| | PITTSBURGH -- Ivan Hlinka, who built the Czech Republic
national team into a gold medal-winning world power, will join the
Pittsburgh Penguins as associate head coach and apparently will
succeed Herb Brooks as coach next season.
The Penguins, the first NHL team to draft heavily in Europe and the first to build their roster around players from the continent,
now seem intent on being the first to have a European-born coach.
|  | | Ivan Hlinka, left, is in Europe right now. He's set to join the Penguins on Feb. 17. |
Brooks, the Miracle on Ice coach of the 1980 U.S. Olympic
champions, replaced Kevin Constantine on Dec. 9 and has since
coaxed the Penguins back into the playoff race with a 15-11-1
record. But it has been widely known in the Penguins' organization
that he did not want the job long-term.
"Herb's not going to be able to coach forever," general
manager Craig Patrick said Monday. "I look at hockey ability and
hockey minds and try to find strong people, and to be able to bring
in someone of this caliber is excellent for this organization."
By joining the Penguins now, Hlinka can spend two months
familiarizing himself with the NHL and the Penguins, nearly half of
whom are Europeans. Six are Czechs, led by NHL scoring leader
Jaromir Jagr, and four played for his 1998 Olympic champions.
Patrick would not confirm Monday that Hlinka will take over when
Brooks steps down, but others in the organization say it's a
foregone conclusion the next coach now is in place.
Jagr has often spoken glowingly about Hlinka, but Jagr also
worries the 50-year-old Hlinka would get an inordinate amount of
scrutiny, attention and, perhaps, criticism as the NHL's first
European coach.
"He's going to be the first coach, and it's always tough for
the first guy," Jagr said.
Hlinka's strengths are his ability to communicate with his
players and to gain their trust, but Jagr said it was easier for
him to do that in the Czech Republic because the players spoke the
same language.
"How are the other (non-Czech) players going to react? How is
he going to treat the players?" Jagr said. "How are the fans
going to react if it's not going well? I'm worried about it because
I love this team and I want it to do well."
Hlinka's English is passable and will improve with time,
according to Patrick, who said the Penguins couldn't pass up the
opportunity to hire a world-class coach.
If nothing else, the Penguins now lead the NHL with two Olympic
gold medal-winning coaches.
"He did a great job in Nagano, but what the most important to
us is what he's done with the Czech national team since then,"
Patrick said. "Their program was in disarray when he took it over,
and he brought it along to be the top program in world right now as
far as international competition. That speaks volumes about what we
think he can do."
Hlinka spent a week with the Penguins last month, talking
coaching philosophies and techniques with Patrick and Brooks. At
the time, the Penguins referred to him as a consultant. Patrick
continued the talks over the phone after Hlinka returned to Europe
to coach a Czech team in a Swedish tournament.
Hlinka will rejoin the Penguins sometime next week.
"He gets a lot of respect from the players because he gives
respect to the players," said Jagr, who often bristled at
Constantine's the-system-comes-first coaching style. "You've got
to give the game to the players, let them know they're the key,
don't just be 'Me, me, me, I'm the coach.' "
Hlinka played in the NHL for the Vancouver Canucks from 1981-83, scoring 42 goals and getting 81 assists for 123 points in 137
games. He also played on the Czechoslovakian team in the 1972 and 1976 Olympics. | |
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