Islanders hire longtime Trotz assistant Lambert as coach
The New York Islanders on Monday hired longtime Barry Trotz assistant and right-hand man Lane Lambert to succeed him as coach. General manager Lou Lamoriello announced Lambert as Trotz's replacement a week after firing the Stanley Cup-winning coach who had one year left on his contract.
news.yahoo.comIslanders fire Barry Trotz in stunner; would Red Wings be interested?
The New York Islanders have fired Barry Trotz after four seasons in a stunning move. Prior to that, Trotz coached four seasons in Washington, culminated with the franchise’s first Cup championship in 2018. After dismissing Jeff Blashill following seven seasons, Yzerman said last week that he is not focused on a particular type of candidate. Lane Lambert, Yzerman’s former teammate and a longtime assistant under Trotz, is a potential candidate. More:Yzerman keeping open mind in coaching searchPros, cons of potential Red Wings coaching candidates
mlive.comNHL postpones 2 Islanders games amid COVID-19 outbreak
The NHL has postponed two more games for coronavirus-related reasons, making it five so far this season. Upcoming New York Islanders games Sunday at the Rangers and Tuesday at the Philadelphia Flyers were postponed after additional members of the team went into the NHL’s COVID-19 protocol on Saturday. General manager Lou Lamoriello said forward Casey Cizikas became the latest player to test positive.
news.yahoo.comNHL players not rushing back to rinks for voluntary skates
NHL players could start participating in voluntary small-group workouts, and teams began opening their training facilities Monday. Players learned Thursday training camps can open July 10, pending an agreement on returning to play later this summer. Now, the players are expected to trickle back in preparation of the resumption of the season. Players started skating by the handful this week in places like Boston, Chicago, Toronto, Pittsburgh, Columbus and Edmonton, while some teams waited to open their doors. Veteran Nashville general manager David Poile said that while almost a dozen players remained in the area, the NHL has instructed teams not to ask or encourage players to show up because this stage is voluntary.