The Record (Troy, NY)

Quennevill­e returns to Chicago with Florida Panthers

- By JAY COHEN AP Sports Writer

CHICAGO (AP) » In some Chicago circles, certainly every one that includes a hockey rink, it’s just “Q.” Only one letter is necessary for a man so revered there is a Twitter account for his mustache with more than 40,000 followers.

Q returns Tuesday night. Joel Quennevill­e leads the Florida Panthers into Chicago to take on the streaking Blackhawks for the first time sincehiswi­ldly successful run in theWindy City endedsome 14 months ago.

The 61-year-old Quennevill­e coached the Blackhawks to three Stanley Cup championsh­ips and nine playoff appearance­s in 10-plus years before he was fired when the team got off to a lackluster start last season. Hewas hired by the Panthers in April, setting upwhat almost certainly will be an emotional night for the coachandhi­s formerplay­ers.

“He’s like an icon in Chicago, whether it’s him winning three StanleyCup­s, coming in and helping us become better players,” Blackhawks star Patrick Kane said. “What he’s done here in his career is amazing, he’ll get a warm reception and it’ll be good to see him. We’ll try to get a win against him and enjoy the time.”

Quennevill­e coaching against his former team is the big headline, but it’s also a matchup of two surging teams hoping to carry their momentum into an extended break. Kane got his 1,000th career point when Chicago beat Winnipeg 5-2 on Sunday night for its season-high fifth consecutiv­e victory. Florida had won four in a row heading into Mondaynigh­t’s game at Minnesota.

Chicago had made just one playoff appearance in 10 years when Quennevill­e took over four games into the 2008- 09 season, replacing Hall of Famer Denis Savard. Dale Tallon was the general manager for the Blackhawks at the time (and he hired Quennevill­e again with the Panthers).

The coaching change in Chicago sparked an unpreceden­ted run for one of the NHL’sOriginalS­ix franchises.

Quennevill­e was the right choice at the right time for Chicago’s promising young core, and Kane, Jonathan Toews, Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook blossomed with the former NHL defenseman behind the bench. The Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup in 2010, 2013 and 2015, and they also reached the conference finals in 2009 and 2014.

“I was fortunate, luckiest guy in the world when I walked into the Chicago situation there — a team ready, sitting on go to win,” Quennevill­e saidafterh­e tookthe job with Florida. “I feel the same here now.”

Heading into Monday’s game against the Wild, Quennevill­e has Florida in contention for its first postseason berth since 2016. Jonathan Huberdeau is heading to the All-Star Game for the first time.

When Quennevill­e was fired by Chicago, Jeremy Colliton was promoted from the Blackhawks’ AHL affiliate in Rockford to the top job. Colliton has been booed before some home games this season, but he sounds as if he is looking forward to the warm reception coming for Quennevill­e.

“It’s a chance to honor Joel. It’s a big night for the organizati­on,” Colliton said after the victory over the Jets. “He was great to me, so I want to honor him too. It’s a big part of the reason why I came here to begin with, because he was here.”

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Florida Panthers head coach Joel Quennevill­e gives instructio­ns during the first period of an NHL hockey game against the Pittsburgh Penguins in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Jan. 5, 2020.
GENE J. PUSKAR - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Florida Panthers head coach Joel Quennevill­e gives instructio­ns during the first period of an NHL hockey game against the Pittsburgh Penguins in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Jan. 5, 2020.

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