In his second season in his second stint with the Buffalo Sabres, Ruff led one of the more remarkable turnarounds in NHL history. The Sabres were 11-13-4 and last in the Eastern Conference on Dec. 5 before ending the season on a 39-10-5 run to win the Atlantic Division with a 50-23-9 record, their first division title since 2009-10 and break their NHL-record 14-season playoff drought. The Sabres had a 30-point improvement from last season, when they finished 26th in the NHL standings.
Buffalo was fifth with 3.45 goals-per game and tied for 10th allowing 2.93 per game after finishing 20th in the NHL last season, allowing 3.50 per game.
Ruff, 66, is a finalist for the fifth time, tying an NHL record with Tortorella, Scotty Bowman, and Alain Vigneault. Ruff won the award with the Sabres in 2005-06 and has finished runner-up twice and third once.
"That just means that our coaching staff did one (heck) of a job," Ruff said. "This isn't a one-man job and the hours these guys have put in and where we got to, a complete team effort."
Spencer Carbery of the Washington Capitals won the Adams Award last season.