It was April 14 and I was bored out of my mind, flipping through channels on my TV trying to find something good.
And what do you know? I found just what I needed to cure my boredom.
The news that the Vancouver Canucks had fired GM Dave Nonis, just over a week after the team missed the playoffs by three points, was being analyzed and discussed endlessly. So-called "experts" were trying to understand the rationale behind the firing. The answer, ladies and gentlemen, is simple.
There was no rationale. It was a panic move.
Canucks fans were demanding change. They were not wasting time mourning the end of the season because they knew this off-season would finally bring the change that was long overdue. Then this happens.
Nonis is a Vancouver-area native. He grew up a fan and he understands how crazy the fans are about the team. He worked for six years as a Senior Vice President and Director of Hockey Operations for the franchise and was Brian Burke's understudy.
When he entered the spotlight in 2004, he already was familiar with the organization and knew how things were done.
After the Canucks missed the playoffs following the 2005-2006 season, Nonis had his first off-season to prove what he could do. He did not dissapoint.
In what will go down as one of best trades in any sport, Nonis traded Alex Auld, Bryan Allen and controversial Todd Bertuzzi to the Florida Panthers for defenseman Lukas Krajicek and the best young goalie in the game, Roberto Luongo. Nonis promptly signed Luongo to a 4-year, $27 million deal.
The following season, the Canucks finished with a team-record 105 points and won the Northwest Division. Although the season ended with a second-round defeat at the hands of the eventual Stanley Cup champion Anaheim Ducks, spirits were high.
The 07-08 season started with high hopes, the team returned many key players and hoped for a deep playoff run, but injuries were the team's undoing.
Krajicek, Kevin Bieksa, Sami Salo, Brendan Morrison, Mattias Ohlund and Willie Mitchell all missed several games. Luongo himself had some personal issues with his wife's pregnancy and had to miss a couple of games.
Even the always-reliable Sedin twins did not produce as they were expected.
The Canucks were in the running until their second-to-last game, a 2-1 loss against the Edmonton Oilers, and missed the playoffs by only three points.
Even so, owner Francesco Aqulini felt the need to find a scapegoat and Nonis was the one to take the fall.
Firing Nonis makes no sense, especially considering the miscommunication within the organization regarding what personnel moves Nonis make (i.e., how much cap room could be used, what trades were allowed).
Nonis did nothing in his three years in office to deserve getting cut off like this. If anything, he should be praised for the way he transformed this team.
Now the Canucks face an obstacle much bigger than player management: finding a GM who is at or above Nonis' level. There are not many out there in the open market.
If that is not accomplished, the Nonis firing will be seen as a much bigger mistake than it is now. It is already a huge mistake.
Only time will tell if this decision was for the best.
Time. Something Dave Nonis did not have.
















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3 months ago
Naslund gone will open up some room for team
will make job easier for new GM
go sign Redden from the Sens with that money protect the best asset this franchise has and keep the twins around
this team will do good but 2 out of 3 years out of playoffs is not good enough for a ownership group that wants to win
check out my Oilers keeping lowe around year after year of no hope of doing anything.have you seen his drafting record would not know what a goalie looked like if his life depended on it
hey how about you canucks taking lowe as your new GM make 2 teams happy there
lol
3 months ago
I will agree that Nonis probably deserved another shot on the basis of his Luongo trade alone, and I respect his refusal to mortgage the future for a quick fix. I also agree that injuries and inconsistency killed this team this year, a fact for which Nonis can not and should not have been singled out. But let's be honest here - even when the Canucks enjoyed that standout season last year, it had everything to do with Luongo and the team's defensive play. They weren't scoring goals then, as they didn't score goals this year. And at no point did Nonis ever try to think outside the box and address that issue. Don't wanna subtract any pieces to do it? Fine, but that leaves free agency as your option. The Canucks' system isn't deep enough at this time to provide an immediate influx of talent. It's one thing to want to protect the guys in that system, but if you sit on your hands and don't acquire anyone to bridge that gap either, you're only setting yourself up for trouble.
3 months ago
He earned the nickname "nonuts" for a reason. Played it way too safe and didnt make any gamble to help the team. All his acquisitions were as safe as could be. Hes not really going to look bad if he gets isbisters and ritchies ..fills the team with plumbers cause if they dont produce hey what do you expect. All this media hype trying to burn the owner at the stake is laughable. Nonis didnt do a good enough job period. Not only that but there will be a much better GM in next and all the naysayers will eat crow.
from 3 months ago
Having said that the coach should have been canned with some time left to turn the slide around. Too much loyalty in this organization breeds complacency
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