Few coaching hires in recent NHL history have generated as much discussion as Mike Babcock’s return to an NHL bench. The Edmonton Oilers believe they have added an experienced voice for a team still chasing a Stanley Cup, but the decision has also reopened old debates that have followed the coach for years.
With opinions continuing to split across the hockey world, the league’s highest-ranking executive has now weighed in publicly.
NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman Defends Oilers’ Decision to Hire Mike Babcock
Babcock officially returned to the NHL on June 23 when the Edmonton Oilers named him the franchise’s 19th head coach. The hiring ended a seven-year exile from the league and immediately renewed scrutiny surrounding one of hockey’s most polarizing coaching figures.
As questions surfaced about Babcock’s past controversies, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman offered perhaps the strongest endorsement yet of the process that cleared the veteran coach for another opportunity.
Speaking with ESPN’s Greg Wyshynski following the NHL Board of Governors meeting in New York, Bettman made it clear that the league found no grounds to prevent Babcock from coaching again.
“Based on our investigation, we concluded there was no basis upon which he should be prohibited from coaching,” Bettman said. “His ability to coach depended on an NHL team wanting to have him coach. And that’s what Edmonton did.”
These comments directly address the concerns that have followed Babcock since he resigned from the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2023. At the time, allegations surfaced that he had reviewed personal photos on players’ phones before ever coaching a regular-season game for the organization.
However, Bettman emphasized that the league conducted its own review before reaching a conclusion.
“We looked at what was alleged to have happened and drew our own conclusions as to what did and did not happen,” Bettman said. He added that the NHL also evaluated “whether or not any of those should disqualify you from being able to be in the league.”
For Bettman, the answer was clear. The investigation did not uncover sufficient grounds to block Babcock from future employment, leaving the decision in the hands of NHL teams.
That stance ultimately opened the door for Edmonton, which was searching for a replacement after dismissing Kris Knoblauch following a first-round playoff exit. The Oilers also took additional steps before finalizing the hire.
General manager Stan Bowman and Babcock met with team leaders Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, and Zach Hyman to discuss the move and gain support from the locker room.
Still, Bettman’s support was not without conditions.
“Having said that, we do — and Mr. Babcock knows it because I spoke to him — expect a certain level of decorum and conduct among all NHL personnel, especially head coaches,” Bettman said.
This message may prove just as important as the commissioner’s defense of the hiring itself. Babcock enters Edmonton with 700 regular-season victories, a Stanley Cup championship, and two Olympic gold medals on his resume.
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Yet his return will likely be judged not only by wins and losses, but also by whether he can meet the standards Bettman publicly outlined as he begins the next chapter of his NHL career.
