Watch CBS News

Panthers Fire Head Coach Bob Boughner After Two Years Without Playoffs

SUNRISE (CBSMiami/AP) — The Florida Panthers lost the final game of their latest playoff-less season on Saturday night, then dropped the hammer on head coach Bob Boughner just 12 hours later.

The Panthers announced Sunday morning that Boughner had been relieved of duties after two seasons with the team.

Also gone from the Panthers is assistant coach John McFarland.

"We made a tough decision today and have relieved Bob Boughner of his duties as head coach," said Panthes President of Hockey Operations and General Manager Dale Tallon. "We didn't meet expectations this season and share responsibility for that fact. After careful evaluation, we have determined that this is a necessary first step for our young team and we will seek to identify a transformative, experienced head coach with Stanley Cup pedigree to lead our team going forward. We're grateful to Bob, Paul and their families for their hard work and their dedication to the Panthers organization and we wish them the best of luck in their future endeavors."

Florida failed to make the playoffs in either of Bougher's two seasons behind the bench.

Last year they fell one point shy of a playoff berth despite a strong 44-30-8 record.

A poor start to this season that included constant issues with defensive play and goaltending were too difficult to overcome as the Panthers stumbled to a 36-32-14 mark.

Now Florida will look to a new leader, and the first name that comes to mind is former Chicago Blackhawks head coach Joel Quenneville.

Tallon and Quenneville have history together from their time with the Blackhawks and reports are already emerging that the two sides are in discussions.

Whomever the Panthers hire will be the 16th head coach in team history, unless they bring back a former coach which is obviously unlikely.

The Panthers haven't won a playoff series since 1996. None of the last 13 coaches could change that.

Tallon will hold a news conference Monday to discuss what comes next.

Florida was one of three teams this season that had four players score at least 28 goals, when adding Evgenii Dadonov to the list of Hoffman, Barkov and Huberdeau. The other two — Tampa Bay and San Jose — are going to the playoffs.

SEASON IN A NUTSHELL

The Panthers have set some individual records this season. In the end, though, it was the same old story.

Travis Zajac scored the winning goal on the power play in overtime, lifting the New Jersey Devils to a 4-3 victory over the Panthers on Saturday night.

Nathan Bastian scored twice in regulation, Pavel Zacha also scored a goal and Mackenzie Blackwood stopped 37 shots for the Devils in the season finale for both teams.

Aleksander Barkov set a Florida franchise points record with a goal and an assist, Jonathan Huberdeau scored his career-high 30th goal of the season and Mike Hoffman also scored a goal for the Panthers — his 300th NHL point. Roberto Luongo made 23 saves.

The Panthers missed the playoffs for the third straight season and haven't won a playoff series since 1996.

"I'm kind of sick of silver linings at this point," Panthers forward Vincent Trocheck said. "Six years in, we're always looking back saying, 'This is a positive' out of that stack of crap."

On the winner, Zajac fired a shot from the high slot that got past Luongo at 4:04 of 4-on-3 overtime.

"That was the longest game, I feel like, to end a season. But it was good," Zajac said.

Barkov's goal, his 35th of the season, was his 95th point, surpassing Pavel Bure as the Panthers' single-season leader. Barkov also had an assist.

"The last couple games we've been playing well, but it's tough to play when you can't get to the playoffs," Barkov said. "Of course (the points record) means a lot and it's awesome and I want to thank everybody who played with me."

The Panthers have three 30-goal scorers (Hoffman, Barkov and Huberdeau) for the first time in franchise history.

"Good to see some guys reach milestones, but it's tough to see we're not playing in the next few days," Panthers (now former) coach Bob Boughner said. "There's a lot of good things, but not making the playoffs is a disappointment."

Trailing 3-1, the Panthers scored two goals in the final 3:25 to tie the score at 3.

Huberdeau closed the gap to 3-2 when Evgenii Dadonov passed from behind the net to Huberdeau in front, and Huberdeau poked in the puck for his 30th goal.

Hoffman tied it at 3 on his shot from the high slot that beat Blackwood with 1:25 left in the third.

Trailing 2-0, Barkov skated in and fired the puck under Blackwood's pads with 8:02 left in the second to make the score 2-1.

The Devils took a 3-1 lead when Zacha easily got past defenseman Aaron Ekblad and flipped the puck into the net with 5:31 left in the second.

Bastian opened the scoring on his first goal at 1:27 in when his one-timer beat Luongo on the glove side.

Bastian stretched the lead to 2-0 when Egor Yakovlev made a nice centering feed and Bastian redirected the puck into the net at 7:41 of the second.

"It just talks about the character of the group," Devils coach John Hynes said. "It was a pretty hard-fought game and (we) stuck up for each other in finding a way to win it."

The Devils had a goal overturned when Drew Stafford was called for a high stick after he deflected a shot by Kenny Agostino into the net in the first period.

NOTES: Panthers F Jamie McGinn and C Denis Malgin each played Saturday. McGinn was a healthy scratch the past four games, and Malgin the past two. ... Devils forward Brett Seney played his first game since Feb. 23 after being recalled from AHL Binghamton. ... Zacha celebrated his 22nd birthday Saturday.

UP NEXT

Both the Devils and Panthers head into the offseason after failing to make the playoffs.

CBS Miami's David Dwork contributed to this article.

(© Copyright 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.