Bluesin lentoon saanut (22-12-8) valmentaja Andy Murray saa aika hyvin kiitosta Canucksin Jeff Cowanilta ja Bryan Smolinskilta, jotka pelasivat aikanaan "Murrayn joukkueessa":
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/sports/story.html?id=41f0a41c-3ca4-4025-922d-a234d1c00501
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/sports/story.html?id=41f0a41c-3ca4-4025-922d-a234d1c00501
Smolinski and fellow Canuck Jeff Cowan both played for St. Louis coach Andy Murray in Los Angeles and are not surprised at the success Murray has had since taking over the Blues in mid-December. Heading into Thursday night's game, Murray has guided the Blues to a 22-12-8 record.
"He makes people accountable for their actions and that's why they have such a good record since he has been there," said Smolinski, who spent four seasons playing for Murray with the Kings.
"I am not surprised at all," added Cowan. "He is a great coach and he's a very well prepared coach. He always has his team ready to play. He has done a great job in St. Louis. They have really had a great push since Christmas."
SHORT SHIFTS: Murray is known to be a stickler for detail and one of the details he pays particularly close attention to is the time his players spend on the ice each shift.
Murray has one of the Blues' assistant trainers time shifts with a stop-watch. Once a line has been on the ice for 25 seconds, the trainer starts alerting the coaching staff.
"He announces when 25 seconds have elapsed, and the [next group] knows now to start getting ready. Then he says 30 . . . 35 . . . and if it gets to 40, his voice gets a little sarcastic edge to it," Murray said Thursday morning. "We call him the 40-second man.
"His wife isn't too crazy about the nickname," he laughed.
"I don't know," quipped Blues' Hall of Famer Bernie Federko, who does colour on the team's TV broadcasts. "Forty seconds is pretty good, isn't it?"