NHL’s Maple Leafs name Mike Babcock coach

Mike Babcock is switching one Original 6 NHL franchise for another after being hired to coach the Toronto Maple Leafs on Wednesday.

The Maple Leafs announced the hiring to put to an end months of speculation about Babcock’s future with the Detroit Red Wings, where he spent the past 10 seasons and won a Stanley Cup in 2008. Babcock will be introduced at a news conference scheduled for Thursday.

Though Babcock was under contract with Detroit through June 30, the Red Wings granted their coach permission to speak to other teams on May 8.

By hiring Babcock, the Leafs must send a third-round draft pick to Detroit as compensation.

In selecting Toronto, Babcock leaves a Red Wings franchise that had reached the playoffs for an NHL-leading 24 consecutive seasons to a team that has struggled competitively. Toronto missed the playoffs last season for the ninth time in 10 years.

The Maple Leafs have also not won a Stanley Cup since 1967, a season before the NHL expanded from its original six franchises. The Red Wings, by comparison, have won the championship four times since 1997.

The 52-year-old also coached Canada to Olympic gold medals in 2010 and ‘14.

He brings stability and a high-profile face to a franchise that is on its fourth full-time coach since Paul Maurice took over in 2006.

The Maple Leafs had a vacancy after Randy Carlyle was fired in January, and replaced on an interim basis by assistant Peter Horachek.

Babcock’s decision comes as a slight surprise, given that he indicated last week that he hated losing and wanted to be part of a team that had an opportunity to win immediately.

The Maple Leafs have an over-priced and aging roster, and questions at goaltending. The team unraveled last season. After holding a 19-9-3 record in mid-December, Toronto closed the season going 11-35-8 to finish 15th in the 16-team Eastern Conference standings.

On the bright side, Babcock is reunited with Brendan Shanahan, who took over as the Maple Leafs president last year. Shanahan played for Babcock in Detroit.

Contract terms were not immediately available. Babcock earned $2 million per season in his previous four-year contract and the corporately owned Maple Leafs are one of the NHL’s most profitable franchises. They were last valued by Forbes as being worth an NHL-high $1.3 billion.

Babcock had not ruled out staying in Detroit, and also interviewed with the Buffalo Sabres. The Sabres had held contract negotiations with Babcock as recently as Tuesday, but were informed they were out of the running on Wednesday, two people familiar with the discussions told The Associated Press.

The two people spoke on the condition of anonymity because the Sabres have not publicly discussed their coaching search to replace Ted Nolan, who was fired a day after the end of the season.

The Sabres must now turn to Plan B. Potential candidates include former NHL coaches Dan Bylsma and Paul MacLean, and minor-league coach Luke Richardson.

Babcock’s departure is a jolt to the Red Wings, who were eliminated by Tampa Bay in Game 7 of their first-round playoff series last month.

The Red Wings, however, already have a candidate in Jeff Blashill prepared to fill the job. Blashill is coach of Detroit’s minor-league affiliate in Grand Rapids and was honored as the American Hockey League’s outstanding coach in 2013-14.

The Red Wings have been protective in regards to keeping Blashill. In allowing Babcock to test the market, Holland prevented teams from interviewing with other teams.

Babcock began his NHL head coaching career with a flourish in 2002-03, when he took Anaheim to within one win of a Stanley Cup title. He began coaching the Red Wings after the lockout that wiped out the 2004-05 season.

Babcock was the first coach to win at least 50 games in each of his first four seasons with an NHL team — a deceiving stat in the shootout era but an impressive one nonetheless — when he did it with the Red Wings. With 458 wins for Detroit, he ranks No. 1 on the franchise’s career list, ahead of luminaries like Scott Bowman and Jack Adams.

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