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Is David Quinn's job in danger amid disastrous start for Sharks?
San Jose Sharks head coach David Quinn. Matt Kartozian-USA TODAY Sports

The San Jose Sharks haven’t just been winless through 11 games this season, they’ve, generally speaking, been an unmitigated disaster on the ice. Saturday's 10-2 loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins marked back-to-back games in which the team has surrendered 10 goals, while also marking just the second time this season that the team scored more than a single goal in a game. According to Sportsnet Stats, no team has surrendered 10 goals in back-to-back games since 1965.

While the Sharks taking up a place in the NHL’s basement was entirely expected, what hasn’t been expected is just how bad the team has looked this season. The Sharks have scored 12 goals, just one more than Auston Matthews alone. The team has surrendered 55 goals, which averages out to five per game and is a full eight goals higher than the next-worst team.

All in all, the Sharks’ performances this season have naturally led to questions over head coach David Quinn’s job status. San Jose Hockey Now’s Sheng Peng asked Quinn about his job security after Saturday's loss.

"I guess it’s an obvious question, but if you’ve been around long, I mean, I don’t think about that for two seconds," Quinn responded. "I’ve got a job to do."

Veteran Sharks forward Nico Sturm was asked about coaching as well.

It’s not about the coaches. We lose 10-1, what are the coaches [going to do]? The coaches aren’t out there and playing. It’s far too easy to play against us right now, and that’s certainly not the coach’s fault. It’s up to us as players and we’re not anywhere near where we need to be right now.

Those quotes, which come via the Mercury News’ Curtis Pashelka, indicate that this isn’t a situation where there is discord and tension between coaches and players, the kind of tension that often causes these types of lopsided losses. Instead, the Sharks’ struggles could very well be more of a reflection of the caliber of roster Quinn is working with.

That being said, Peng wrote on X Saturday night that the team will “need to show real improvement, and relatively soon” in order for Quinn to solidify the status of his job. He added that the improvement can come in the form of simply just “competing consistently & not getting embarrassed” and that the issue for Quinn’s job security may not be the fact that they are losing, but “how they’re losing.”

For Quinn to be fired so early in the season would be something of a surprise, even with how poorly the Sharks have been playing.

Quinn was GM Mike Grier’s choice to lead the team through its rebuild, a former highly successful college coach with extensive experience managing young players and coaching in a rebuilding setting in the NHL.

General managers typically do not get a large number of head coaches to cycle through before questions start coming in about their own job, so firing Quinn would represent a significant setback for the Sharks’ front office, an admission that their first head coaching choice had backfired.

But what would also be a significant setback for the Sharks would be continuing this current stretch of downright horrific performances.

The team appears to have no issue stacking losses in order to secure the best chance at projected 2024 number-one pick and San Jose Jr. Sharks product Macklin Celebrini, just as clubs had no issue losing in order to have the best chance for Connor Bedard last season. But in most cases rebuilding clubs would like to pair those losses with genuine steps forward for some of their young players.

So far, that hasn’t happened for the Sharks. The team has lost all of its games and seen many key young players fail to take the steps forward at the NHL level that the organization was hoping for.

Just one player has registered more than five points this season (veteran Tomáš Hertl) while valued youth talent such as William Eklund and Filip Zadina have struggled to put points together.

It’s an undeniably brutal situation for a rebuilding club to be in, and it’s a situation without many clear paths out unless the team as a whole significantly improves its play. If Quinn isn’t able to guide his team to more competitive hockey on a nightly basis, the questions on his job status could get harder to ignore.

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

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