List of St. Louis Blues head coaches

The St. Louis Blues are an American professional ice hockey team based in St. Louis, Missouri. They play in the Central Division of the Western Conference in the National Hockey League (NHL).[1] The team joined the NHL in 1967 as an expansion team with five other teams. The Blues first played their home games at the St. Louis Arena until 1994; they have played their home games at the Enterprise Center, first named the Kiel Center, since then.[2] The majority of the Blues franchise are owned by SLB Acquisition LLC, headed by Tom Stillman; Doug Armstrong is their general manager.[3][4]

There have been 27 head coaches for the Blues. The franchise's first head coach was Lynn Patrick, who coached for 16 games in his first term. Joel Quenneville is the franchise's all-time leader for the most regular-season games coached (593), the most regular-season game wins (307), the most regular-season points (709), the most playoff games coached (68), and the most playoff-game wins (34). Barclay Plager and Bob Plager are the only pair of brothers[5] to have coached the Blues; Barclay coached for four seasons, and Bob coached for eleven games. Red Berenson, Brian Sutter, Quenneville and Ken Hitchcock are the only head coaches to have been awarded the Jack Adams Award with the Blues.[6] Scotty Bowman, Al Arbour, and Emile Francis are the only Blues head coaches to have been elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder.[7] Six coaches have spent their entire NHL head coaching careers with the Blues.

Drew Bannister serves as interim head coach after the firing of Craig Berube on December 12, 2023.[8]

Key

#Number of coaches[a]
GCGames coached
WWins = 2 points
LLosses = 0 points
TTies = 1 point
OTOvertime/shootout losses = 1 point[b]
PTSPoints
Win%Winning percentage
*Spent entire NHL coaching career with the Blues
Elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder

Coaches

Scotty Bowman has coached the Blues for two stints that comprise four seasons.
Mike Keenan (shown with the Calgary Flames) coached the Blues for three seasons.
Davis Payne coached the Blues for 137 games from 2010 to 2011.
Ken Hitchcock was the head coach of the Blues from 2011 until 2017.
Mike Yeo served as head coach of the Blues from 2017 to 2018.

Note: Statistics are correct through the end of the 2022–23 regular season.

#NameTerm[c]Regular seasonPlayoffsAchievementsReference
GCWLT/OTPTSWin%GCWLWin%
1Lynn Patrick196716410210.313[9]
2Scotty Bowman19671970210977940234.557462422.522[10]
3Al Arbour1970–19715021151456.560[11]
Scotty Bowman†1971281310531.553624.333[10]
4Sid Abel1971103617.350[12]
5Bill McCreary, Sr.197124614416.333[13]
Al Arbour†197119725721251153.4471147.364[11]
6Jean-Guy Talbot19721974120525315119.496514.200[14]
7Lou Angotti197432620618.281[15]
Lynn Patrick197421013.750[9]
8Garry Young197419759841411698.500202.000[16]
Lynn Patrick1975–197683506.375[9]
9Leo Boivin*1976431717943.500312.333[17]
10Emile Francis1976–1977803239973.456404.000[18]
Leo Boivin*1977–19788020471353.331[17]
11Barclay Plager*1978197910425641565.310[19]
12Red Berenson*197919822041007232232.5691459.3571980–81 Jack Adams Award winner[6][20]
Emile Francis†19821982441425533.3751055.500[18]
Barclay Plager*1982–19834815211242.438413.250[19]
13Jacques Demers1983198624010610628240.500331617.485[21]
14Jacques Martin19861988160667123155.4841679.438[22]
15Brian Sutter1988199232015312443349.545412021.4881990–91 Jack Adams Award winner[6][23]
16Bob Plager*1992114619.409[24]
17Bob Berry19921994157736321167.5321578.467[25]
18Mike Keenan19941996163756622172.528201010.500[26]
19Jim Roberts1996–199793339.500[27]
20Joel Quenneville1997200459330719195709.598683434.5001999–2000 Jack Adams Award winner[6][28]
21Mike Kitchen*2004200613138702399.378[29]
22Andy Murray2006201025811810238274.531404.000[30]
23Davis Payne*20102011137675515149.544[31]
24Ken Hitchcock2011201741324812441537.650452025.4442011–12 Jack Adams Award winner[6][32]
25Mike Yeo20172018133734911157.590[33]
26Craig Berube2018202338220613244239.594512427.4712019 Stanley Cup champions[34]
27Drew Bannister*2023–present

Notes

  • a A running total of the number of coaches of the Blues. 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.[35]
  • c Each year is linked to an article about that particular NHL season.

References

General

  • "St. Louis Blues Coach Register". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved 2010-01-02.

Specific