Columbus Blue Jackets coach Rick Bowness questioned his players’ commitment to winning after an uninspired season-ending loss to the Washington Capitals on Tuesday night.
“Just look at the stat sheet: Three hits, 23 giveaways. I don’t know if I’m back, but if I’m back, I’m changing this culture. These guys, they don’t care. Losing is not important enough to them. It doesn’t bother them. How can you go out and play like that?” Bowness said.
The Jackets were eliminated from playoff contention Monday when the Philadelphia Flyers secured third place in the Metro Division. Bowness called their effort in the 2-1 loss to Washington — in what might have been Capitals star Alex Ovechkin‘s final game, pending a decision on retirement — “terrible and inexcusable” by his standards.
“If they’re not embarrassed by tonight, by that, they’re on the wrong team,” Bowness said.
The loss capped one of the most frustrating stretches in franchise history for Columbus. The Blue Jackets won only twice in their last 11 games (2-8-1), plummeting from a playoff seed. It was a stunning reversal of fortune for Bowness, 70, who started 10-1-0 in his first 11 games after coming out of retirement to replace Dean Evason on Jan. 12. Columbus finished with a record of 40-30-12 (.561 points percentage).
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