Mike Johnston

Hockey Coach

Mike Johnston was born in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada on February 19th, 1957 and is the Hockey Coach. At the age of 67, Mike Johnston biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
February 19, 1957
Nationality
Canada
Place of Birth
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada
Age
67 years old
Zodiac Sign
Pisces
Profession
Head Coach, Ice Hockey Player, Writer
Mike Johnston Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

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Mike Johnston Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Mike Johnston Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
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Mike Johnston Life

Mike Johnston (born February 19, 1957) is the current Head Coach, Vice President, and General Manager of the Portland Winterhawks.

The Winterhawks won four straight WHL finals appearances, including a championship in 2013. Johnston was hired as the head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins of the National Hockey League after six years in Portland. (NHL)

He spent one season as the Penguins' bench boss before returning to Portland in a more senior role. During Johnston's nine years in Portland, he helped 28 Winterhawks be drafted into the league, with eight of whom were drafted in the first round.

He played for Team Canada and spent nearly a decade as an assistant and associate coach with the Vancouver Canucks (1999-2006) and the Los Angeles Kings before his time with Portland.

[1] He is the uncle of NHL hockey player Ryan Johnston and Rebecca Johnston.

Personal life

Johnston played hockey for Brandon University in Manitoba and Acadia University in Nova Scotia, and he earned a master's degree in Coaching Science from Acadia University.

Gabby and Adam, who serves as a scout for the Portland Winterhawks, are Johnston and his partner Myrna.

Johnston is the uncle of professional hockey players, Ryan Johnston and Rebecca Johnston.

Source

Mike Johnston Career

Coaching career

Johnston initially started coaching at the College and University level in Canada. He coached college hockey in Alberta for five seasons before becoming the head coach of the University of New Brunswick from 1989 – 1994, winning two McAdam Division titles, and finishing with three first-place finishes and an overall record of 77–44–6. He was named the 3M Coach of the Year in 1994 and won the Telegraph Journal Coach of the Year Award in 1993.

Internationally, Johnston worked for Team Canada for five seasons from 1994 to 1999 serving in the capacity of general manager and associate coach and finally head coach for the 1998–1999 season, and was an assistant coach at the 1998 Winter Olympic Games in Nagano, Japan. In addition to the championships at the senior level, Johnston won three gold medals as head coach for Canada at the Spengler Cup Tournament and two World Junior Championships as an assistant coach in 1994 and 1995.

In 1994 he became general manager and associate coach of the Canadian national men's hockey team. In 1998 he became the head coach for one season. He then spent six seasons as, at first, an assistant coach and then as an associate coach with the Vancouver Canucks. During Johnston's time in Vancouver, the Canucks made four straight trips to the postseason and won the Northwest Division in 2003–2004. After that, he was an associate coach of the Los Angeles Kings.

Johnston was the coach and general manager of the Portland Winterhawks of the WHL from 2008 to 2014, where he amassed a record of 231–114–10–10, landing him second on the Winterhawks' all-time wins list.

In his second season with the Hawks in 2009–10, Johnston guided the team to a 48-point improvement from the prior season, a franchise record, and an appearance in the second round of the playoffs. The Winterhawks topped the 100-point barrier in 2010–11 with 103 points, a U.S. Division title and then their first of four straight trips to the WHL championship series.

After 102 points in 2011–12, they advanced to the WHL championship and the first of their three straight WHL Finals series against the Edmonton Oil Kings. In 2012–13 the Winterhawks had their greatest season in team history, with franchise records of 57 wins and 117 points, and a league record 29 road wins, as they won the third WHL championship in franchise history and advanced to the final of the 2013 Memorial Cup. In 2013–14 the Winterhawks set another franchise record under Johnston, with a 21-game winning streak as they amassed 113 points and their fourth consecutive trip to the championship series. Johnston returned to the Winterhawks for the 2016–17 season as head coach, general manager and vice president of the team. In his first year back with the Winterhawks, Portland amassed 40 wins for the sixth straight season under Johnston.

After an investigation by the Canadian Hockey League, Johnston was suspended by the Western Hockey League for the duration of the 2012–13 WHL season, after it was revealed he offered improper player benefits and committed various recruitment violations over a four-year period. Some of the noted improper benefits Johnston offered to Winterhawk players included paying for their families to come to Portland multiple times during the season by subsidizing travel costs to the city, financing private summer training programs and providing cellular telephones to the team captains. As a result of the violations, Johnston was forced to hand over his general manager and head coaching positions to assistant coach Travis Green, who would guide the club to the Ed Chynoweth Cup. As a punishment for violating league rules, the team was forced to forfeit the first five rounds of the 2013 WHL Bantam Draft, along with their first round draft picks until 2017. The investigation into Johnston's conduct came months after the Ontario Hockey League's Windsor Spitfires were fined for improper player benefits and recruitment violations. Johnston's suspension was lifted at the end of the season.

Johnston was hired as the head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins on June 25, 2014. During the 2014–15 season, the Penguins stormed out of the gate to a 22–6–4 record, but as injuries started to mount, Pittsburgh began to struggle and finished the season eighth in the Eastern Conference. The Penguins would be eliminated in the first-round of the playoffs by the New York Rangers.

In his second season with Pittsburgh, the Penguins started the 2015–16 season 15–10–3, and Johnston was fired on December 12, 2015. In a team statement announcing the firing, general manager Jim Rutherford stated that he felt the team was "underachieving".

Johnston's combined record with the Penguins was 58–37–15.

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Mike Johnston Awards

Awards and achievements

  • Spengler Cup Gold Medal – 1993
  • U20 WJC Gold Medal- 1994, 1995
  • IIHF World Championships Bronze Medal – 1995
  • IIHF World Championships Silver Medal – 1996
  • Spengler Cup Gold Medal – 1993, 1997, 1998
  • IIHF World Championships Gold Medal – 1996, 1997, 2007
  • IIHF World Championships Silver Medal- 2008
  • President's Cup/Ed Chynoweth Cup – 2013

Denver city council approves defund the police cuts - the largest ever in city's budget - to pay for migrant crisis

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 18, 2024
Denver City Council's Finance and Governance Committee has approved plans to defund the police to pay for the migrant crisis that is costing the democrat-led city about $89.9 million.  The finance committee determined that $41 million in cuts from multiple city departments is needed to house migrants on Tuesday, reported KDVR.  The police department is expected to experience $8.4 million budget cuts, the sheriff's office could see a $3.8 million cut and the fire department is expected to cut $2.4 million. 

Denver defunds police to pay for migrant crisis: Democrat city strips cops' budget of $8.4million in sweeping cuts

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 12, 2024
The city of Denver has announced plans to defund the police to pay for the migrant crisis as the democrat city strips cops' budget of $8.4 million.  The sanctuary city's progressive Mayor Mike Johnston unveiled a budget proposal on Wednesday, allocating $89.9 million to assist incoming undocumented migrants, whom he refers to as 'newcomers.'  The amount will be drawn from approximately $45 million that's used for public programs and services. 

Denver warns new migrants to leave the sanctuary city and move elsewhere, citing a lack of funding as the reason for asylum seekers' "suffer."

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 31, 2024
A Denver city official begged migrant families to migrate to other sanctuary cities such as New York and Chicago, reminding them that a lack of resources in Colorado would cause them to'suffer.' In a clip first posted by 9NEWS, Communications Liaison Andres Carrera urges a group of new arrivals inside a migrant shelter to search for help in other regions. 'The possibilities are over,' Carrera says in Spanish. 'New York tells you more.' More information about Chicago is here. So I recommend you go there for longer-term protection. In addition, there are also increased job opportunities.' According to Mayor Mike Johnston, the overburdened city has been given more than $100 million to support shelter, medical care, and education for asylum seekers. However, the number could rise to $180 million, which is 15 percent of Denver's annual budget, in the midst of the continuing migrant crisis. 'If you stay here, you will suffer even more, and I don't want to see this,' Carerra told the asylum seekers.