(UPDATE: It’s now official. No replacement has been named with Keith Gretzky taking over in an interim basis.)
It is done.
It would appear that a loss to the last place Detroit Red Wings was the straw that finally broke the camel’s back. And man, that camel was a stubborn such and such.
The Oilers reportedly fired general manager Peter Chiarelli late Tuesday after another miserable outing in a 3-2 loss on Tuesday, a move that the club is expected to formally announce on Wednesday.
Peter Chiarelli has been fired by the Oilers. Done deal
— Ryan Rishaug (@TSNRyanRishaug) January 23, 2019
The move, of course, was a long-time coming.
Chiarelli had failed to move the team forward, and in the eyes of many Oilers fans, only moved the team in the opposite direction.
The Oilers went from being a win away from reaching the Western Conference Final to one of the most disappointing teams in 2017-18. Perhaps it was just a fluke. Surely, a team sporting the best player in hockey couldn’t be held down for too long.
Tuesday’s loss, Edmonton’s third straight and perhaps most embarrassing of the season, was proof even McJesus can’t save this bunch alone.
The Oilers own a 23-24-3 record, shockingly just three points out of a playoff spot and yet still likely insurmountable.
In his wake, a litany disastrous moves that may take a while to make right after Chiarelli’s three-and-a-half years in northern Alberta.
We’re reminded of Milan Lucic’s contract, that Griffin Reinhart deal and others that saw good players -- Taylor Hall and Jordan Eberle -- leave with less than adequate players coming to replace them.
More recently, the trade of Drake Caggulia for Brandon Manning, and the very recent three-year, $13.5 million deal for Mikko Koskinen, one based on less than 40 NHL games, a career .905 save percentage, and equipped with a limited no-trade clause just so Chiarelli’s legacy will live on in Edmonton all the longer.
Yeah, there’s a mess on a few aisles that need a major cleanup.
But by who? What the future holds is anyone’s guess at the moment.
In the interim, Sportsnet’s John Shannon said a member of the Gretzky family will take the reins in some fashion.
It wouldn’t be surprising to see Ken Hitchcock, who just took over as head coach earlier this season after the team fired Todd McLellan, take over the post at some point. He appears to want to stay in Edmonton.
It also wouldn’t be surprising to see some recycling, either. That’s kind of par for the course in Edmonton, re-using old parts hoping they work like new again. Canning a GM mid-season isn’t common.
That would be a shame, however.
Edmonton deserves a clean slate, from top to bottom. This isn’t going to be the first “rebuild.” It’s not the second or third either.
Connor McDavid deserves a better fate.
Oilers fans deserve a better team. God knows they’ve been starving for one for a long while.
Scott Billeck is a writer for Pro Hockey Talk on NBC Sports. Drop him a line at phtblog@nbcsports.com or follow him on Twitter @scottbilleck