Dave Cameron & Assistant Coaches Fired by Ottawa Senators

Mar 8, 2016; Raleigh, NC, USA; Ottawa Senators head coach Dave Cameron looks on from the bench against the Carolina Hurricanes at PNC Arena. The Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Ottawa Senators 4-3. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports
Mar 8, 2016; Raleigh, NC, USA; Ottawa Senators head coach Dave Cameron looks on from the bench against the Carolina Hurricanes at PNC Arena. The Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Ottawa Senators 4-3. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports

Dave Cameron, Andre Tourigny, Rick Wamsley, and Jason Smith Were Released by new Ottawa Senators GM Pierre Dorion on Tuesday

Dave Cameron was next on the chopping block just one day after the Arizona Coyotes relieved GM Don Maloney off his duties. Sens GM Pierre Dorion also released Dave Cameron’s Assistant Coaches Andre Tourigny, Rick Wamsley, and Jason Smith.

It’s about that time of year where non-playoff teams have their end of season meetings, clearing out their lockers. Those who fell short of expectations often find themselves on the hot-seat, and if those same coaches manage to preserve their jobs, they’re usually on a short leash moving forward.

Several coaches and managers are largely considered to be on thin-ice. Coaches such as Willie Desjardins in Vancouver, and Michel Therrien in Montreal have received votes of confidence from their superior’s, suggesting their jobs are safe for now. Other coaches such as Claude Julien or playoff-bound GM Chuck Fletcher enters a state of unknown (especially if Minnesota meets an early demise).

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The Senators finished fifth in the Atlantic Division with 85 points (38-35-9), 11 points behind the Philadelphia Flyers for the second wild card into the Stanley Cup Playoffs from the Eastern Conference.

Cameron was named the 11th coach in Senators history, replacing Paul MacLean on Dec. 8, 2014. He was 70-50-17 in 137 games as coach.

Cameron helped the Senators become the big story over the final two months of the 2014-15 regular season. Ottawa went 23-4-4 down the stretch and overcame a 14-point deficit to make the playoffs, the largest such margin in NHL history. They lost in six games to the Montreal Canadiens in the Eastern Conference First Round.

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Ottawa Senators owner Eugene Melnyk insisted that everything/everyone within the organization would be re-evaluated. Clearly, the Sens did not believe Dave Cameron was the right fit for this group.

Moving forward, Pierre Dorion is in a great position with an ability to hire his own coach in year one. And given how much time he spent behind Bryan Murray, there should be little to no evaluation period, as the new GM is very familiar with this current roster.

Next: Ottawa Senators: 5 Potential Offseason Trade Scenarios

It’s unclear how much player personnel change we can expect this offseason, but it would make sense for Ottawa to make at least one move of significance. That means trading one of the following players: Kyle Turris, Bobby Ryan, or Mike Hoffman. Cody Ceci can also be included, but it makes little sense to move a blueliner on a thin defensive group.