Yardbarker
x
Buffalo Sabres Reportedly Hire Marc Bergevin, Josh Flynn
Eric Bolte-Imagn Images

8:05 a.m.: Things appear to be moving quickly in Buffalo. The Athletic’s Aaron Portzline reported Sunday morning that the Sabres are hiring Flynn from the Blue Jackets. Flynn had been with Columbus since 2008, serving as assistant GM since 2019.

8:00 a.m.: The Buffalo Sabres are reportedly hiring Los Angeles Kings senior advisor Marc Bergevin to the role of associate general manager.

The move has not yet been officially announced. It was originally reported by David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period, whose reporting was corroborated by The Athletic’s Matthew Fairburn and Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman.

The Sabres are in the middle of a significant amount of turnover at key leadership positions in their hockey operations department. GM Kevyn Adams was replaced in his position by former Columbus Blue Jackets GM Jarmo Kekäläinen.

In his first major move as GM, Kekäläinen fired associate GM Jason Karmanos, who also served as GM of the club’s AHL affiliate, the Rochester Americans. Today’s reporting makes it clear that Kekäläinen has already found the person who will replace Karmanos in that role.

In Bergevin, the Sabres have found another executive with a significant amount of high-level hockey operations leadership experience. Like Kekäläinen, Bergevin has significant previous experience as a GM in the NHL, serving as GM of the Montreal Canadiens for nearly a decade, from 2012 to 2021. Before his time in Montreal, Bergevin served in numerous roles with the Chicago Blackhawks, winning a Stanley Cup as director of player personnel in 2010.

Sabres owner Terry Pegula came under significant fire for the process of how he hired Adams, picking someone to serve as GM of the struggling Sabres who had no significant prior hockey operations experience.

The hire of Bergevin further underscores what appears to be a commitment from Pegula to going in the opposite direction with his next hires. The addition of Bergevin as one of the top lieutenants of Kekäläinen’s front office gives Buffalo a deeply experienced pairing of executives at the top of the organization.

Bergevin’s nearly decade-long run as Canadiens GM made him one of the league’s more recognizable executives, and his legacy in Montreal is still debated. In some respects, his tenure was an undeniably successful one. The Canadiens instantly rebounded from a poor 2011-12 campaign to win the Northeast Division in his first season there.

Montreal reached the playoffs in four of his first five seasons as GM, even making a run to the Eastern Conference Final before an injury to star netminder Carey Price cost them a chance at seriously challenging the New York Rangers for the Prince of Wales Trophy.

Bergevin’s Canadiens struggled in the latter period of the 2010s, but ultimately returned to the playoffs during the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2020-21 Canadiens went on a dramatic run to the Stanley Cup Final, winning the Clarence S. Campbell Bowl before losing the Stanley Cup to the Tampa Bay Lightning. It was the Canadiens’ first trip to the Final since their victory in 1993.

Montreal fired Bergevin early in the following season as the Canadiens endured one of the worst starts to a season in franchise history. Bergevin was credited in Montreal with acting boldly and creatively to try to solve his team’s problems, an approach perhaps no better illustrated by his attempt to offer sheet Carolina Hurricanes star Sebastian Aho, or his franchise-altering trade of star defenseman P.K. Subban for future Hall of Famer Shea Weber.

Bergevin made numerous transactions that paid significant dividends for the Canadiens, and one could make the argument that he “won” far more trades than he “lost.” His tenure was littered with savvy moves, such as when he acquired future captain Nick Suzuki (among other assets) in a trade for Max Pacioretty, acquired Phillip Danault and the pick that became Alexander Romanov for two rental wingers in Tomas Fleischmann and Dale Weise; or when in January 2020, he traded a fourth-round pick for Marco Scandella, only to flip Scandella a few months later and receive a second-round pick (and a fourth-rounder) in return.

But with those big moves, many of which worked out for Montreal, also come a few high-profile mistakes. His major free agent signing of Karl Alzner was nothing short of a disaster, and his move to trade Mikhail Sergachev for Jonathan Drouin did not age well.

Bergevin also came under fire later in his tenure as GM for reportedly failing to “modernize” the Canadiens’ hockey operations department. The team reportedly lagged behind its peers in terms of the modernization, as Sportsnet’s Eric Engels reported in 2022 that the Canadiens did not have an in-house analytics department or at the time employ a dedicated skills coach.

From the Sabres’ perspective, the positives and negatives of Bergevin’s Canadiens tenure aren’t hugely relevant. What matters most is what Bergevin will be able to bring to Buffalo in his capacity as associate GM, and the key thing he’ll offer Kekäläinen is an immense amount of high-level hockey operations decision-making experience.

Kekäläinen’s work is far from over, as The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun reported yesterday that the Sabres requested permission from Columbus to speak with assistant GM Josh Flynn, someone Kekäläinen worked closely with during his days running the Blue Jackets. According to LeBrun, permission was granted.

Flynn’s background is specifically within hockey administration, and in Columbus, Flynn is responsible for leading “salary cap management” and “contract negotiation,” according to his listing on the team website.

After firing Karmanos, the Sabres have two remaining assistant GMs on the staff who are holdovers from the Adams regime: Jerry Forton, who oversees amateur scouting, and Mark Jakubowski, who per Fairburn “mostly handles contracts.” It remains to be seen if Kekäläinen’s plans for his front office involve any other departures, or only just additions such as Bergevin’s.

There is no clarity at this time as to what major responsibilities Bergevin will hold in the Sabres front office. Karmanos’ significant responsibility was building and managing the AHL’s Americans, and it’s unclear whether Bergevin will directly take on that role.

This article first appeared on Pro Hockey Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

Yardbarker +

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!