh trailing by multiple goals.

Just over 72 hours later, Hextall was gone.

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