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Jim Montgomery is thrilled to be back with the St. Louis Blues as their coach

Jim Montgomery

Jim Montgomery

NEW YORK — As new Blues coach Jim Montgomery appeared before reporters at Madison Square Garden sporting a dark blue sweatshirt emblazoned with the team’s famed blue note logo, there was no hesitation about his emotions.

An assistant with the Blues from 2020-22, Montgomery is overjoyed to be back with St. Louis.

“Crazy — there’s no other word for it,” the 55-year-old said after he was fired by the Boston Bruins and hired by St. Louis to replace Drew Bannister. “I have worked with over half this lineup already, and I know how committed they are. For me, this was a no-brainer for me to come back home.”

The Blues — who missed the playoffs last season after Bannister took over for 2019 Stanley Cup-winning coach Craig Berube in December — have work to do. They started the season 9-12-1, only two teams have scored less than their 2.36 goals a game and they rank in the bottom third of the league on the power play and penalty kill.

Montgomery guided the Bruins to a record-setting 65-win, 135-point season in 2022-23 and was named coach of the year. When he became available, Blues president and general manager Doug Armstrong pounced.

“When you get a phone call and you hear Doug Armstrong’s plan and how you’re a big part of it, that makes you feel it is the right place to go,” Montgomery said. “The best line that put his hooks into me is, ‘When something delicious falls on my plate, I eat.’ I don’t know. I guess I was a T-bone that day.”

Every NHL team Montgomery has coached for a full season has qualified for the playoffs, and his .659 points percentage ranks among the best in league history.

“I believe in this group,” Montgomery said. “It’s not easy to make the playoffs in this league. Half the teams miss it. But I do think that in time this is a caliber playoff team.”

Blues players reacted positively to the coaching change.

“He’s detailed and structured, but at the same time he lets guys play hockey,” captain Brayden Schenn said. “He’s a guy you want to play hard for who has had success in this league.”

Robert Thomas, a first-round draft pick by St. Louis in 2017 now in his seventh season with the Blues, said he was sorry to see Bannister go but happy the energetic Montgomery was back as head coach.

“He was a huge help for me and someone I really relied on a couple of years ago,” Thomas said. “He’s someone a lot of us have a ton of respect for. He’s got a big personality.”

The Bruins…

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