NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Barry Trotz is retiring as general manager of the Nashville Predators after just under three years on the job but will stay on until a successor is found, a person with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press on Monday.
The decision is not health-related, said the person who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the team had not commented on the situation.
A news conference with Trotz, majority owner Bill Haslam and CEO Sean Henry is scheduled for noon Central. Coach Andrew Brunette told reporters he learned Monday morning that Trotz was stepping down.
''I guessed I was as surprised as everybody else,'' Brunette said. ''Wasn't expecting that today.''
Trotz, now 63, took over control of hockey operations from longtime GM David Poile in the summer of 2023. The Predators made the playoffs the following season after Trotz fired coach John Hynes and hired Brunette to replace him.
After spending $100 million in free agency to sign Stanley Cup champions Steven Stamkos and Jonathan Marchessault and defenseman Brady Skjei on July 1, 2024, set expectations high, they were one of the NHL's biggest disappointments with 52 losses in 82 games and nowhere close to playoff contention.
Nashville is in the mix past the midway point of this season but appears to be an organization at a crossroads since Haslam became majority owner last summer. Stamkos still has two years left beyond this one on his contract at a salary cap hit of $8 million, Skjei four more at $7 million and Marchessault three more at $5.5 million.
They and center Ryan O'Reilly are all in their 30s and could be potential trade chips ahead of the March 6 deadline or in the offseason.