The Minnesota Wild have had more problems this season than a slow start resulting in a coaching change. Over the past 48 hours, Michael Russo and Joe Smith of The Athletic reported that not only former assistant general manager Chris O'Hearn left the front office but that the front office has undergone multiple investigations.
Some details of one of the two investigations have come to light thanks to Russo's report on Friday. General manager and newly-made president of hockey operations Bill Guerin was investigated following a complaint filed by Andrew Heydt, the team's longtime director of team operations and player relations. The complaint centered around an alleged incident of verbal abuse.
The team's statement to The Athletic read:
The Minnesota Wild takes its code of conduct seriously. We recently concluded two separate investigations into alleged violations of that code of conduct, and have taken appropriate steps to address the matters raised to our attention. The club will not comment further.
This might not be the end of the story, though. Elliotte Friedman, Sportsnet's NHL insider, discussed his knowledge and understanding of the situation on Friday's episode of his "32 Thoughts" podcast.
[Russo's] story indicated that Guerin was going to be able to move past it, and that he'd probably have to undergo classes for or something like that. [He] wrote that Guerin was expected to continue working. I don't know that. I don't have any reason to dispute Russo, I just haven't been told that same thing.
The one thing that I had heard that [Russo] hadn't written about is because this is a staff member who had a connection to the players, I'd heard some players were really upset about it. I don't know what the truth is, I'm not passing judgment one way or the other. I just know that I've been told some of the players were upset about it, and the Wild had to manage that.
Friedman also commented on the O'Hearn situation, noting that while he didn't know O'Hearn personally or what transpired before he left the organization, sources close to him were "shocked" when the news broke. "People are stunned because if you would go through the NHL and [ask who would] be guilty of some behavior that could result in a mutual agreement to walk away, he would be very low on the list."
Russo confirmed on KFAN that O'Hearn's dismissal arose as a result of one of the two investigations.
Currently, it doesn't seem as if unhappiness off the ice is affecting the team. New coach John Hynes has the team with a 6-2-0 record, including a 3-2 shootout win last night after the news broke. Of course, there are more important things than a team's record over eight games. Concerning the players' unhappiness with the Heydt situation, Friedman noted that they may have to be "sated" in the aftermath of the incident. If the Wild can't manage those relationships, things could turn sour.
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