Jets coach Rick Bowness announces retirement

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[May 07, 2024]  Winnipeg Jets head coach Rick Bowness announced his retirement Monday after nearly 50 years in the NHL as a player and coach.
 
His departure comes a week after the Jets were eliminated by the Colorado Avalanche in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs. 

Apr 1, 2024; Winnipeg, Manitoba, CAN; Winnipeg Jets head coach Rick Bowness talks to the media after their win against the Los Angeles Kings at Canada Life Centre. Mandatory Credit: James Carey Lauder-USA TODAY Sports

Bowness, 69, was named a Jack Adams Award finalist this season for the first time in his 14 years as a head coach.

"Hockey won't be the same without your, Bones," the Jets posted on X.

At a press conference Monday, Bowness explained that he'd always heard from older coaches in the business that he would know when the time was right to retire.

"And when I was looking around (after losing to Colorado) ... I wasn't happy with the job I had done," Bowness said. "It just hit me then, like, ‘It's time.'

.".. I told the coaches an hour later that I'm done, I'm finished, I'm going to retire. They're all looking at me, ‘You sure? You want to take some time on this?' But I knew. I knew in my heart it was time."

Bowness is 310-408-37 (48 ties) in 803 career games with seven different teams, including Winnipeg twice. His first stint as head coach came in 1988-89 with the original Jets franchise after they fired Dan Maloney. Bowness went 8-17-3 as interim head coach.

Bowness led the Dallas Stars to the Stanley Cup Final in 2020 as interim head coach. The Stars lost to Tampa Bay in six games. He also coached the Boston Bruins, Ottawa Senators, New York Islanders and Phoenix Coyotes.

He led the Jets to a second-place finish in the Central Division this season, a 15-point improvement from last year. Bowness went 98-57-9 in two seasons back with Winnipeg, where he also finished his NHL playing career in 1981.

"(My wife) Judy and I were all set to call it a day (two years ago), but if I was going to come back to coaching, I couldn't have picked a better place to come back to and to finish my career," Bowness said. "I'm just disappointed that I didn't get this team further. That's my biggest disappointment and that's something I'm going to have to live with."

He is one of three NHL coaches, with Scotty Bowman and Pat Quinn, to serve behind the bench in five different decades.

As a forward, Bowness recorded 55 points (18 goals, 37 assists) in 173 NHL games from 1975-81 with the Atlanta Flames, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues and Jets.

--Field Level Media

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