
Embattled assistant coach Marc Crawford will remain with the Blackhawks after all.
Crawford will resume his normal duties starting Jan. 2, exactly one month after he was suspended and an investigation was launched into numerous allegations of player abuse at prior NHL coaching stops, the Hawks announced Monday.
“Through our review, we confirmed that Marc proactively sought professional counseling to work to improve and become a better communicator, person and coach,” the Hawks said in a statement. “We learned that Marc began counseling in 2010 and he has continued therapy on a regular basis since. We believe that Marc has learned from his past actions.”
Crawford has been accused by four previous players — Sean Avery, Brent Sopel, Patrick O’Sullivan and Harold Druken — of abuse during coaching stints with the Canucks and Kings between 1999 and 2006. Crawford was said to have punched, kicked and choked players, in addition to using excessively aggressive language.
Since the investigation was launched, however, several current Hawks players — including Robin Lehner and Zack Smith — have spoken out in support of Crawford, and coach Jeremy Colliton has noted several times the positive impact Crawford had brought since joining the Hawks this past summer.
“I just love having his experience around,” Colliton said on Dec. 8. “Obviously, just like everyone you, dole out the responsibility. We’re all contributing, we kind of fill that hole. Certainly we’re missing him.”
See you soon Marc Crawford. Good to have you back!
— Robin Lehner (@RobinLehner) December 16, 2019
Sopel, whose descriptions of abuse occurred in a podcast more than a year ago, clarified a Dec. 5 statement he had no “intent to make any allegations against anyone.”
In a statement Monday, Crawford apologized to those harmed and said he has taken necessary steps to reform his behavior in the undeniably lengthy time period since those incidents.
“I used unacceptable language and conduct toward players in hopes of motivating them, and sometimes went too far,” he said. “As I deeply regret this behavior, I have worked hard over the last decade to improve both myself and my coaching style.”
The firestorm around Crawford emerged after widespread and later confirmed incidents of abuse by two other well-known NHL head coaches, Mike Babcock and Bill Peters, took the NHL by storm in November.
Peters eventually resigned from his Flames position before his investigation concluded, and Babcock was fired from the Maple Leafs’ job before his firestorm erupted, but both have likely seen the end of their NHL careers. The same may or may not be also eventually said for Jim Montgomery, who was fired suddenly last week from the Stars’ head coaching position for undisclosed “unprofessional conduct.”
Crawford, however, will avoid a similar fate.
His situation did always seem less clear-cut than Peters, whose repeated use of the N-word toward former Hawks prospect Akim Aliu clearly crossed the point of no return.
As time passed and the outrage toward Crawford dwindled, with no word from the Hawks on the investigation’s status, an eventual return to the Hawks’ bench felt more and more likely. Monday’s announcement confirmed that.
The Hawks said Crawford will continue counseling, even after his January return, and will retain his full coaching duties, which included a large special teams emphasis in October and November.
He will presumably be behind the bench for the Hawks’ road game on Jan. 2 in Vancouver; his first home game after returning from suspension will be Jan. 5 versus the Red Wings.
“Moving forward, I will continue to improve myself, to listen to those that I may have hurt, and learn from their experiences,” Crawford said in the statement. “My goal is to approach all players, past and present, with empathy and understanding.”