List of Chicago Blackhawks head coaches

The Chicago Blackhawks are an American professional ice hockey team based in Chicago, Illinois. They play in the Central Division of the Western Conference in the National Hockey League (NHL).[1] The team was first named the "Chicago Black Hawks", until 1986, when spelling found in the original franchise documents spelled the franchise name as the "Chicago Blackhawks", making the team change its name in response.[2] The team is also referred to as the "Hawks".[3] The Blackhawks began their NHL play in the 1926–27 season as an expansion team with the Detroit Cougars and the New York Rangers, and is one of the Original Six teams.[4] The franchise has 6 Stanley Cup championships, most recently winning in the 2014–15 season. Having played in the Chicago Coliseum (1926–1929) and the Chicago Stadium (1929–1994), the Blackhawks have played their home games at the United Center since 1994. The Blackhawks are owned by the Wirtz Corporation, chaired by Danny Wirtz; Kyle Davidson serves as the team's general manager. The Blackhawks captaincy is vacant, following the team's decision to not re-sign Jonathan Toews for the 2023–24 season.[5][6]

Pete Muldoon was the Blackhawks first head coach, and allegedly put a curse on the Hawks.

There have been 37 head coaches for the Blackhawks. The franchise's first head coach was Pete Muldoon, who coached for 44 games in the 1926–27 season. However, he is also well remembered for allegedly "putting a curse" on the Blackhawks, which stipulated that the team would never finish in first in the NHL.[7] The Blackhawks never had a first-place finish until 40 years after that incident.[8] Hughie Lehman, originally the team's goaltender, became the Blackhawks' third head coach after yelling at the first Blackhawks owner, Frederic McLaughlin, that his proposed plays were "the craziest bunch of junk [he had] ever seen".[9]

Orval Tessier became the only head coach to have been awarded the Jack Adams Award with the Blackhawks by winning it in the 1982–83 season.[10] Tommy Gorman, Tommy Ivan, and Rudy Pilous are the only Blackhawks head coaches to have been elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder.[11] Gorman, Bill Stewart, Pulios, and Joel Quenneville are the only coaches to have won a Stanley Cup championship as the head coach of the Hawks.[12]

Billy Reay, the Blackhawks' head coach for 14 seasons, is the franchise's all-time leader for the most regular-season and playoff games coached and wins, with 1012 regular-season games coached, 516 regular-season game wins, 117 playoff games coached, and 57 playoff game wins. Twenty-three head coaches spent their entire NHL head coaching careers with the Blackhawks. Darryl Sutter and Brian Sutter are the only pair of brothers[13] to have coached the Blackhawks; both coached the Hawks for three seasons each.

Joel Quenneville was the head coach of the Blackhawks from the 2008–09 season to early in the 2018–19 season.[14][15] and guided the Blackhawks to three Stanley Cup titles in 2010, 2013 and 2015. At the time of his firing, Quenneville was the second-winningest coach both in the Blackhawks and NHL history, and was also second in all-time games coached.[14]

The 40th and current head coach of the Blackhawks is Luke Richardson, who was hired on June 24, 2022.[16]


Key

#Number of coaches[a]
GCGames coached
WWins = Two points
LLosses = No points
TTies = One point
OTOvertime/shootout losses = One point[b]
PTSPoints
Win%Winning percentage[c]
RefReference
*Spent entire NHL head coaching career with the Blackhawks
Elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder
Spent entire NHL head coaching career with the Blackhawks
and have been elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder

Coaches

Hughie Lehman won three out of the 21 games he coached.
Charlie Conacher coached the Blackhawks for three seasons.
Mike Keenan was the Blackhawks head coach for four seasons.
Darryl Sutter coached the Blackhawks for three seasons.
Alpo Suhonen was the Blackhawks head coach in the 2000–01 season.
#NameTerm[c]Regular seasonPlayoffsAchievementsRef
GCWLT/OTPTSWin%GCWLTWin%
1Pete Muldoon*1926–1927441922341.4662011.250[17]
2Barney Stanley*1927–192823417210.217[18]
3Hughie Lehman*19282131717.167[19]
4Herb Gardiner*1928–192932523414.219[20]
5Dick Irvin1929122648.333[21]
6Tom Shaughnessy*1929–193021108323.548[22]
7Bill Tobin*1930231110224.5222011.250[23]
Dick Irvin1930–1931442417351.5809531.611[21]
Bill Tobin*1931–19324818191147.4902110.500[23]
8Emil Iverson*1932–19332187622.524[24]
9Godfrey Matheson*193320200.000[25]
10Tommy Gorman193319347328281773.5008611.8131933–34 Stanley Cup championship[12][26]
11Clem Loughlin*19341937144616320142.4934121.375[27]
12Bill Stewart*193719396922351256.4061073.7001937–38 Stanley Cup championship[12][28]
13Paul Thompson*1939194427210412741249.45819712.368[29]
14Johnny Gottselig*194419471876210520144.385404.000[30]
15Charlie Conacher*19481950162568422134.414[31]
16Ebbie Goodfellow*1950195214030911979.282[32]
17Sid Abel19521954140397922100.357734.429[33]
18Frank Eddolls*1954–19557013401743.307[34]
Dick Irvin1955–19567019391250.357[21]
19Tommy Ivan1956195710326562173.354[35]
20Rudy Pilous1957196338716215174398.514401822.4501960–61 Stanley Cup championship[12][36]
21Billy Reay196319761,0125163351611,193.5891175760.487[37]
22Bill White*1976–1977461624638.413202.000[38]
23Bob Pulford19771979160616534156.488408.000[39]
24Eddie Johnston1979–19808034271987.544734.429[40]
25Keith Magnuson*19801982132495726124.470303.000[41]
Bob Pulford1982281214226.4641587.533[39]
26Orval Tessier*19821985213999321219.5141899.5001982–83 Jack Adams Award winner[10][42]
Bob Pulford19851987187847726194.51922913.409[39]
27Bob Murdoch1987–1988803041969.431514.200[43]
28Mike Keenan1988199232015312641347.542603327.550[44]
29Darryl Sutter199219952161108026246.569261115.423[45]
30Craig Hartsburg1995199824610410240248.5041688.500[46]
31Dirk Graham*1998–1999591635840.339[47]
32Lorne Molleken*199919994718191046.489[48]
Bob Pulford1999–2000582824662.534[39]
33Alpo Suhonen*2000–20018229411270.427[49]
34Brian Sutter200120042469110352234.476514.200[50]
35Trent Yawney*2005200610333551581.393[51]
36Denis Savard*20062008147656616146.497[52]
37Joel Quenneville20082018797452249961,000.6271287652.5943 Stanley Cup championships (2009–10, 2012–13, 2014–15)[12][53]
38Jeremy Colliton*20182021205879226200.488945.444[54]
39Derek King*202120227027331064.457[55]
40Luke Richardson*2022–present

Notes

  • a A running total of the number of coaches of the Blackhawks; thus, any coach who has two or more separate terms as head coach is only counted once.
  • b Before the 2005–06 season, the NHL instituted a penalty shootout for regular season games that remained tied after a five-minute overtime period, which prevented ties.[56]
  • c In ice hockey, the winning percentage is calculated by dividing points by maximum possible points.
  • d Each year is linked to an article about that particular NHL season.

References

General
  • "Chicago Blackhawks Coach Register". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved 2009-06-14.
Specific