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Cameron Thompson The Hockey Writers

Published on Monday, June 29, 2020

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Blue Jackets Beginnings: Doug MacLean’s Tenure as GM

The Columbus Blue Jackets were awarded an expansion franchise on June 25, 1997, and were set to take the necessary steps to establish itself in the National Hockey League in the 2000-01 season.

Enter Doug MacLean who was hired as the first general manager in Blue Jackets history on Feb. 11, 1998. His previous managerial experience came behind the bench from 1987 to 1997 in the form of assistant coach and head coaching positions.

Related: The Columbus Blue Jackets under GM Scott Howson

MacLean split time as an assistant coach between three NHL clubs from 1987 to 1992 with the St. Louis Blues, Washington Capitals and the Detroit Red Wings. Also, MacLean was hired as head coach for the Florida Panthers for two seasons and change, leading the Panthers to the Stanley Cup Final against the Colorado Avalanche in the 1995-96 season before being fired just two seasons later after a slow start to the 1997-98 season (from ‘NHL’S PANTHERS TO HIRE MACLEAN,’ Orlando Sentinel, 07/24/1995).

With MacLean getting his first crack at shaping a team from scratch, Columbus was hoping that he could have the same impact that he did with the Panthers in taking them to the Stanley Cup Final in short order.

Drafting

When looking back on MacLean’s nine years with the organization and six years as acting general manager and president, drafting — especially drafting high — was the aspect as a general manager that he just couldn’t seem to get a good grip on.

Related: Taylor Hall for Adam Larsson Trade Revisited

As an expansion franchise, you look to gather many high picks in the draft in your first three or four years in the league. You acquire top prospects to build your team around and eventually become competitive down the line, but MacLean largely came up short in his time with the Blue Jackets.

Doug MacLean’s best pick in his tenure came in the 2002 NHL Draft by selecting Rick Nash. (Photo by Dave Gainer/The Hockey Writers)

MacLean’s most notable triumph in the draft came in the form of a dominant junior player with the London Knights and first-overall pick of the 2002 NHL Draft in Rick Nash. Make no mistake, Nash is the greatest Blue Jacket to date and MacLean made an easy choice in selecting the best player available. However, it doesn’t excuse him of picking seven times in as many drafts in the top eight overall and only getting two real players in Nash and Derick Brassard.

There have been plenty of swings and misses at the top of the draft for MacLean, none more notable than Alexandre Picard, Gilbert Brule, Nikolai Zherdev, and even Pascal Leclaire. Specifically with Brule, the majority of MacLean’s scouting staff wanted to go with the Slovenian star and Kings’ great Anze Kopitar, but MacLean chose to overrule the scouts and go with the Canadian out of the Western Hockey League.

Anze Kopitar, Los Angeles Kings
Anze Kopitar could’ve been a Blue Jacket if MacLean hadn’t selected Brule in the 2005 NHL Draft. (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

Brule played three seasons for the Blue Jackets and never scored more than 19 points or 9 goals for Columbus, while Kopitar had 61 or more points in each of his first three seasons with the Kings, including a 32-goal campaign in the 2007-08 season.

Although the drafting history is tough to look at, it wasn’t a complete disaster for MacLean as he drafted players like Brassard, Marc Methot, Adam McQuaid, Kris Russell, Jared Boll, Steve Mason, Derek Dorsett, and Dan Fritsche, who became the first Ohio-born player to play for the Blue Jackets.

Related: Blue Jackets Roster Impact From the Gaborik Trades

Another interesting pick for MacLean in the 2002 draft was Sergei Mozyakin in the ninth round. Mozyakin preferred Russia over the NHL and is the all-time leading scorer for the Kontinental Hockey League with 469 goals and 1,000 points in 19 seasons, marking perhaps the greatest Blue Jacket to never play for the Blue Jackets.

Drafting is a critical part of any general manager’s job and even if your team suffers to get the results on the ice, the draft system is there to pick your team up again and give fan bases hope for the future. However, when a team picks at least in the top eight overall in each of its first seven seasons and only gets Nash and Brassard, it won’t go well. Not delivering with those chances that high in the draft will cost you, and the Blue Jackets were constantly chasing their tails in the draft.

Trades

Where MacLean lacked in drafting and developing prospects, he tried to make up for in trading and acquiring assets to play with the core that he had, specifically finding someone that can center a line with star winger Nash.

Related: Carolina Hurricanes’ 5 Best Trades in Franchise History

The best that MacLean could offer in his tenure through trade was 35-year-old and Hall of Fame player Sergei Federov (from ‘Sergei Fedorov traded to Blue Jackets,’ OC Register, 11/15/2005). Although still an effective player even in the twilight years of his career, he only spent three seasons with the Blue Jackets before being traded to the Washington Capitals at the trade deadline in the 2007-08 season.

Chris Pronger Edmonton Oilers
Doug MacLean’s reported hesitation to deal Alexandre Picard kept the Blue Jackets from acquiring Chris Pronger from the St. Louis Blues. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/Getty Images)

The worst trade that MacLean made in his tenure with the Blue Jackets was actually a trade that he didn’t make and that was trading for Hall of Fame defenseman Chris Pronger. The sticking point was that the St. Louis Blues wanted MacLean to include 2004 first-round pick, Alexandre Picard, as a part of the deal and MacLean didn’t want to part with the highly touted Canadian winger.

The trade obviously didn’t materialize and Pronger went on to complete a Hall of Fame career with two trips to the Stanley Cup Final with the Edmonton Oilers in 2006 and the Philadelphia Flyers in 2010. While on the other side, Picard played 67 games and only recorded two assists in his NHL career.

MacLean acquired solid players such as Fredrik Modin, Jason Chimera, Darryl Sydor, and signed players such as Ray Whitney and David Vyborny, but none could play or elevate their game enough to keep up with the player that was keeping the franchise alive in Nash.

Conclusion

After six seasons with the Blue Jackets as general manager and president, MacLean was fired on April 19, 2007, paving the way for Scott Howson to replace him.

MacLean’s tenure with the Blue Jackets can only be described in one word: frustrating. He is the only general manager to serve six seasons and come away with no playoff berths. With your highest season point total being 74 points, it won’t get your team to the playoffs.

Scott Howson stepped in for the Blue Jackets as general manager for the fired Doug MacLean. (Photo Courtesy of Jeff Little/THW)

A well-run front office in sports typically separates teams that stay relevant and compete every year to the ones that are constantly recycling voices and searching for a direction in philosophy. The best example of that in sports is looking at the NFL and the stark difference between two franchises like the Cleveland Browns and the New England Patriots.

Related: The Sedin Twins and the 1999 NHL Entry Draft

Since MacLean left the Blue Jackets at the end of the 2006-07 season, the team found some clearer direction with Howson. Now, they have the most sustained success and talent they have ever had under Jarmo Kekalainen and his expertise, which proves just how important general managers and the front office can be to a franchise, young or old.

The post Blue Jackets Beginnings: Doug MacLean’s Tenure as GM appeared first on The Hockey Writers.


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