Glen Gulutzan has a shot at redemption with the Dallas Stars

After spending the past seven seasons as an assistant coach with the Edmonton Oilers, Glen Gulutzan is finally getting another shot as a full-fledged bench boss in the NHL.
Making matters even more interesting, he’s getting that chance with the same team that gave him his very first opportunity as an NHL head coach: the Dallas Stars, with whom he spent the 2011-12 and 2012-13 seasons.
Gulutzan, 53, is widely expected to be named Peter DeBoer’s replacement as head coach of the Stars at some point in the near future. It’s nearly unprecedented for head coaches to get a second chance with the exact same team in the same role, but that’s exactly what’s going to happen for the Manitoba product.
On Monday’s edition of Daily Faceoff Live, Tyler Yaremchuk and Matt Larkin discussed the unusual circumstances surrounding Gulutzan, who has also worked for the Calgary Flames and Vancouver Canucks during his lengthy NHL career:
Tyler Yaremchuk: He was their head coach 12 years ago. It’s very rare you see a guy go back for a second tour of duty with a franchise when the first one didn’t even feature a playoff appearance.
Matt Larkin: Yeah, it’s true. It’s almost like Dallas is treating the slate as clean because Gulutzan has learned so much working as an assistant since then, and I think that’s fair.
I always think of examples like Mike Sullivan and Bruce Cassidy, even though they didn’t go to the same organization. Those are two guys that got a shot pretty early in their career, maybe before they were ready. And then they accumulated a lot of experience, whether it was in the AHL or working as assistant coaches, and by the time they got their next shot, they were pretty seasoned, pretty respected. So I feel like this could be Glen Gulutzan’s version of the Bruce Cassidy or Mike Sullivan redemption tour.
Watch the full episode here: