Rick Bowness walked off the ice following the Winnipeg Jets’ final loss of the season, which eliminated them from the playoffs, unhappy with his performance and how his team played, and it dawned on him that it should be the final NHL game he coaches.
“Coaches have always told me ... they’ve always said you’ll know it’s time,” Bowness said. “It just hit me then: It’s time.”
Bowness announced his retirement Monday after 38 NHL seasons, a well-respected career that included leading the Dallas Stars to the Stanley Cup Final in 2020 and more time spent behind the bench than anyone else in league history.
“When I leave, I just want to be remembered,” Bowness told reporters at a news conference in Winnipeg, choking back tears. “I just love the game, and I respected the game. I love this league. I respect the league.”
Health issues of his own and his wife, Judy, played a role in his decision, which went beyond disappointment over losing to Colorado in five games. After all, Bowness did a good enough job the rest of the time to be a finalist for the Jack Adams Award as coach of the year for the first time for leading the Jets to a franchise-record 52 wins and a second consecutive postseason appearance in as many seasons on the job.
The EU's executive decides to end legal standoff with Poland over democracy concerns
Travellers share snaps of the worst behaved flight passengers
Georgia Steel risks an awkward run
Skye Wheatley hosts reunion with her I'm A Celebrity co
China and Russia hold first joint navy patrol in Pacific
Outrage as Tesla starts shipping $3,000 Cybertruck tent that looks nothing like as advertised
Hong Kong's leading bookstores decline to stock new book by last governor Chris Patten
Donald Trump calls Joe Biden weak on antisemitism, ignoring his own rhetoric
How I kept my Easter under £10 by buying no eggs and using year
Baby Reindeer knocked off Netflix's top spot by new 'must
McDonald's is dishing out Chicken McNuggets at a discounted price