What was known to be completed in the past few days became official Wednesday, as the Rangers announced David Quinn would be their 35th coach in franchise history. He will have his official meet-and-greet press conference at the Garden on Thursday, and finally the Blueshirts can move forward with the rest of their offseason plans.
Quinn, 51, leaves Boston University after five seasons behind its bench and takes over a young Rangers roster that is filled with players who came through the college ranks. The hope is that Quinn can develop the talent while not taking too long to turn them into a group that can compete for and in the postseason.
“I am very pleased to welcome David Quinn to the New York Rangers,” Garden chairman James Dolan said in a statement. “David brings a diverse and successful coaching resume that includes extensive work in developing young talent. I am confident he is an excellent fit for our team, and know he will work tirelessly with [President] Glen [Sather], [GM] Jeff [Gorton] and our entire organization to execute our plan to build the next Rangers Stanley Cup contending team.”
Gorton fired Alain Vigneault immediately after the final game of this regular season on April 7 after five mostly successful seasons behind the bench. But the defensive structure had been a problem in recent years, with assistant coaches Ulf Samuelsson, Jeff Beukeboom and Lindy Ruff all unable to create stability in the Rangers’ own end.
So in comes Quinn, who was a highly touted young defenseman in his own right and spent years running the defensive side of the puck under legendary BU coach Jack Parker.
“In a coaching career that has spanned over two decades at the collegiate, pro, and international level, David has helped his teams achieve success while simultaneously teaching the game and helping his players develop on and off the ice,” Gorton said in the same statement. “He is the ideal choice to bring our loyal and passionate fans the winning hockey they deserve.”
The Rangers organization had made a clear declaration during this past season that they were trying to rebuild, beginning when they sent a letter to the fans on Feb. 8 that foreshadowed the trades of many veteran players to obtain draft picks and young prospects in return. It was the first time the Rangers had missed the playoffs since 2009-10, and just the second time since the hard salary cap was introduced after the 2004-05 lockout.
A few weeks after the season ended, Dolan told The Post the Blueshirts were looking for a “developmental coach,” and it seems their rather secretive search didn’t spread too much further than Quinn and Denver University’s Jim Montgomery, who ended up taking the job as the headman of the Stars.
There was a point after the first interview with the Rangers when Quinn had told friends he intended to return to BU, as well as continue with the job as head coach for the U.S. team in the 2019 World Junior Championships. But there seemed to be a change of heart, and now Quinn is totally focused on the Rangers.