4:30 PM on a Friday. In terms of employee terminations, there are usually two main reasons to fire someone on a Friday: One, because that person and/or the company will need the whole weekend to cool off and get over the decision or two, because in an organization that is a focal point for the media, Friday afternoon is the best time to fire someone and keep it as quite as possible. That way, the person getting fired can keep their dignity while the organization tries to avoid a media circus going into the weekend. Need proof? Just ask the New York Mets how firing manager Willie Randolph at 1 AM worked out for them. The Lightning, who don't play tonight but have lost three straight and five of six, fired Melrose at 4:30 PM this afternoon. His termination becoming a crystal clear admission that their brand new ownership had made a major mistake. What was also clear, was that Friday afternoon was a good time to let him go and try to garner as little media attention as possible, a 180 degree turn in philosophy for owners Len Barrie and Oren Koules. Their first and not nearly only noise making action as owners was to bring in the former ESPN analyst. Barely five weeks into the season, it was clear things were not going to work out.
Thursday night's 4-3 loss to Detroit probably wasn't even the final straw. It likely came on Wednesday night when the Bolts got embarrassed 4-0 in Miami against the equally troubled Panthers. The Detroit loss dropped the Bolts to a 5-7-4 record and the cellar of the conference right next to the Islanders and Panthers. Only four points out of the final Eastern Conference playoff spot and 66 games to go, the Lightning are clearly still in the playoff hunt. That leads me to believe -- and this is pure speculation -- that there may be more to this situation than poor play on the ice. There may have been gears grinding in the front office and in the dressing room that we don't know about and may never hear about.
As if often the case, one or two assistant coaches have to take the fall when a head coach is fired. In this instance,
Of all of the NHL coaches who we could consider on the Hot Seat, Ted Nolan wasn't one I expected to be fired any day soon. The Isles seemed to love the guy enough to bring him out of his blacklisted exile, and he was a key component of their five-headed management strategy.
























