Darryl Sutter

Canadian ice hockey coach and former player
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroCanadian ice hockey coach and former player
A.K.A.Darryl John Sutter
A.K.A.Darryl John Sutter
PlacesCanada
isAthlete Sports coach Ice hockey player Ice hockey coach
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
Birth19 August 1958, Viking
Age66 years
The details

Biography

Darryl John Sutter (born August 19, 1958) is a Canadian professional ice hockey coach and former player. He is the current head coach of the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL), with whom he has won two Stanley Cup titles. He is one of seven Sutter brothers, six of whom made the NHL (Brent, Brian, Darryl, Duane, Rich and Ron); all but Rich and Gary (the seventh Sutter brother) worked alongside Darryl in some capacity during Darryl Sutter's tenure with the Calgary Flames. Sutter has also coached for the San Jose Sharks and the Chicago Blackhawks, the latter with which he spent his entire NHL playing career with, from 1979 to 1987.

Playing career

As a player, Sutter spent five years in the minor leagues, including a year in Japan, where he was named rookie of the year. He stands 5 foot 11 inches and his playing weight was 176 pounds. Sutter was drafted by the Chicago Blackhawks at the 1978 NHL Entry Draft in the 11th round, 179th overall. In his NHL career, he suited up only for the Blackhawks and scored 279 points (161 goals and 118 assists) in 406 career regular season games, in addition to 43 points (24 goals and 19 assists) in 51 Stanley Cup playoff games. His last season as a player was in 1986–87.

Coaching career

Sutter began his coaching career in the International Hockey League (IHL), where he coached the Saginaw Hawks and led the Indianapolis Ice to the Turner Cup as League champions.

He was the head coach of the Chicago Blackhawks for three seasons and also served as Chicago’s assistant coach in 1987–88 and as associate coach from 1990 to 1992. He led Chicago to a first-place finish in the Norris Division—and the best record in the Campbell Conference—in 1992–93 with a 47–25–12 record (106 points), only to be swept in the opening round by the St. Louis Blues, which featured his brother Rich on the team. In the lockout-shortened 1994–95 season, he led Chicago to the Western Conference Finals. Following the 1994–95 season, he stepped down as coach of the Blackhawks to return home to the family farm in Viking, Alberta. The decision was largely made out of necessity for him to be with his son, Christopher, who has Down syndrome.

After a two-year hiatus from coaching, Sutter returned to the NHL in 1997–98 season as head coach of the San Jose Sharks, coaching the team until being relieved of his duties on December 1, 2002, just 24 games into the 2002–03 season.

On December 28, 2002, four weeks after he was fired by San Jose, Sutter was named head coach of the Calgary Flames, replacing Greg Gilbert, who had been fired by Calgary on December 3. In April 2003, with Calgary already out of contention of a 2003 playoff spot and then-General Manager Craig Button's contract expiring, the Flames added the title of GM to Sutter's job responsibilities.

In the 2003–04 season, his first full season in Calgary, Sutter led the Flames to a 42–30–7–3 record and the organization's first trip to the playoffs in seven seasons. En route to the Stanley Cup Finals, where Calgary ultimately lost in seven games to the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Flames defeated three higher-ranked opponents in the Western Conference playoff bracket—the Vancouver Canucks, Detroit Red Wings and San Jose Sharks. Sutter and the Flames were unable to build upon their surprise success, however, as the entire following season, 2004–05, was cancelled due to a lockout.

Sutter at the 2006 NHL Awards.

On July 12, 2006, Sutter stepped down as head coach of the Flames. He has said that he found it difficult to handle the jobs of both head coach and GM of the Flames. Sutter compiled a 107–73–26 record in two-plus seasons behind the Calgary bench. The Flames promoted Jim Playfair as Sutter's replacement, but after a first-round loss to Detroit in 2006–07, Sutter hired Mike Keenan as head coach, with Playfair stepping back into an associate coaching role. Keenan was then fired a month after the Flames were eliminated from the 2008–09 playoffs by Chicago. Brent Sutter, former coach of the New Jersey Devils, was selected as the new Flames coach in June 2009. On December 28, 2010, Sutter resigned as the general manager of the Flames.

On December 17, 2011, the Los Angeles Kings hired Sutter mid-season as the team's new head coach after the dismissal of Terry Murray. Sutter's first game with the Kings was a December 22, 2011, shootout victory over rival Anaheim Ducks. He led the Kings to a 25–13–11 mark in 49 games, finished third in the Pacific Division, and entered the 2012 playoffs as the eighth and last seed in the Western Conference. In the playoffs, the team beat the first seed Vancouver Canucks, second seed St. Louis Blues and third seed Phoenix Coyotes to advance to the Stanley Cup Final, the only team to accomplish that feat in the 119-year history of the Finals. The Kings then went on to defeat New Jersey four games to two to give Los Angeles its first Stanley Cup championship in its 45-year history. The Kings set several records during the playoffs, including winning ten-straight games on the road and being the first team to go three games to zero in each of their playoff series.

Sutter and the Kings later won another Stanley Cup in the 2013–14 season, playing 26 playoff games, the most ever for a Cup champion. The Kings also became only the fourth team in NHL history to come back from down three games to zero in a series after shocking the San Jose Sharks in the Western Conference Quarterfinals. Los Angeles then went on to defeat Anaheim and Chicago, both in seven-game series. On June 13, 2014, the Kings beat the New York Rangers in five games to win their second Stanley Cup in three years.

Despite posting a 40–27–15 record in the 2014–15 season, Sutter and the Kings missed the 2015 playoffs by four points, becoming the first team since the 2006–07 Carolina Hurricanes to miss the playoffs entirely after winning the Stanley Cup the previous year, and only the fourth in NHL history.

Personal life

Sutter and his wife Wanda have three children, Brett, Jessie and Christopher. In addition to his NHL responsibilities, Sutter also owns and maintains a 3,000 acre farm in Viking, Alberta, raising beef cattle. In February 1997, during his hiatus from coaching, Sutter fell from a height of 12 feet while doing repairs on the farm and suffered a skull fracture and a broken shoulder blade.

Career statistics

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1974–75Red Deer RustlersAJHL6016203643
1975–76Red Deer RustlersAJHL60439313682
1976–77Lethbridge BroncosWCHL1101015371013
1976–77Red Deer RustlersAJHL565578133131
1977–78Lethbridge BroncosWCHL68334881119849132
1978–79New Brunswick HawksAHL197613651230
1978–79Flint GeneralsIHL10110
1979–80New Brunswick HawksAHL69353166691266128
1979–80Chicago BlackhawksNHL8202273142
1980–81Chicago BlackhawksNHL764022628633142
1981–82Chicago BlackhawksNHL402312353130112
1982–83Chicago BlackhawksNHL80313061531346108
1983–84Chicago BlackhawksNHL592020404451120
1984–85Chicago BlackhawksNHL4920183812151271912
1985–86Chicago BlackhawksNHL501710274431230
1986–87Chicago BlackhawksNHL4486141620000
NHL totals4061611182792885124194326

Head coaching record

NHL coaching record

TeamYearRegular seasonPostseason
GamesWonLostTiedOTLPointsFinishWonLostWin %Result
CHI1992–93844725121061st in Norris04.000Lost in Division Semifinal
CHI1993–948439369875th in Central24.333Lost in Conference Quarterfinal
CHI1994–954824195533rd in Central97.563Lost in Conference Final
CHI Total21611080261115.423
SJ1997–9882343810784th in Pacific24.333Lost in Conference Quarterfinal
SJ1998–9982313318804th in Pacific25.286Lost in Conference Quarterfinal
SJ1999–00823530107874th in Pacific57.417Lost in Conference Semifinal
SJ2000–01824027123952nd in Pacific24.333Lost in Conference Quarterfinal
SJ2001–0282442783991st in Pacific75.583Lost in Conference Semifinal
SJ2002–03249122121(fired)
SJ Total43419316760141825.419
CGY2002–0346191881475th in NorthwestDid not qualify
CGY2003–0482423073943rd in Northwest1511.577Lost in Stanley Cup Final
CGY2005–06824625111031st in Northwest34.429Lost in Conference Quarterfinal
CGY Total2101077315151815.545
LA2011–1249251311953rd in Pacific164.800Won Stanley Cup
LA2012–134827165592nd in Pacific99.500Lost in Conference Final
LA2013–1482462881003rd in Pacific1610.615Won Stanley Cup
LA2014–1582402715954th in PacificDid not qualify
LA2015–1682482861022nd in Pacific14.200Lost in First Round
LA Total343186112454227.609
TOTAL1,203596432101748982.520

Minor league coaching record

TeamYearRegular seasonPost season
GWLTPtsFinishResult
SAG1988–89824626101022nd in EastLost in first round
IND1989–9082532181141st in WestWon Turner Cup

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