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Mike Keenan

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Michael Edward Keenan (born October 21 1949 in Bowmanville, Ontario) is the former General Manager of the Florida Panthers. He was named to the position May 26, 2004. On September 3, 2006, Keenan resigned his position and was replaced by head coach Jacques Martin.

Keenan was a player for St. Lawrence University (1969-72), the University of Toronto (1972-73), the Roanoke-Valley Rebels (1973-74), and his native Whitby Warriors (1976-77).

He began his coaching career with the Peterborough Petes before moving on to the Rochester Americans, which he guided to the American Hockey League championship in 1983. He returned to University of Toronto to lead it to the CIAU title. He then landed his first high-profile job with the Philadelphia Flyers in 1984, then the Chicago Blackhawks in 1988. In 1993, he took the job as New York Rangers head coach, and led the franchise to its first Stanley Cup win since 1940. Keenan has also coached the St. Louis Blues (1994-96), Vancouver Canucks (1997-98), and Boston Bruins (2000-01). While coaching the St. Louis Blues, he refused to dress his team in a newly designed alternate jersey because of how horrible they looked. He was named head coach of the Panthers on December 3, 2001 before becoming its GM.

Currently, he is 5th all time in NHL wins. Keenan's teams never missed the playoffs until 1998. His tough coaching style and attitude towards his players have earned him the nickname "Iron Mike".

[edit] Controversy

Despite Keenan's coaching record his inability to maintain working relationships with players and team organizations has resulted in a lack of long term coaching positions. His coaching resumue includes abrupt terminations or resignations from coaching or general manager positions, sometimes at bafflingly inopportune, or peak, moments of his career.

Keenan was unceremoniously dismissed from the Philadelphia Flyers not long after leading them to the 1987 Stanley Cup Finals. After taking the Chicago Blackhawks to the 1992 Stanley Cup Finals, Keenan again abruptly resigned his coaching position a year later due to friction in the front office and a lucrative coaching offer from the New York Rangers. Keenan managed to coach the Rangers to the Stanley Cup in his first and only year as head coach, but was unable to coexist long enough with general manager Neil Smith and resigned weeks later. Unremarkable stops as coach or general manager in St. Louis, Vancouver, Boston and Florida (twice) followed.

In September of 2006, Keenan again attracted headlines when he abruptly resigned as general manager of the Florida Panthers. It was speculated that Keenan had lost a power struggle with head coach and longtime friend, Jacques Martin, over personnel decisions. Martin succeeded him as general manager upon his resignation.

Once, "Iron Mike" in game 4 of the first round of the 1987 playoffs, pulled his goalies, Ron Hextall and Glenn Resch, a total of five times in a single game (granted the 5th time was to get an extra attacker for the last minute). Keenan is well-known for doing that — once even making four goalie changes in one period.

Roberto Luongo, then a Panther, maintained in 2002:

“Not a big deal. [Keenan] does it so much that we expect it. If he’s your coach and you’re an NHL goalie on the bench, you have to be ready, just in case.”
[citation needed]

[edit] Career Record

Preceded by:
Bob McCammon
Philadelphia Flyers Head Coaches
1984-88
Succeeded by:
Paul Holmgren
Preceded by:
Bob Murdoch
Chicago Blackhawks Head Coaches
1988-92
Succeeded by:
Darryl Sutter
Preceded by:
Ron Smith
New York Rangers Head Coaches
1993-94
Succeeded by:
Colin Campbell
Preceded by:
Bob Berry
St. Louis Blues Head Coaches
1994-97
Succeeded by:
Jimmy Roberts
Preceded by:
Tom Renney
Vancouver Canucks Head Coaches
1997-99
Succeeded by:
Marc Crawford
Preceded by:
Pat Burns
Boston Bruins Head Coaches
2000-01
Succeeded by:
Robbie Ftorek
Preceded by:
Duane Sutter
Florida Panthers Head Coaches
2001-04
Succeeded by:
Rick Dudley
Preceded by:
Rick Dudley
Florida Panthers General Managers
2004-06
Succeeded by:
Jacques Martin


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