The
Chicago Blackhawks fired head coach Denis Savard just four games into the season on Thursday, replacing him with NHL coaching veteran Joel Quenneville.
"I'm disappointed but I guess it's the nature of the business," Savard said from his Chicago home Thursday.
"I know I was doing a good job, I'm dedicated to my work. Obviously they felt they had to make a change, so what can you do." Savard, who was in the last year of his contract, was told he'd been fired Thursday morning by GM Dale Tallon.
"I knew I had to do well this year. We talked this summer and I was aware of that," Savard said.
In a prepared statement, the team said firing Savard -- one of the franchise's greatest players -- was not easy. "This was an extremely hard day for this organization and for me personally," Tallon said. "Denis is forever a part of our organization. We made a tough decision that we strongly feel is the right one as we continue to evaluate our team and create a championship caliber organization that can sustain success." Quenneville, according to Tallon, "brings us a wealth of experience and a winning track record that will have an immediate and lasting impact."
Quenneville, who had been working as a scout for the Blackhawks, coached the
Colorado Avalanche from 2005 through 2008 and led the
St. Louis Blues for seven seasons (1996-2004). He has a 438-283-118 career record, including a 44-31-7 mark in Colorado last season.
Led by sophomore stars
Jonathan Toews and
Patrick Kane, the Blackhawks have high hopes to make it back into the playoffs this season. They lost their first three games before finally winning 4-1 over Phoenix on
Wednesday night.
"They promised to bring a Stanley Cup here, and they felt maybe I wasn't their guy. It's very well understood," said Savard. "The only thing I can say is that last year I thought I did a heck of a job with our young kids," added Savard. "Eight to 10 rookies in our lineup. We had a bit of a slow start this year but I thought the team was on the right track. I guess it goes with the territory. As a coach you're judged on wins and losses."
Savard posted a 65-66-16 record in parts of three seasons as coach of the Blackhawks. A member of the Hockey Hall of Fame as a player, he had 473 goals and 865 assists in 1,196 career games with the Blackhawks,
Montreal Canadiens and
Tampa Bay Lightning.