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Elliotte Friedman blasts Jack Adams Award voting after Lindy Ruff, Dan Muse snubs

Jon Cooper of the Tampa Bay Lightning won the award as the NHL Coach of the Year in a highly controversial vote.
Buffalo Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff
Buffalo Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff | Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

Two NHL head coaches, Lindy Ruff of the Buffalo Sabres and Dan Muse of the Pittsburgh Penguins, had clear-cut cases as strong contenders for the Jack Adams Award. Either one would have represented a worthy selection as the league's Coach of the Year.

The NHL Broadcasters' Association, which votes on that honor, instead selected Tampa Bay Lightning head coach Jon Cooper after months of narrative creation that pushed him as a deserving choice based on some bizarre reasoning that made it more of a lifetime achievement award.

Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet discussed the situation on Friday's 32 Thoughts podcast, saying he doesn't get too emotionally involved when it comes to the annual award winners.

"Look, Lindy Ruff would be very deserving. Dan Muse would be very deserving," Friedman said. "I don't get too riled up about awards. I understand Sabres fans are disappointed."

The NHL insider was far more concerned about the NHL Broadcasters' Association's handling of the vote, which allegedly saw dozens of unreturned ballots. He noted the Professional Hockey Writers Association, which is tasked with voting for most of the other NHL Awards, strips a person from future voting assignments if they don't return a ballot in any given year.

"The one thing I didn't like, however, is some mentioned to me there were 40 people eligible to vote for the Jack Adams that didn't," Friedman said. "... I just think this, for the Broadcasters' Association, if it's true 40 people didn't vote, if I was the NHL I'd have a real problem with that. You've been given the honor of selecting an award for somebody. If, what is that? A third of your members aren't voting? That's a problem. And I think the individuals shouldn't be allowed to vote again if they don't vote on time."

Here's a look at how close the final voting numbers were for the Jack Adams Award:

NHL Coach

Voting Points

Jon Cooper (TBL)

226

Lindy Ruff (BUF)

223

Dan Muse (PIT)

199

So, the results could have easily changed if everybody eligible to vote returned their ballot, and that's unacceptable. It's unfair to Ruff and Muse because one of them deserved the trophy.

Cooper is a tremendous coach and it's accurate to say he probably should have won the Jack Adams once (or twice) in the past. But that's not a good reason to overlook more deserving candidates.

Buffalo Sabres show support for head coach Lindy Ruff on social media after Jack Adams controversy

The Sabres were quick to react Wednesday after Cooper was announced as the award winner.

They posted a picture of Ruff on Twitter/X with the caption "our coach of the year," which generated nearly 8,000 likes and more than 100 replies, including many in support of the Buffalo bench boss:

Pete Guelli, the club's president of business operations, used the "blind résumé" approach to showcase the strength of Ruff's case:

Some people have suggested Sabres (and Penguins) fans are overreacting to something that doesn't really matter, but the NHL Broadcasters' Association deserves to get called out. Friedman's critiques are spot on when it comes to not even filling out a ballot.

The controversy would also be greatly diminished if either Ruff or Muse won. Those two fanbases could still have a minor gripe if the other coach won, but it at least would have been understandable. Choosing Cooper based solely on the 2025-26 season is laughable.

It'll be interesting to see if the NHL steps in to change how the Jack Adams Award is selected for next season and beyond.

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