John Tortorella Didn’t Want To Do The Job He Was Hired For
When this current era of Flyers hockey kicked off, the plan was clear. This was always going to be a rebuild, and the timeline was always several years down the road. Danny Briere gets that. Keith Jones gets that. But as we learned this week, John Tortorella did not get it.
This is part of why the decision was made this week, with under 10 games to go, to move on from the Flyers Head Coach. Briere told reporters that comments made earlier in the week by Tortorella were not the reason for the move, but it is hard to believe it did not play apart.
“I’m not really interested in learning how to coach in this type of season where we’re at right now.”
That is Tortorella publicly admitting he did not want the job. Chuck Fletcher was the one who hired Tortorella before this was an official rebuild, but Tortorella knew what he was getting into once Briere and Jones took over. He chose to stick around anyway. But now it is clear he was not okay with rebuilding.

John Tortorella Upset About The Deadline
But the recent comments were just the tip of the iceberg. Elliotte Friedman spoke about the firing on his Podcast 32 Thoughts and talked about how Tortorella was not happy with the moves made at the deadline.
“I heard that was really hard on Tortorella, the relationship really began to move sideways then. They were struggling heading into Thursday’s game, it wasn’t going well for them at all, and I just think it was getting harder and harder…“
That tracks with what Danny Briere said in the press conference that this move was the culmination of things happening over 3 weeks, starting at the trade deadline.
Tortorella apparently wanted to forgo trying to keep adding assets to build for the future, for the chance to drag this team into the playoffs. Briere rightfully recognized that even if this team snuck into the playoffs, it was not winning anything, so he made the correct decision to trade veteran players with no future value to this team, and to add assets that do provide future value to this team.
Did it lead to a complete collapse by the team? Yes. The team had looked listless without Scott Laughton. That also falls on the coach, but that is beside the point. Tortorella didn’t understand the mission. If he was upset that the Flyers were sellers, that is a him problem. Selling was the obvious and only choice for the Flyers.
He never approached this the right way. He came in and played the tough guy coach, but was not interested in building up young players. He benched players left and right, but routinely failed to communicate with players why they were being benched.
Related: John Tortorella Has A Communication Problem With His Players
No one will begrudge Tortorella for coaching to win. Even in a full tank, the players and the coaches should go out there trying to win. But Tortorella somehow did not understand that Briere and Jones had bigger plans that a first-round playoff exit this season. If he didn’t understand that, he should have stepped down a long time ago.