Showing posts with label danny briere. Show all posts
Showing posts with label danny briere. Show all posts

Sunday, March 12, 2023

Philadelphia Flyers: Danny Briere Part of Organizational Rebuild

Daniel Briere is the Philadelphia Flyers' new interim General Manager. As the Gatineau, Quebec, native said in today's press conference, he did not expect to gain this responsibility two days ago. 

Fans of this storied franchise and others across the hockey world know Briere by his nickname, Danny. The goodwill he earned appears more likely than not to lead to him being named the organization's full-time general manager in the near future. 

The Flyers are in the early stages of head coach John Tortorella correctly labeled a rebuild earlier this season. Chuck Fletcher, the recently relieved President of Hockey Operations and General Manager, was not hired in 2018 to rebuild the team but to quickly make it a Stanley Cup contender. 

Many factors caused the team to regress. What was seen as a one-person operation, led by former General Manager Ron Hextall, was replaced with a multi-person corporate effort. Neither formation worked. 

So, an announced split of Fletcher's positions into a President of Hockey Operations and a General Manager will happen. Briere's task, assuming he becomes the GM under whoever the new President of Hockey Operations is, will be to make steady progress and not backslide. 

Tortorella's praise for Briere during the season signaled organizational confidence. That, along with Comcast Spectacor's hire of Dan Hilferty as Chief Executive Officer, furthers significant internal changes to restore the Flyers to an elite team in the National Hockey League. 

Founder and Chairman Ed Snider died in 2016. No one and no internal group can ever replace what Snider created or become what he and those who worked for him represent. But all involved are striving toward restoring the reputation the Flyers held. 

Briere wore the Flyers uniform and various hats in the organization after he retired. He raised his sons in this area and made Philadelphia his home. Now, like others before him, Briere must translate his passion for the game, background in it, and a solid work ethic into achieving success on the ice and, eventually, in raising the ever-elusive third Stanley Cup.

The following was provided by the Flyers media relations department: 

Philadelphia Flyers Interim General Manager Daniel Briere

 

Hi everyone, Danny Briere here. First of all, I want to start by thanking Dave Scott for trusting me and giving me this opportunity. I had the chance to work with Dave closely with the Mariners when I started my career, my second career after stepping off the ice and then in the last couple of years too with the Flyers. I want to thank Chuck Fletcher as well for the chance, the opportunity of including me on the staff in the past season. It is a true honor to be in this role. I've been a Flyer for a big part of my career. I love the Flyers. I love the logo. I spent a lot of days, a lot of sweat, a lot of sacrifice here for this organization. It's a true honor to be in this position. It's also the city I call home. I've raised my kids here; that's what they consider their home. I'm very proud to be here, to live here, and to be part of this. All I can say at this point is that I want to do whatever I can to help finish the season and help prepare the right way. Put a plan in place hopefully for an important summer ahead of us.

 

Over the last couple of days, how have you navigated the emotions of Chuck getting fired, someone you work with closely, and earning the interim role?

It's been a little bittersweet, to be honest. I have so much respect for Chuck Fletcher. Anybody that has had the chance to work with him and under him the last few years will tell you, he is true gentleman. One of the nicest person in the hockey world. You know that side is tough. It's also the business of hockey. That's what we're in. I have a lot of respect for Chuck and I, again, thank him for giving me the opportunity. Then on the flip side, it's the excitement of being here, of representing the Flyers as Interim GM. It's a pretty cool moment. It's something that I'm extremely proud of. To be honest with you, it's something that will stay with me for a long, long time. This emotion of having that title is pretty special, to be honest.

 

With regards to the Flyers roster as a whole, over the last few weeks, John Tortorella and Chuck mentioned the importance of taking this slow and doing this the right way. In his comments about Chuck being removed, Dave Scott knew this is going to be a multiyear process. Obviously, you're the Interim GM. You're not the full time GM as of yet. Do you agree that fixing this and getting the Flyers on the right path is a multiyear process?

Yes, I do. That's my belief. It needs to be done the right way. At this point, I think that's what's needed. That's what's going to be important moving forward and not rushing to things. We're going to keep evaluating players. We’ll have a lot of discussions in which direction we're going to move, but there's no doubt that this is not a quick fix in my mind. I believe it's going to take a little while, but at the same time, it doesn't mean that we're going to do a full fire sale and have a complete new team next year. There's a lot of good players. There's a lot of good young players on this team. We've definitely gone on the younger side and I think it shows at times. It showed this year and it's going to show until the end of the year. We're a younger team. We maybe lack a little bit of experience. I think it's the right way to go at this time.

 

When we were talking to John Tortorella yesterday, he said that you have some pretty strong opinions about where you think this organization needs to go. What are some of the strong beliefs that you have and that you're able to do as you move forward here?

Well, I'm not going to get into player’s names and stuff like that at this point. I think it's a little too early for that. I have my own way of seeing things, obviously. I have my own opinions. I'm not gonna lie about that. Everybody sees things their own way differently and I do as well. I'm really looking forward to spending more time with the coaches, get their thoughts, and also our staff here on the second floor. I have some good people around me that I want their opinion and I'm going to talk to a lot of different people, moving forward, evaluating, and deciding on what the next few steps will be at this point. It's only been 48 hours. To be honest, we haven't dived really deep into any of that at this point. I'm just trying to survive those last 48 hours. My phone hasn't stopped buzzing for more than about three seconds. It was a little bit of survival mode the last couple of days.

 

I know you were involved in the interview process with John Tortorella when you guys were hiring this head coach. What did you like about his interview and what you've learned about him?

There was a lot to like about John. I think what really was striking for me was how he was going to rebuild the culture over here. Looking at the last couple years, it was tough to watch at times. I felt we were an easy team to play against. You don't realize how important culture is until you lose it. We interviewed a lot of great candidates, guys that were probably great coaches and could have done the job. In my mind, I felt John Tortorella was the perfect guy at this time to get us back on track and I really feel we've seen this. We've seen it this year. You look at not just the way we play, but talking also to players around the league, executives around the league, and they all say the same thing: The Flyers are tough to face. They might not have the most talent at this point. They might be a little inexperienced at this point. But man, it's tough to face you guys. We've heard that constantly over the year. I've been really proud of the players and our coaching staff, the way they enforce that and how tough they've made us to face the season. I think it was the right step in the process. The mentality is different around here, from what I've seen from the previous two years. It's really exciting. I think and I still believe that John was the perfect decision at this time for us.

 

Two questions. The first one, you’re obviously talking like someone who's gonna be a part of this decision-making for the long term, why the interim title? What do you do to get it full-time? Is it a try out for a few weeks or what exactly is going on with that?

Well, look, I think it's the right thing to do. I'm okay with it. I don't have a problem with the interim tag. I like that Dave and his staff are going to take the proper time to evaluate who should be full time in that position. You know, I see myself staying here and being part of the future. I hope they believe in me as well. It feels that way. I honestly don't have a problem with the tag. We'll see what happens next. Like I said, I'm honored to be here and to be in this position. I want to do everything possible to help put this this franchise on the right track at this point.

 

A quick follow up, a lot has been made of the senior advisors on the Flyers, the guys who've been around for decades now. Are they part of your decision-making? Do you see them playing kind of the same role in the past with that?

I don't know at this point. I am not sure. What I can tell you is I have a lot of respect for, I assume you're talking about Bobby Clarke, Bill Barber, and Paul Holmgren. I have a lot of respect for those guys for what they've accomplished in their career, both on and off the ice. Lots of respect. I've been in this position for 48 hours. I've had a quick chat with them. At this point, that's all that's happened. We'll see moving forward with what happens there.

 

There are two openings right now: President of Hockey Operations and General Manager. Does one of the two jobs appeal to you more than the other?

Well, I have the GM part in my title, so that's kind of what I'm going with at this point. I haven't really thought about President. At this point, I probably see myself as the GM, I would say, but I would be open to whatever Dave and Dan would see fit. It really doesn't matter to me.

 

As a quick follow up, Chuck Fletcher did not like the word rebuild when he talked about the future. Is that something that you don't like to use too? Or do you see this as a rebuild?

Not at all. I believe it's needed. We have to be careful, and I want to make sure that rebuild doesn't mean fire sale. There's a big difference between the two. I want to make that clear. We're not going to get rid of everybody. We have some good players here. Some players that are in certain roles that we're going to keep as well. We're going to look at every possible option out there to improve the team. I don't think this is a quick fix. That's my belief and that's why I'm not afraid to use the word rebuild. As long as you all understand, those little asterix, that it's not a fire sale. It doesn't mean fire sale for me.

 

Danny, what are kind of your primary focuses over the next couple of months heading into the off-season, Draft and does having the interim tag impact any of that?

Well, the next few things, it's helping John, his staff finish the season strong. Obviously, I know a lot of the players, but I'll have the chance to maybe dive a little deeper with his coaching staff and the people upstairs around me. Have deeper discussions on evaluating players and what the next few steps moving forward. At the same time, the draft is going to be a key opportunity for us to improve our team for the future. The reality is, unfortunately, we're not going to make the playoffs most likely this season. We're going to be positioned pretty well to add a key quality player for the future of this franchise. That's going to be important the next couple months to send the proper people in the right place to see us who's out there. Make sure we make the right pick. That's also going to be a key responsibility of my job.

 

You are the interim GM, but are you empowered if there were changes in the front office, either additions or subtractions that you're allowed to make?

That's a discussion that I need to have with Dave and Dan, but I believe so. At this time, it's not about rocking the boat. It's more about evaluating everybody that's in place, evaluating our players, finishing the season strong and being a help to the players and staff and everybody around me. Try to get everything on track finishing off. I'm not looking to change anything drastically right at this moment. I've had this job for 48 hours. It's not going to happen overnight. This is going to be a long process. Just like we've talked about doing things the right way, I think it applies also with everybody on the staff, not just the players.

 

It's pretty clear based on our conversation this morning that you would like to ultimately be named the GM. That said, you've only been an official member on the front office as a special assistant for a little over a year. What gives you the confidence that you have the necessary experience to take on that role for the players?

Oh, there's no doubt in my mind that I can do the job. I'm going to have some great people around me as well. It's not something that I'm going to do alone. I was never a player that worked alone. I always believed in team first, team mentality first, and it's going to be the same approach on this side. I love working with people and it's going to be the same way moving forward now. Even when I played as a player, I was always someone that studied my opponents, also studied my GMs, and what they were doing and whether the other GMs were doing. I probably started doing that a little deeper when I got to Buffalo, the way the Darcy Regier kind of built a young team that went to a couple back-to-back Conference Finals. I came here, learned a lot under Paul Holmgren as well, where we were a lot closer, maybe when I arrived to winning the Stanley Cup, but it was also coming off a year where we finished last, I believe, the year before I got here, and how he was able to rebuild that team. I went to Montreal with Marc Bergevin where he also had to rebuild the character of his team. In the year that I was there, I was able to take a team to the Conference Final as well and then to Joe Sakic in Colorado. I got there early in the process; they were just the latest Stanley Cup Champions. I was there early in the process when that rebuild was being made. Now I like to think that I was able to help some of the young guys because I was at the end of my career. More of in leadership role, little less responsibilities on the ice. I felt that I was there more for leadership, but I also saw how things were being built at that time. Since then, I've tried to follow how teams were building their teams. I've also learned on the business side, different things that you don't realize as a player, how everything works in front offices. It's been a great process. Yeah, maybe I was hired officially under Chuck in the past year, but my journey has started a long, long time ago. I've always been someone that pays attention to what's going on, how processes are being done, and how I could use it if one day I'd be in that position. I'm not gonna lie, it's something that I saw myself do from early on when I was playing. I always believed that I could be in this position one day. Again, it’s why it's so special and so exciting for me.

 

First, as Adam was referencing, the still is relatively new to you in the front office and you were talking about your preparation for it. But in your mind, how important is it as there's a search for a team president is there to have somebody with high degree of experience in a front office role? Or does it really kind of depend on who the candidate is?

Why I think there's many ways to go about that. That would be more of a question for Dave Scott and Dan Hilferty. I don't want to put words in their mouth that whatever they decide. It might be someone that can help in a day-to-day decision, or maybe it's someone else that we find in a different role. I'm not sure. That would be more of a question for them.

 

Chuck in one of his last press conferences was talking about how he's not planning a fire sale. He mentioned a number of young players as a group that in his mind were growing and continue to build on key guys like Noah Cates, Owen Tippett, Cam York, Morgan Frost and maybe a couple other guys. In your mind, is that the group that go in each day individually? Are these guys that you're looking to continue to grow as an organization?

Well, what I would say to that is our young guys have a lot of value to us. At the same time, we're not in the position to not listen to anyone. The young guys are not the guys that we would be shopping, obviously. Yes, I have been really impressed in the development of the guys that you've mentioned under John Tortorella. That's the really exciting part for me. Seeing some of the young guys take a step this year. In the last few days seeing also guys like Elliot Desnoyers and Tyson Foerster come up and hold their own. Gives us a lot of hope moving forward. They're all going to be part of the evaluating process. As you've seen, there's no one that's untouchable anywhere. If Wayne Gretzky can be traded, anyone can. But obviously, some players have more value than others and I'm not going to deny that.

 

I don't know if you know this yet or not. As far as Brent Flahr, is he going to be around? Is he going to be the leader of the Draft? And moving forward, is he going to be on the staff here?

That's my expectation. I have a great relationship with Brent. He's been tremendous. He's included me on everything since I started working with Chuck. I have a lot of confidence in Brent. You look at his track record at the draft. It's pretty impressive. So yeah, I would say so.

 

The timing was a bit curious, right after the trade deadline. How active were you in trade discussions? If this was going to happen, would you'd rather had it before the deadline to get a full crack at shaping the roster that way?

I didn't even think of that. I was trying to help as much as I could at the deadline like everybody else. That's really not my decision. It happened 48 hours ago. I'm ecstatic. I'm so happy and honored to be here. I'm not questioning what was done before or when the decisions were made. To me, it's moving forward. Looking to this day and moving forward. That's what I'm excited about.

 

Have you been given any idea what kind of timeframe Dave and Dan have to hire full time people? Obviously, your interview started 48 hours ago and it's going to be ongoing. Have they given you any ideas of when they want to have full time people in those two positions?

No, I don't know what the timeline is at this point. I have the feeling, or I was kind of led to believe that it's not going to be something that's going to drag into next season. I don't know the timeline of things. I'm sure they're going to reach out to people and talk to different people. Hopefully, the decision is made soon.

 

Last year, we were talking about the development. This season has been a big year for the Phantoms with a lot of young players taking bigger bites of the team. Do you feel that that is on the right track? Or do you think that that still needs to be accelerated?

That's a good question. Something we're going to evaluate deeper. At the same time, I think Lappy has done a great job preparing these guys when they were called up. Like you mentioned, they've done a really good job coming up and helping. You look in the case of Cam York, I remember beginning of the year when we sent them down, you would have thought that was the end of his career. Even though it wasn't easy for him, it was a tough time. He battled through. I was really impressed on how he got through that and how Lappy’s staff was able to get him back on track, work with him, and how good he's been since he got called up. He's playing heavy minutes for us in our top four and on the power play. It's been an impressive process, so it's got to be part of the evaluation.

 

You've come across like trying to find your feet a little bit. Were you surprised when you got the call?

A little bit, obviously. You don't go to work expecting the person you work for to be fired. Like I said, the last 48 hours it's been a little crazy. Lots of people reaching out. Lots of friends reaching out. I couldn't keep up and I apologize to everyone if I haven't had the chance to get back to you yet. It's been a little crazy. I know I'm repeating myself and I apologize for that, but it's been pretty amazing. It's quite an honor. I’m trying to survive at this point the last 48 hours.

Friday, March 10, 2023

Philadelphia Flyers: Danny Briere's Elevation to Interim General Manager Is Step 2

The Philadelphia Flyers hired John Tortorella last year. The ramifications of that internal decision was detailed heading into the start of this season.


Today's move, relieving President of Hockey Operations and General Manager Chuck Fletcher of his duties and naming Danny Briere interim GM, is step 2 in rebuilding the Flyers on and off the ice.  


The organization's decision to split what were Fletcher's positions, since his hire in 2018, into President and GM roles recognizes the complexities of the modern professional sports world. 


Briere has worked for the Flyers for many years following his retirement as a player after the 2014-15 season. He was provided with a comprehensive opportunity to learn all aspects of the organization, and also served in a top role for the Comcast-owned East Coast Hockey League's Mariners of Maine team, which gave him unique and applicable experience he can use now. 


The interviews Briere had in the recent past, including his being a finalist for the Montreal Canadiens GM position, led to the Flyers naming Briere as Special Assistant to the General Manager. 


The Quebec native was drafted in the first round of the National Hockey League's draft in 1996 by the then-Phoenix Coyotes. Brier seems primed to be elevated beyond the interim GM title he earned today. 


And earned is the right adjective to use regarding Step 2, with Step 1 being Tortorella's hire. 


Tuesday, November 29, 2022

John Tortorella's Comments Intriguing - Danny Briere's Star to Shine in Philadelphia?

Philadelphia Flyers head coach John Tortorella spoke with the media this week, as he regularly does, and offered an intriguing response to a question about his relationship with the team's management. 

He credited assistant general manager Brent Flahr. But Tortorella also praised the hockey mind of the special assistant to the general manager, Danny Briere. 


People can subjectively read between the lines now and refer back to the latter part of November 2022 to determine where Briere's ascension is realized, meaning with this or another organization, as the future unfolds.


Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Trade Deadline Offers Great Opportunity

Philadelphia Flyers President of Hockey Operations and General Manager Chuck Fletcher is looking ahead to next season and beyond as he and his expanding staff prepare for the National Hockey League's trade deadline on March 21. 

Opportunity was a keyword that is being used regarding this season. Danny Briere, the recently appointed Special Assistant to the General Manager, referenced during his introductory presser earlier this month. 

Only injury would likely prevent the trade of captain Claude Giroux, with that specific, anticipated transaction representing the end of an era in this franchise's history. 

A change in the team's roster should include the addition of NHL-ready younger players arriving via trades, a handful of off-season free agent acquisitions, with cap space allowing one or possibly two larger contracts, and the hope for a score of solid draft choices this summer (with the event being held on July 7 and 8 in Montreal at Centre Bell), with those prospects providing hope for the future.

Recent presser comments from Fletcher (Feb 11) and Briere (Feb 9) provide a glimpse of current organizational perspective regarding the near-term and beyond. Courtesy of the Flyers media department...

Philadelphia Flyers President of Hockey Operations & General Manager Chuck Fletcher

Was Coots’ back surgery something you expected as you saw it progress or did it come as a surprise?

Well, this wasn't an issue that was bothering him coming into this year. I think he started having issues in the fall. Tried to battle through. We tried to treat things non-surgically. Couple epidurals to be exact and trying to resolve the issue that was there. Ultimately, you try to do your best to avoid back surgery if you can, but ultimately the doctor and Sean felt confident that the best way to resolve this going forward would be to have this surgical intervention. It was successful today. It’s about a three-month return to play, which will take him out of this season. Fortunately for him and for us, it will give him the chance to have a normal summer of training and come back healthy for the ‘22-‘23 season. 

 

Do you expect him to be 100% at training camp?

Yeah. Doctor’s confident on that.

 

Do you have an update on Ryan Ellis? Is he looking like he needs surgery or can you guys avoid that?

Yeah, that’s what we’ve been trying to do, again. If Ryan does have surgery, whether it was two months ago or now, it’ll knock him out for the season. We’ve been trying to avoid surgery and look at different ways of rehabbing and treatment to allow him to play. We’re starting to get to a point in the year though where obviously his health is first and foremost and the second issue would be making sure he’s ready for next year. We’re getting close to that point. I just spoke with Ryan about twenty minutes ago and he’s worked hard. He’s done everything he can. We’ll see where we’re at, but in the next few weeks, we’ll have to make a decision. 

 

We see Kevin Hayes skating, is there a level of concern though in bringing Kevin Hayes back too soon?

I don’t know about bringing him back too soon. It’s certainly a lot going on in that area for him. The core muscle, the groins, everything. I think with Kevin, it’s 50/50 that he can come back and play. He also may need some additional work done to get ready for next year. We’re doing what we can. He’s seen different specialists. We feel we have a good grasp on where we’re at. We’re just going to have to see how he responds to the treatment and the skating that he’s doing now. Again, the focus for all these guys is what’s in their best long-term interests in terms of their health and can we get them ready for the 22-23 season.

 

You say Hayes may need something else, do you mean surgery?

Yeah. 

 

We’ve seen Tyson Foerster here, what’s the update on where he’s at?

With the shoulder surgery that he had, I don’t think he’d be a candidate to play this year. The good news is, as you’ve seen, he’s skating every day. Rehab’s going well. Everything’s trending the right way. I don’t know that we’ll be in a position to get him to play games this year, but again, he’s working on skating right now. Going to be able to work on his lower body strength and then when his shoulder begins to progress, he’ll be able to work on the upper body. We’re very confident he’ll be good to go for next year. We’re just trying to take advantage of the time that we have to work on some areas that a lot of young players need to work on. 


Do you expect to Ryan Fitzgerald to play this year after giving him an NHL contract in the offseason?

We’re hopeful. I don’t know if I want to speak out of turn, but Tanner Laczynski, I believe, will be able to return to play a week from today and another week is the goal. It could be off a day or two. Ryan would be another week or two after that. They’ve both made tremendous progress. Laczynski’s skating every day. Skating hard. Working on conditioning. Ryan is a couple weeks behind him, but we expect both to be able to play. They’ve put a lot of time and effort in, so I’m excited for both of them to get playing as well as Lappy. 

 

Morgan Frost and Cam York were sent to the Phantoms during the All-Star break and Isaac Ratcliffe is back up here. What are you looking for to get them back up with the Flyers?

The idea isn’t to rush to get them back up here. It’s just allow them to continue to play. Play in all situations and develop. If that’s up here, it’s fine, but if it’s down there, right now it’s just about development with them. These guys are very important parts of our future. Ice time, roles, opportunity to get puck touches. We feel that Lehigh Valley is the best place for them to achieve that.

 

How would you rate their development while they were here?

Tough league to develop in. I thought Morgan was getting better. Showing signs. I thought with Cam, he played well. There’s times he played a top four role and there’s times he played a third pair role. Once his minutes dropped a bit, that sort of I guess pushed me a little bit to consider the Lehigh Valley option. For me, it’s just about playing and getting a lot of reps. We’re not in a rush. He’s 21 years old, Cam. He’s a really good player. He showed everybody what he can do in terms of retrievals, puck movement and his ability to play on the power play. He’s not the biggest body, but he defends well, particularly for his size. I think he has all the attributes to be a long-term NHL player. I just think there’s a lot of times we rush these kids and we don’t give them a chance to fully develop.

 

With Couturier being ready for next year, do the doctors believe that this injury might linger into his later years of his career?

Not at all. That’s why the surgery. Again, there were things we looked at, non-surgically, that may have helped short-term, but there were some concerns about long-term. The procedure he had today, to the best of everybody’s knowledge at this point, should resolve the issue. 

 

Getting back to Bill’s question about Cam and Morgan. Does there come a point where you say you have to start taking a more serious look at some of the young guys coming up?

We have been. Right now, we’re only carrying twelve healthy forwards. Isaac’s here, and Max Willman, Bunnaman, and Mayhew. Other players have had a look at various times. Out of necessity, a lot of players have had that opportunity. I think the most important thing is to the extent that you have enough bodies, just to do what’s right for them for their long-term development. I think you’ll see various players get some games up here, to have that opportunity. Playing in Lehigh Valley, Lappy and that team had a tough start. Didn't win a lot of games the first two months. I think from December and on, we’ve had very few regulation losses. They’re playing hard. They’re playing the right way. It’s just a great learning and winning environment right now, which I think is really beneficial for these kids long-term.

 

Can you talk about Danny Briere and what would be his most important role?

I’m very excited about Danny. Danny’s been involved with us since the ‘19-‘20 season. With that 2020 Draft, he spent a lot of time with Brent, watching a lot of videos on the top kids. The year we took Tyson Foerster, I think. He’s been in every meeting we’ve had since that season, whether it’s free agency, trade deadline, draft, end of the season strategic meetings. He’s been involved in every meeting. He’s been involved with our player development staff, even spent a few games on the bench with Lappy in Lehigh this year when we lost some coaches to COVID. Danny’s been really involved. In terms of the timing, I think it’s worked out really well for Danny. He’s obviously the President and Governor in Maine. Up until last summer I believe, he was taking an executive business program at Wharton. I think the timing really worked out really well for him to transition into a full-time role with us. I think interviewing with the Canadiens really showed him that this is something he really wants to pursue and jump into. I think the timing is great for him and for us.  I know speaking with Brent, Brent’s already got him scheduled out. He was on the road last weekend. He is on the road this weekend. He’ll be focusing probably on the pro side through the trade deadline. After the trade deadline, he’ll focus on the first round of the draft and he’ll sit in on all of the meetings. Going forward, we’ll get him more involved in everything that we do. Brent and I had this experience with Andrew Brunette in Minnesota at the end of his career. We brought him in and Andrew did player development, spent time with the farm team. He did pro scouting. He ended up coaching a little bit with Mike Yeo as he determined his career path and what he wanted to pursue. Now, he’s head coach in Florida. I kind of see a similar type of path for Danny. He’s going to have a bright future in this game. He has to see what areas he likes, but he’s got a tremendous knowledge of the game. He knows players. I think this is a great opportunity for us and for him. 

 

Back to Ryan Ellis for a second, can you sense how frustrated he is with only being able to play 4 games this year?

Yeah, it’s been terrible for him. We go on the road and he stays behind. He comes in early to get his rehab done, so you don’t even feel like you’re part of the team. I know there’s been a lot of frustration from Ryan. What's ailing him this year hasn’t ailed him before, so it’s hard to know how these things happen. He’s dealing with it the best he can. Again, at this point really our focus is on next year, trying to do what’s best for him and for our club going forward.

 

When it comes to Kevin Hayes, is the situation like Couturier’s where you will go non-surgical as much as possible?

I think that’s what the doctors and Kevin are speaking about. If he can come back, play, feel good and not do any further damage, that’s great. If it’s not healing to the extent we need it to be and to the level we need it to be, then we’ll have to look at additional surgery. It’s still a little bit up in the air, but I think everyone’s realistic about the situation.

 

How does the outlook of the team change with Couturier and Ellis not being able to return this year?

Again, Ryan only played 4 games for us. I thought three of those four games, he and Provorov played really well. Provorov’s game without him has been okay, but it looked like they had the ability to have good chemistry. He’s an all-situation player. He plays power play and penalty kill, plays late in a game when you’re up a goal, late in a game when you’re down a goal. He’s an impactful player when he’s healthy and playing to his ability. We’ll have to use the limits we have. If he and Provy guide us to what we think they can bring next year, it makes it a little bit more challenging. Obviously, we’re a bit more familiar with Coots and Kevin Hayes. I don’t think it changes things too much. Right now, it’s been an extremely difficult season but there’s opportunities for the players that are here to show what they can do. I think there’s a great opportunity for our organization to look at ways to improve, whether it’s the trade deadline or this summer. Going into next year, we have to take advantage of these opportunities, where it’s the players that are getting them or the management, coaching staff, looking at ways to get better for next year. It’s all looking forward now. How do we get better? There’s going to be opportunities for not just the players, but for our group to do that as well. 

 

Can you talk about the expansion to the analytics department? Can you talk about the two people that you added?

It’s really exciting. Ian Anderson heads up our analytics side. Ian and Jake have been here a long time while we added Matt a couple seasons ago on the analyst side. They’ve been doing great work, but we’re now getting this massive data dump from the NHL. There’s going to be incredible opportunities for teams to try to figure out how to manipulate and best utilize the data that we’re going to have. We’re trying to get ahead of it. Katie and Cole are two tremendous hires. Ian did a great job going through the process. We had hundreds of applications. These two young people, we’re very fortunate to hire them. Both Katie and Cole are technically very skilled, but they also have experience within the hockey industry. Katie’s been part of the UMass program that just won the National Championship. She’s getting her second masters. She’s worked for the Boston Bruins and she’s a young woman. Her work ethic is off the charts and talk about multi-tasking. She’s got all these things going on. She comes very highly recommended from Greg Carvel at UMass as well as from the Boston Bruins. We’re excited to get her in here in the spring after UMass’ season is done. Cole, a former goalie, played junior hockey. Played at Amherst college. He’s done a lot of work in the public domain, in terms of goaltending and tracking and projects of that nature. We’re very excited to bring him in. He works in the tech industry now and has that very good technical skill set, and again a love of the game of hockey. To find these people with a high level of technical expertise combined with knowledge of hockey and working with coaches, in Cole’s case playing the game, I think this is tremendous. They’re great hires. I know Ian is still looking to add to our staff and our goal is to be best in class, to be top. No different from our player development program we’ve worked on, our strength program, added Danny Briere to our management staff, and adding Alyn McCauley and promoting Tom Minton, now with the addition of Katie and Cole. I think we’re very fortunate. Dave Scott, at times I feel like he’s given me an unlimited budget and I’m trying to go by, trying to exceed it. We’ve been able to have some great people. We have a great staff. We have opportunities here to get better, but the people we have, I feel very confident that we’ll find some good solutions. 

 

Are you confident in getting several of the prospects signed this year once their season ends?

I hope so. They’re playing, so out of respect to their collegiate programs, I don’t know that I want to stir the pot, muddy the waters too much. Look, we’re having a tough season. This is the land of opportunity right now. We’re looking for talent. We’re looking for high-end skill. A young man like Bobby Brink’s top scorer in the NCAA. Ronnie Attard, one of the top defensemen in the NCAA. Noah Cates scored a goal in the Olympics yesterday. Fedotov, the Russian goalie, has had back-to-back shutouts. Desnoyers had four goals the other night. All these kids are knocking on the door and are more than ready to start their professional experience with the Flyers. We’re looking forward to that infusion of talent as well as what we hope to add in the next few months.

 

When do you start the permanent coaching search and who will be involved in that?

We’ll get to the end of the season. I’ve been working with Mike and the coaching staff now. Certainly, think about this all the time, but at the end of the season, we’ll sit down and look at every department and look to make the changes we want to make when we have more time. Right now, there’s still a lot of hockey to be played. A lot of issues that we’ll have to deal with in the next few months, whether it’s injuries, whether it’s the trade deadline, whether it’s signing some of our top prospects, whether it’s college free agency, whether it’s preparing for the draft. There’s a lot of things, and certainly at the right time, that will become a priority. 

 

With the trade deadline, when does the conversations start to pick up?

It started really about the last week. Teams typically have their pro scouting meetings either late January through to mid-February. For example, our pro scouts are coming in next week. We’re going to have five days of meetings to get organized for the next couple months. Some teams have just finished; some teams are just starting. Usually coming out of those meetings, the level of communication increases, and that’s what we’re starting to see. 


Philadelphia Flyers Special Assistant to the General Manager Daniel Briere

 

Do you know what your duties are going to be?

I think it’s going to be scouting, evaluating, maybe some player development. I know the organization pretty deeply from all my time and years here. It’s probably over the years, or the next few years going to increase. I’m not sure yet at this point how deep it’s going to go, but from what I was told, I expect to be more and more involved as time goes on. 

 

Does that include the NHL draft as well?

That’s the plan. For us with the situation we’re in and unfortunately with the way the season has gone, the focus coming up will be what we decide to do the trade deadline. That will be the first focus coming up shortly. A re-shift maybe towards the amateur draft coming and the position we’re in. Again, it’s unfortunate right now but it might be an opportunity that we have to take advantage of. We have to be prepared for that. That will probably be the next step after the trade deadline.

 

[Inaudible question]

I would say that probably forced me to have a better vision of the way I see things. Building an organization from all aspects, but at the same time, the situation that I’m coming in here with the people that are already in place that I’ll be working closely with. When I think of, obviously Dave Scott and Chuck Fletcher, but also Brent Flahr and Barry Hanrahan, who have been in those positions for years. They have a lot of experience. It’s a pretty cool situation for someone who’s starting in the business. I feel very, very fortunate to have people that have that experience all around me.

 

What did you gain from that experience?

I think more and more we're seeing that the business side and the hockey side collapse more and more moving forward. That’s just the reality of how it is in today’s game. It’s important. You look at how the players now, like all the revenues are tied to the player’s contracts. It’s more important. It’s more critical. I think it’s going to keep expanding and growing so for my own development and my own understanding. I remember when I stepped off the ice, I had no idea all that it entailed on the business side. I had no clue at the time, seven years ago, all the work that was done on the business side. It opened my eyes. I think it was great experience and I have the chance to practice it. Not just learn it but really experience it with the Mariners and oversee it, making tough decisions at the time on the business side. That experience alone was good for my development.

 

[Inaudible question]

There’s a lot of people. It started with Paul Holmgren bringing me aboard, along with Shawn Tilger. Valerie believing in me to keep doing that. Mike Shane has been great in teaching me the last few years. I had a lot of help from Adam Goldberg in Maine, and that’s one thing I want to say. Our staff in Maine, this last season has grown in revenues, our season ticket base by up to 25, maybe even more percent. Our staff there has been tremendous in making me look good, so I definitely want to give a shout out to them in all that they’ve done. 

 

Why would you want to stay in Philadelphia?

I played here. I had a lot of success with the Flyers. Along with Buffalo, they were probably the two teams I spent the most time. When I retired this became home. The family, the kids, love it here. We made it our home. I was very fortunate I was able get involved here with this organization. I got to know a lot of people from the business side and the hockey side. A lot of people from the players, from juniors to the ECHL, American league, and to the NHL. I know from top down the people in an organization. It makes it a lot easier. I don’t have to move. I’m staying home. I keep working for an organization that I love and where I had a lot of success. It couldn’t be a better set up honestly.

 

When do you see a turnaround happening?

That’s a good question, and it’s tough to tell how long it could take for that turnaround. Obviously, we would love to see the turnaround starting tonight. Being realistic, it might be next year or the following year. Who knows? I think there's a lot that comes into play. Let’s say we don’t make a push here to make the playoffs and we become sellers. Well, it becomes who’s available to sell at the deadline, and it also depends on what's available on the other side of the table. When you get a draft pick, it might take a little longer. If you get guys who are coming to the lineup right away to help you out, that might rush it a little bit more. It’s tough to tell at this point. One thing I know is there’s a lot of good players and I don’t think we’re a team that’s as bad as what the standings are showing at this point. You just look at the beginning of the year. We were supposed to have Couturier, Hayes, Brassard and Brown as our number 1 through 4 centermen, but how many games have these guys played? I mean we pretty much lost our top four centermen to start the year. That puts us in a tough position. That’s where I believe we’re definitely not as bad as what it’s showing on paper.

 

What do you think are the biggest needs? 

I agree with Chuck when he said high end talent. Difference makers that can on a nightly basis come in. Obviously, Coots not being there really hurts. G has pulled more than his weight. He’s been awesome, but they’ll need support.

 

About drafting and developing players…

That’s another key, the development of those guys. Tyson Foerster, I believe he eventually could be a great player for us, but there’s a lot of guys that you’re waiting to see how they develop. That’s going to be critical for the Flyers’ future. Bobby Brink is having a great season. Samu Tuomaala, that we drafted last year, showed some great promise about being a kid that can make a difference. Zayde Wisdom. Morgan Frost, we’ve seen him here. He’s going in the right direction but he’s got to keep doing it. And on defense, we’re seeing Cam York playing more and more minutes. I think he’s going to get better. At the end of the day, it’s the development of all those young kids that are going to make it or not for the future of the Flyers. 

 

How much of it is injuries and how much of it is relying on young players?

Yeah, they’re going in the right direction. We have to help them take the next step and become difference makers. That's definitely an area that I believe we can do a better job and we’ll have to do a better job to get the Flyers where they belong. 

 

Do you see some parallels between this team and the one you signed with?

I certainly hope so. I remember when I signed the year, I think the Flyers were last the previous season. It looked pretty bleak. Sometimes you got to look a little deeper and find the positive. At the time, I believed in what Paul Holmgren was doing. I believed in the players that were in the system coming up. I thought it was a team that was being built for the future, not just for a year or two. That’s why I was so interested in joining the Flyers back then. Hopefully we can have that same kind of turnaround. I said it earlier, sometimes you have a bad season, well you’ve got to take advantage of it. There’s other opportunities that show up in front of you, you’ve got to jump on that.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Philadelphia Flyers: Behind The Scenes With Danny Briere


The Philadelphia Flyers' announcement that they were buying-out Danny Briere today caused me to think about one of the interviews I conducted with him a few years ago.
(The photo that is used in this post was taken by me in February, 2013.) 

This veteran forward was a terrific playoff performer for the Flyers during the six seasons that he was with the team after signing as a free agent in. The number six is fitting, since he ranks sixth all-time among the franchise playoff scoring leaders and also averaged more than a point-per-game during the six years he spent in orange and black. 

Briere was a terrific person to talk with in the locker room as well. He was genuine, respectful and glib, which is everything that a journalist needs. 

I use the term 'journalist' because the players know the difference between beat writers and freelancers. He treated all of us the same. 

The first time I interviewed him we stood eye-to-eye, one-on-one. I noticed that he probably weighed five-10 pounds less than I did and was obviously impressed that someone of his average (by societal standards) size had endured in a League full of increasingly larger opponents. 

How has Briere survived in the NHL since 1997? Talent, toughness and character.

Here is a link to an interview feature that I wrote about him in the fall of 2011:

Flyers’ Briere is ready for another solid season

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5 Traits Old School Flyers' Fans Possess
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