Post by DyEaBoLiKaL on Aug 9, 2006 20:20:12 GMT -5
He was coach when Bobby Orr made his celebratory flop during the Bruins' 1970 championship, the general manager who brought Hall of Famers such as Ray Bourque to Boston and president as the team slipped into mediocrity over the past decade.
On Wednesday, Harry Sinden became the latest figure in the team's offseason shake-up.
Sinden resigned as president after 17 years to become an adviser to team owner Jeremy Jacobs.
Sinden had become synonymous with the franchise after more than 40 years with the Bruins. But the team is reorganizing, hiring Peter Chiarelli as general manager and Dave Lewis as coach as it tries to win its first Stanley Cup since 1972.
"Things evolve and change and the Bruins have to change with it," said Charlie Jacobs, the Bruins executive vice president and son of the owner.
The 74-year-old Sinden said it was time to step down, as he's been gradually moving into an advisory capacity -- even in his job as president running the team's business operations.
"My role as president, as most people would perceive it, is that you would be in charge and running those operations," he said. "Well, I'm just not doing that anymore."
He added that he needed to step aside so people know the new management team was running the Bruins, not him.
"I can't control perception. I don't think I ever have over the years been able to control the fact ... that somehow I was pulling all the strings in some people's minds. It was totally false," Sinden said.
"Whether or not I can convince people that that's not the case, it wasn't the case and won't be the case now, I don't know."
Sinden acknowledged he'd prefer to be part of the team's daily operations, "but I would prefer to be 25 years younger too than I am."
The team said it would not hire a new president, but instead align all hockey operations under Chiarelli.
On Wednesday, Harry Sinden became the latest figure in the team's offseason shake-up.
Sinden resigned as president after 17 years to become an adviser to team owner Jeremy Jacobs.
Sinden had become synonymous with the franchise after more than 40 years with the Bruins. But the team is reorganizing, hiring Peter Chiarelli as general manager and Dave Lewis as coach as it tries to win its first Stanley Cup since 1972.
"Things evolve and change and the Bruins have to change with it," said Charlie Jacobs, the Bruins executive vice president and son of the owner.
The 74-year-old Sinden said it was time to step down, as he's been gradually moving into an advisory capacity -- even in his job as president running the team's business operations.
"My role as president, as most people would perceive it, is that you would be in charge and running those operations," he said. "Well, I'm just not doing that anymore."
He added that he needed to step aside so people know the new management team was running the Bruins, not him.
"I can't control perception. I don't think I ever have over the years been able to control the fact ... that somehow I was pulling all the strings in some people's minds. It was totally false," Sinden said.
"Whether or not I can convince people that that's not the case, it wasn't the case and won't be the case now, I don't know."
Sinden acknowledged he'd prefer to be part of the team's daily operations, "but I would prefer to be 25 years younger too than I am."
The team said it would not hire a new president, but instead align all hockey operations under Chiarelli.
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