Maple Leafs name Mike Babcock head coach; deal reportedly worth around $50M over 8 years

by
Rob Grabowski-USA TODAY Sports

The wait is over.

The Toronto Maple Leafs named Mike Babcock their 30th coach in team history Wednesday after the two sides agreed to an 8-year contract worth around $50 million, according to TSN's Darren Dreger.

The deal comes after a crazy morning that reportedly saw a bidding war break out between the Buffalo Sabres and Maple Leafs, after multiple teams dropped out of the Babcock sweepstakes.

Related: Babcock to Toronto nothing but a win for the Leafs

The deal makes Babcock far and alone the highest-paid coach in the NHL, a title previously held by Chicago Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville, who makes $2.95 million per season.

TSN's Bob McKenzie tweeted that Babcock may earn as much as $8 million per season in the first three years of the deal, and added that there is no out clause in the contract, as was speculated in the moments after the deal was announced.

With the Maple Leafs signing Babcock, the team will also be forced to give up a third-round pick in the NHL draft to the Red Wings within the next three years.

The Maple Leafs will introduce Babcock at an 11 a.m. ET press conference Thursday.

The Digest

Leaving Detroit: Everything you need to know about Mike Babcock joining the Maple Leafs

by theScore staff
Greg M. Cooper-USA TODAY Sports

Mike Babcock was the most sought-after coach in years after the Detroit Red Wings decided to let him explore his options with other teams around the league.

Babcock met with teams throughout the past two weeks in hopes of solidifying his future, and did so on May 20, joining the Toronto Maple Leafs, reportedly becoming the league's highest-paid coach in the process.

Related: Babcock to Toronto nothing but a win for the Leafs​

Need to Know

  • Babcock said he'd make a decision on his future by May 20, and stuck to his timeline. He was announced as the 30th coach in Maple Leafs history at 2:22 p.m. ET. He'll be introduced at a morning press conference in Toronto on May 21.
  • Red Wings general manager Ken Holland met with the media Wednesday evening, saying Detroit wasn't prepared to offer Babcock more than a five-year contract. "All good things come to an end," Holland said, adding that Grand Rapids Griffins head coach Jeff Blashill is a leading candidate to take over behind the bench in Detroit.
  • The Sabres reportedly thought they had a deal with Babcock done May 18.
  • Babcock reportedly met with Red Wings general manager Ken Holland one last time May 18 before making his final decision.
  • The Maple Leafs and Sabres reportedly agreed to give up draft-pick compensation to Detroit in order to land the head coach. The price is a third-round pick, according to multiple reports.

Further Reading

Babcock faces an uphill battle he's not accustomed to dealing with, writes Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman:

"At the Draft Lottery, (team president) Brendan Shanahan said that even if they got Connor McDavid, this was still a huge rebuild," Friedman writes. "I’ve never met a person less wired for losing than Mike Babcock."

Friedman believes it won't matter how good Babcock is if he isn't given the talent to be competitive:

If the Maple Leafs don’t do a better job of drafting and developing, all of Babcock’s bench barking won’t amount to anything. He knows this is going to take time, one of the reasons we are looking at an eight-year contract.

The Globe and Mail's James Mirtle says Babcock will have to develop patience in Toronto and won't have the benefit of the doubt like he did in Detroit, where Stanley Cups and playoff appearances were the norm:

None of that exists in Toronto. There’s no aura there. There’s no winning culture – or anything resembling it. He’s entering on the ground floor – closer to the basement, really – with a team that has been poorly coached, finished fourth-last and that hasn’t yet assembled a deep group of prospects.

Babcock will need to evolve, too, as much of his job description will be about working with youngsters and helping them reach their potential.

He’ll also need to get used to losing and doing it in a spotlight that wilted other coaches with solid track records, such as Ron Wilson, who, incidentally, sits more than 100 wins ahead of Babcock in his career.

As proven as Babcock is, his success or failure with the Leafs will be dependent on how Shanahan fills the remaining openings in the organization, writes TSN's Jonas Siegel:

But Babcock, maybe the most decorated NHL coach in the past decade, is still just one piece of a much bigger puzzle, one that will hinge not on his merits behind the bench, but on Shanahan and his vision, philosophy and success as the leader of the Leafs.

Babcock's Coaching Career

Team Year Record Points
ANA 2002-03 40-27-9-6 95
ANA 2003-04 29-35-10-8 76
DET 2005-06 58-16-8 126
DET 2006-07 50-19-13 113
DET 2007-08 54-21-7 115
DET 2008-09 51-21-10 112
DET 2009-10 44-24-14 102
DET 2010-11 47-25-10 104
DET 2011-12 48-28-6 102
DET 2012-13 24-16-8 56
DET 2013-14 39-28-15 93
DET 2014-15 43-25-14 100

*Note: Ties were included in records in 2002-03 and 2003-04 seasons.

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