The Boston Bruins 
have fired coach Bruce Cassidy, who led them to the Stanley Cup Final in
 2019, the best record in the league the next year and at least 100 
points in each of his four full non-pandemic seasons behind the bench.
Bruins
 general manager Don Sweeney announced the move Monday night, three 
weeks after the team’s first-round playoff loss to the Carolina 
Hurricanes.
“This
 was an extremely difficult decision,” Sweeney said in a statement. “His
 head coaching record for the Bruins is impressive, and we are 
appreciative of Bruce both professionally and personally.”
The
 Bruins made the playoffs in each of Cassidy’s six seasons since he took
 over for Claude Julien in February 2017. He coached them within one 
victory of the Stanley Cup in 2019 against the St. Louis Blues.
But
 the team hasn’t gotten out of the second round since then, including a 
Game 7 loss to Carolina this spring. Afterward, team president Cam Neely
 said: “We have to look at making some changes as far as how we play and
 the way we do some of the things.”
“I
 think Bruce is a fantastic coach,” Neely said at his end-of-season 
media availability. “He’s brought a lot of success to this organization.
 I like him as a coach. So, we’ll see where it goes. But I do think we 
need to make some changes.”
On Monday, Neely delivered the verdict.
“Bruce
 has been a fantastic coach and has helped this team win many games and 
achieve success over his tenure behind the bench,” he said in a 
statement. “I have the utmost confidence in Don to conduct a thorough 
search to identify the best candidate that is going to help our team 
reach its full potential.”
The
 Jack Adams Award winner as the NHL’s top coach in 2020, Cassidy becomes
 a top candidate for vacancies in Philadelphia, Chicago, Winnipeg, Vegas
 and Detroit. Others may open because of his availability.
After
 struggling for two seasons with Washington in his first NHL 
head-coaching job, from 2002-04, Cassidy worked his way back to the NHL 
with the Bruins’ American Hockey League affiliate in Providence. 
Cassidy,
 57, took over in Boston from Julien, who led the team to the 2011 
Stanley Cup championship and back to the final two years later. With the
 core of Zdeno Chara, Patrice Bergeron, Brad Marchand and Tuukka Rask, 
Cassidy brought the team to the cusp of another title in 2019 before 
losing to St. Louis in seven games.
During
 the pandemic-interrupted 2019-20 season the Bruins amassed 100 points 
in 70 games and claimed the Presidents Trophy for the league’s best 
record. But after Rask left the postseason bubble to tend to a family 
emergency, the team lost in the second round. 
After
 another second-round exit last year, the Bruins qualified for this 
year’s postseason with a wild-card berth and did not make it out of the 
first round. 
The
 team has since announced that Marchand, the top scorer, and Charlie 
McAvoy, the No. 1 defenseman, will miss the first two months of next 
season while recovering from surgery. Bergeron, who won his record fifth
 Selke Trophy as the league’s top defensive forward, is unsigned and has
 not committed to playing another season; he is also recovering from 
surgery.
In all, Cassidy was 245-108-46 in Boston and is 292-155-9-7 in his NHL coaching career. 
By JIMMY GOLEN
AP Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno contributed to this report.