Minor leagues After his playing days were over, Boudreau began a highly successful coaching career. In the minor leagues, Boudreau has coached the
Muskegon Fury,
Fort Wayne Komets,
Mississippi Sea Wolves,
Lowell Lock Monsters,
Manchester Monarchs, and
Hershey Bears. Under Boudreau's leadership, the Bears won the
Calder Cup championship in
2005–06. The Bears made it all the way back to the Calder Cup finals under Boudreau again in 2007, ultimately falling to the
Hamilton Bulldogs. Previously, Boudreau coached the Mississippi Sea Wolves to the
Kelly Cup championship in
1998–99, and also led the Fort Wayne Komets to the
Turner Cup Final in
1993–94. Boudreau was awarded the
Commissioner's Trophy as coach of the 1993–94 Komets.
Washington Capitals (2007–2012) Boudreau was named interim head coach of the NHL's
Washington Capitals on November 22, 2007, and later their permanent coach on December 26. He compiled a 37–17–7 rookie coaching record with a team that was 6–14–1 when he inherited it. Under Boudreau's leadership, the 2007–08 Capitals won their first
Southeast Division title in seven years and made the playoffs for the first time in five years. He also won the
Jack Adams Award as the NHL's best coach in
2007–08. Boudreau continued his success in his second season as coach of the Capitals, leading the Capitals to a record of 50–24–8 and 108 points, good enough for another Southeast Division title and second in the
Eastern Conference. In his third season with the Capitals, Boudreau led the team to a 54–15–13 record and 121 points, which was not only good enough for a third straight Southeast Division title, but also was the most points in the NHL, leading to the team's first
Presidents' Trophy. Their success in the regular season, however, did not carry over to the postseason, as they lost to the eighth-seeded
Montreal Canadiens in seven games, losing the last three games of the series. After a hot start to the
2011–12 season, the Capitals fell apart, posting just four wins in 13 games during the month of November 2011.
Alexander Ovechkin and
Alexander Semin both vastly underperformed during the stretch. These and other factors led to Boudreau's firing on November 28, despite Boudreau having reached 200 regular season wins faster than any coach in the modern NHL era. He was replaced by former Capitals captain and then-
London Knights head coach
Dale Hunter.
Anaheim Ducks and Minnesota Wild (2012–2020) Two days after he was fired by the Capitals, the
Anaheim Ducks hired Boudreau to replace the recently fired
Randy Carlyle as their head coach. Boudreau became the fastest coach to be hired after being fired in NHL history. On April 29, 2016, Boudreau was fired by the Ducks after they lost a game 7 on home ice for the fourth consecutive year. He led the Ducks to four consecutive
Pacific Division titles in his four full seasons in Anaheim. On May 7, 2016, Boudreau was hired by the
Minnesota Wild as their new head coach. Boudreau led the Wild to a successful regular season finishing second in the
Central Division (earning home-ice advantage for the first round series), but the team fell apart in March 2017, after the
Martin Hanzal trade, and collapsed in the first round of the playoffs winning just one game on the road and losing every game at home against the
St. Louis Blues. During his fourth season with the Wild, he was fired on February 14, 2020.
Vancouver Canucks (2021–2023) On December 5, 2021, Boudreau was named head coach of the
Vancouver Canucks, whose poor season to that point had led to the dismissal of both head coach
Travis Green and general manager
Jim Benning. His immediate positive impact on the team's performance resulted in him being serenaded regularly during home games with a variation of the
Tag Team song "
Whoomp! (There It Is)" lyric, "Bruce, there it is!" On January 23, 2022, Boudreau coached in his 1,000th career NHL game in a 3–1 loss to the St. Louis Blues. Ultimately, the Canucks would not make the playoffs in Boudreau's first season, despite a significant uptick in performance and a winning record under Boudreau. In the off-season, the Canucks' new president of hockey operations,
Jim Rutherford, indicated that they would not immediately extend Boudreau's contract beyond the option for one more season in his initial arrangement. It was subsequently reported that Rutherford, who had been hired after Boudreau, was initially unaware that the latter's contract contained an option for a second year. After the Canucks began the
2022–23 season with a franchise-record seven-game losing streak, Rutherford became publicly critical of the team's performance and, implicitly, of Boudreau.
The Province noted "the optics of
the owner first hiring Boudreau and then Rutherford were never good," as it was typically management's job to hire the coach. By January 2023, as the Canucks continued to sink in the standings, Rutherford admitted that he had been speaking to potential replacements for Boudreau. Days later, it began to be reported that Boudreau would soon be replaced by
Rick Tocchet. The unusual spectacle of an NHL coach continuing in his job as a
lame duck began to attract considerable media attention. Addressing the rumours in advance of a January 20 game, Boudreau acknowledged "I'd be a fool to say I don't know what's going on." Despite the team subsequently losing that game to the
Colorado Avalanche by a score of 4–1, fans in the stands revived the "Bruce, there it is!" chant in support of Boudreau. Speaking afterward, he said that "I've only been here a year, but it'll go down in my memory books out of the 48 years I've played and coached as the most incredible thing I've experienced on a personal level other than winning championships." On January 21, with media reports that Boudreau would be formally replaced the following Monday (January 23), he oversaw what was believed to be his final game as coach, with the team falling 4–2 to the
Edmonton Oilers. He was again saluted by the audience, and said that numerous players had approached him after the game to bid farewell, though he had not heard anything from management. On January 22, the Canucks announced that Boudreau had been fired and replaced by Tocchet. The saga of Boudreau's firing, particularly the publicly-perceived mistreatment of the coach in his final few weeks, became a major news story that was widely reported on beyond the sports world, with criticism being directed towards Rutherford and Canucks management for their treatment of Boudreau. During Tocchet's subsequent introductory press conference, Rutherford apologized for the manner in which Boudreau's dismissal had been handled.
Canada national team (2023) In December 2023, Boudreau coached
Canada national team at the
2023 Spengler Cup. This appearance marked Boudreau's international coaching debut. ==Head coaching record==