Friday, June 5, 2026

Cliff Fletcher obit

Hockey Hall of Famer Fletcher dead at 90

 

He was not on the list.


Long-time NHL general manager Cliff Fletcher has died at the age of 90, the Toronto Maple Leafs announced on Friday.

A Hockey Hall of Famer, Fletcher won a Stanley Cup with the Calgary Flames in 1989 and later brought the Leafs back to relevance in the early 1990s as the architect of what was arguably the most impactful trade in the franchise history.

“The Toronto Maple Leafs and its fans will remain forever grateful for the many contributions Cliff made to the organization and the game of hockey,” the team said in a statement. “He will always be remembered as part of our hockey family. The club extends our deepest condolences to the Fletcher family, including his children Chuck and Kristy, their families, and his partner Linda.”

“Cliff was a great man and an even better dad,” Cliff’s son, Chuck, said in a statement, “The outpouring of support has been amazing and appreciated,”

A native of Montreal, Fletcher got his start in hockey at 21 as a scout with the Montreal Canadiens under Sam Pollock. He would leave for the St. Louis Blues in 1966 and serve as assistant GM with the team. After joining the Central Hockey League’s Kansas City Blues in 1971 as its GM, he made his return to the NHL as a GM for the first time in 1972 with the expansion Atlanta Flames.

Fletcher would remain with the Flames for two decades and helped shepherd the team in their relocation to Calgary in 1980. Under Fletcher, the Flames became a Campbell Conference contender, winning the Smythe Division on two occasions, claiming the Presidents’ Trophy twice and reaching the Stanley Cup Finals in 1986. The team would ultimately fall to the Canadiens in five games.

Three years later, though, Fletcher’s Flames would achieve glory. With a team featuring six future Hall of Famers in Lanny McDonald, Joe Nieuwendyk, Mike Vernon, Al MacInnis, Joe Mullen and Doug Gilmour, the Flames won the team’s first and, to date, only Stanley Cup. Getting a measure of revenge, the Flames defeated the Habs in six games with defenceman MacInnis winning the Conn Smythe Trophy.

The 1988-1989 season for the Flames was notable for more than just the Stanley Cup. That year forward Sergei Pryakhin made his NHL debut after being drafted by Fletcher with the final selection of the 1988 NHL Entry Draft. Officially signing a contract in February of 1989, Pryakhin suited up for the first time in a March 31 game against the Winnipeg Jets, becoming the first Russian player permitted to play in the NHL by the Soviet Hockey Federation.

Fletcher’s time with the Flames came to an end with him taking over as GM of the Leafs in 1991. He would quickly put his mark on the team in early 1992 with a blockbuster deal consummated with the Flames. Fletcher shipped Gary Leeman, Jeff Reese, Craig Berube, Alexander Godynyuk and Michel Petit to Alberta with Jamie Macoun, Ric Nattress, Rick Wamsley, Kent Manderville and the deal’s centrepiece, Gilmour, coming back to the Leafs.

With new head coach Pat Burns, the Gilmour-led Leafs set a new franchise record for wins and points in a season and reached back-to-back Campbell Conference Finals appearances in 1993 and 1994, returning to the final four for the first time since 1978.

Fletcher would make another franchise-altering move in the summer of 1994, sending captain Wendel Clark to the Quebec Nordiques in exchange for centre Mats Sundin.

Fletcher would step down from his position with the Leafs in the spring of 1997. He left with two seasons remaining on his contract. One of Fletcher’s final moves as GM of the Leafs was the trade of captain Gilmour to the New Jersey Devils.

After a brief stint in the Tampa Bay Lightning front office, Fletcher was named general manager of the Phoenix Coyotes in the winter of 2001. Shifting to a senior vice-president role that summer, Fletcher would remain with the Coyotes through the 2006-2007 season. At its conclusion, both Fletcher and GM Mike Barnett were dismissed by the team.

Months later when the Maple Leafs fired GM John Ferguson Jr., Fletcher returned to Toronto as interim GM in January of 2008. He remained in the role until the hiring of Brian Burke in November of that year. At that point, Fletcher transitioned to an advisory role with the Leafs, one that he maintained for the rest of his life.

“Few men in the history of hockey have had as profound and lasting an impact on the game as Cliff Fletcher,” NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said in a statement. “Revered for his keen eye for talent, respected for his management acumen and beloved for his character, Cliff devoted seven decades to hockey in myriad roles and leaves a legacy as remarkable for the many men and women he has mentored as for the franchises he helped established and games his teams won.”

Internationally, Fletcher served as the general manager of Canada’s entry at the 1981 Canada Cup. With a team featuring the likes of Wayne Gretzky, Guy Lafleur and Mike Bossy, an undefeated Canada won four of its five round-robin games, scoring 32 goals in the process. After dispatching the United States in the semifinals, Canada was crushed 8-1 by the USSR in the gold-medal game at the Montreal Forum.

Hockey management ran in the family for Fletcher. His son, Chuck Fletcher, joined the Florida Panthers in 1993 and would become the team’s interim GM in 2001. Following assistant GM stints with the Anaheim Ducks and Pittsburgh Penguins, Chuck was named GM of the Minnesota Wild in 2009, a role he held until 2018. The following year, Chuck became GM of the Philadelphia Flyers, serving in the position until 2023.

Fletcher was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder in 2004.

Fletcher moved to the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1991, to serve as chief operating officer, president and general manager. He made a blockbuster trade with Doug Risebrough, his successor as the Flames' General Manager, sending Gary Leeman, Michel Petit, Jeff Reese, Craig Berube, and Alexander Godynyuk to the Flames for Doug Gilmour, Jamie Macoun, Ric Nattress, Rick Wamsley, and Kent Manderville on January 2, 1992. That year, Fletcher also hired Pat Burns as head coach for the upcoming season.

In 1999, Fletcher joined the Tampa Bay Lightning as Senior Advisor to the GM for two seasons at the request of Jacques Demers, then Tampa's coach and GM. When Demers left the franchise in 1999, so did Fletcher.

Years later, Demers revealed that he had sought the assistance of Fletcher (as well as that of Jay Feaster) largely on account of his own functional illiteracy, which Demers managed to keep concealed from NHL circles before leaving the game. In his biography, Demers acknowledges that Fletcher and Feaster did most of the work a general manager would normally do because Demers knew he could not do it himself.

Fletcher joined the Phoenix Coyotes on February 17, 2001, as general manager and executive vice-president. On August 28, 2001, he passed his GM role to Mike Barnett and became senior executive vice-president of hockey operations.

On April 11, 2007, Fletcher and General Manager Mike Barnett were fired after the Coyotes finished the 2006–07 season with their worst record since relocating from Winnipeg to Phoenix in 1996.

Fletcher was officially named the interim general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs on January 22, 2008, replacing John Ferguson Jr.  Fletcher signed a nineteen-month contract with the franchise; serving as GM for six months before becoming an executive for the Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment organization. He was replaced as GM of the Toronto Maple Leafs by Brian Burke.

Team President Richard Peddie announced that Fletcher would likely be the general manager through the 2008–09 NHL season, although it was later announced on November 27, 2008, that Brian Burke had agreed to a six-year contract as the Maple Leafs' GM. Fletcher served the remainder of his contract with the Maple Leafs as an adviser for the Maple Leafs management team. During the off season of 2009, Fletcher signed a multi-year contract extension.

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