April 30th, 2008 admin
The Dallas Stars extended the contract of Head Coach Dave Tippett today, locking up their bench boss through the 2007-08 season. His contract was set to expire on June 30, 2007. In addition, the Stars also announced that Associate Coach Rick Wilson, Assistant Coach Mark Lamb, and Assistant/Goaltending Coach Andy Moog have all signed two-year extensions through the 2007-08 season. Each of the current contracts of the Stars’ associate/assistant coaches were due to expire on June 30, 2006.
Tippett, 44, is in his fourth season with the hockey club and boasts an overall record of 135-68-30 during his tenure as head coach of the Dallas Stars — the best record among active NHL coaches. He was named the 19th head coach in Stars franchise history on May 21, 2002. Tippett notched his 100th career NHL win on Nov. 18 vs. Columbus and coached in his 200th career NHL game on Jan. 2 at Los Angeles.
“We’re extremely pleased to secure Dave Tippett as head coach of the Dallas Stars through the 2007-08 season,” Armstrong said. “Dave has done an outstanding job as head coach of this club and we expect that to continue for years to come. We’re equally pleased to extend the contracts of our entire coaching staff for two more seasons. We feel we have an extremely cohesive coaching staff and the results of their hard work speak for themselves.”
Tippett went 46-21-15 in his first season as Dallas’ head coach, winning the Pacific Division crown and posting by far the best record for a Stars coach in his first 82 games. The team’s 111 points were the fourth-highest in NHL history for a first-year head coach. Tippett continued his success during the 2003-04 season, posting a 41-27-12 mark for 97 points, and currently has this year’s edition of the Dallas Stars poised for another division title.
“These moves will provide the club a great deal of stability as we continue to pursue our ultimate goal of bringing the Stanley Cup back to Dallas,” said Tippett. “I’m excited that the entire staff will remain together and we look forward to continued success both on and off the ice.”
Wilson, 55, is currently in his fourth season as associate coach and his 14th with the Stars organization, with his coaching emphasis on the club’s defensemen. During his tenure in Dallas, he has been part of six division championships, two Western Conference crowns, two Presidents’ Trophies and the 1999 Stanley Cup. Wilson has over 19 years experience as a coach in the NHL.
Lamb, 41, is in his fourth season as an assistant coach for Dallas, with his coaching emphasis on the Stars’ forwards and offense. He has also served as an assistant coach for Edmonton and played in 403 career NHL games with six different teams.
Moog, 46, is in his fourth season as the Stars’ assistant/goaltending coach. He works closely with Dallas management in the areas of goaltender coaching and advising, pro scouting and consulting in goaltender personnel decisions. A three-time Stanley Cup winner with Edmonton, Moog appeared in 175 games for the Stars from 1993-1997. Moog has served as goaltending consultant for Team Canada at the past two Winter Olympic Games.
source: http://www.dallasstars.com/homeNewsDetail.jsp?id=5187
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Ted Donato, a former Harvard hockey captain who won an NCAA championship, played in the Olympic Games, and enjoyed a 13-year NHL career, was introduced as the Robert D. Ziff Head Coach of Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey on Friday, July 2, 2004. The hire by Harvard not only brings prominent alum back to the forefront of this proud program, but also brings Donato’s hockey career full circle, back to the Bright Center where he enjoyed a standout career.
Donato, a 1991 graduate of Harvard, becomes just the sixth person to serve as Harvard’s head coach since 1950. He is the eighth Harvard alum to serve as head coach at his alma mater. The appointment at Harvard is Donato’s first coaching position.
“I am thrilled to be back at Harvard,” notes the rookie head coach. “Obviously this is a special place for me. I embrace the history and tradition of Harvard Hockey and the quality of people who are involved with the program. Harvard is the greatest combination of superior academics and competitive athletics in all of college sports, and that is a tradition that I hope to carry on. I look forward to working with a number of outstanding people, and I’m very excited about the future of this program.”
As an undergraduate, Donato etched his name along the all-time greats in Harvard Hockey history. He finished his career in 11th place on the Crimson’s career scoring chart (50 goals, 94 assists, 144 points) and remains 12th in that category. He earned All-ECAC and All-Ivy League accolades in his 1990-91 senior season.
Donato was named Most Valuable Player of the 1989 NCAA Frozen Four, when Harvard downed Minnesota, 4-3 in overtime, in the NCAA Championship game. That contest, held in the Gopher’s backyard (St. Paul, Minnesota) saw Donato net a pair of goals, one which tied the game at one midway through the second and another which gave the Crimson a 3-2 lead with seven minutes to go. Donato scored three goals and added a pair of assists in the tournament en route to MVP honors. He earned the Donald Angier Hockey Trophy as the team’s most improved player in 1989, and he accepted the Ralph “Cooney” Weiland Award for spirit and devotion to Harvard Hockey as a senior in 1991.
A native of nearby Dedham, MA, Donato was a member of four United States national teams, including the 1992 Olympic team that competed in Albertville, France. He tied for the team lead in scoring with four goals and three assists in eight games in the Olympics and had 11-22-52 totals in the pre-Games schedule. He also played in the World Championships in 1997 (4-2-6 in eight games) and 1999 (2-6-8 in eight games) and in the 1988 World Junior Championships (3-2-5 in seven games).
Donato was selected by the Boston Bruins in the fifth round of the 1987 NHL Entry Draft (98th overall), and he signed with his hometown club in March 1992 following the Olympic Games. His 13-year professional career included stops in New York (with both the Rangers and Islanders), Ottawa, Anaheim, Los Angeles and St. Louis. He returned to the Bruins as a free agent in July 2003.
Donato’s NHL career spanned 796 games, in which he scored 150 goals with 197 assists for 347 points. He had eight goals, 18 assists and 26 points in 58 career playoff games. Donato inherits a Harvard squad that returns 16 letterwinners from the 2003-04 team, which went 18-15-3, won the ECAC tournament championship and advanced to the NCAA tournament.
Born April 28, 1969, Donato played scholastically at Catholic Memorial High School, where he graduated as the school’s all-time leading scorer. The son of Michael and Mary Donato, Ted and his three brothers were all active in intercollegiate athletics. Brother Michael played baseball at Princeton, Chris played hockey, baseball and football at Williams, and Dan played hockey and baseball at Boston University. He also has a sister, Paula, who is a plastics engineer. Donato is a resident of Scituate, MA, with his wife, Jeannine, and their four children: Ryan (8), Jack (6), Nolan (5) and Madelyn (1).
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Chris Serino enters his seventh season as head coach of the Merrimack College hockey program and third as Interim Athletic Director.
Serino guided Merrimack to a 12-18-6 mark in 2002-2003 and qualified for the Hockey East playoffs for a fifth straight season. The Warriors went 7-13-4 in league play for a seventh place finish.
Merrimack won its first ever Division I holiday tournament last season, capturing the RPI Tournament last December. Senior goaltender and captain Joe Exter was named to the All Hockey East Team, while freshman defenseman Bryan Schmidt was selected to the league’s All-Rookie Team and was runner-up as Hockey East Rookie of the Year. Serino is coming off a personal triumph that prevails over any of his many athletic-related accomplishments. Diagnosed with throat cancer before the start of the 2001-2002 school year, Serino was faced with his toughest challenge ever. Merrimack hockey still remained a huge part of his life but often had to take a back seat that season, as Serino focused his efforts on conquering his illness. He came out the winner as after the season-long bout with cancer, Serino was given a clean bill of health from his doctors.
Several of Serino’s friends and family organized “An Evening with the Coach”, a benefit held on May 6, 2002 in honor of Serino. Over 800 people, the majority of which included the hockey community, attended the event to show their support for the long-time coach who returned to the Warrior bench on a full-time basis for 2002-2003. Serino was tabbed head coach on April 24, 1998, becoming the sixth coach in the then 44-year history of the program. He has led the Warriors to five consecutive trips to the Hockey East playoffs. In 2001-2002, his Warriors compiled an 11-22-2 mark and notched several impressive victories along the way. They defeated defending national champion Boston College and NCAA Frozen Four finalist Maine during the regular season and gave No. 1 ranked New Hampshire a scare in the Hockey East playoffs before falling 5-4 in overtime to the Wildcats. Several players garnered individual honors during the season, including two who earned the US College Hockey National Player of the Week award on different occasions. Anthony Aquino, Serino’s top recruit at Merrimack, was named a New England Hockey Writers All Star and All-Hockey East Honorable Mention.
Over the summer of 2001, two Merrimack players were selected by the Dallas Stars in the National Hockey League Entry draft. Aquino went in the third round as the 92nd overall pick while the Stars snagged Marco Rosa in the eighth round as the 255th overall pick.
In 2000-2001, Serino guided Merrimack to four wins and a tie against nationally ranked opponents. Playing what was recognized as one of the toughest schedules in Division I, the Warriors finished with a 14-20-4 mark, matching the team’s third highest win total since Merrimack joined Hockey East 13 years ago. A pair of Warriors earned All-Hockey East post-season recognition, with a player being named to the All-League Second Team and one being named to the All-Rookie Team.
Defense has been a priority for Serino since arriving in North Andover and his focus on team defense has fostered dramatic improvements over his four seasons. In 2000-2001, the team goals against average stood at 3.15, up slightly from the 3.12 the Warriors posted in 1999-2000. In 1998-99, Merrimack had a GAA of 3.78, which was over a one-goal improvement from the 4.86 it had the year prior to Serino’s arrival. Under Serino, the Warriors have not only had success on the ice but in the classroom as well. Serino’s emphasis on academics has been evidenced by the 31 Warriors named to the Hockey East Academic Honor Roll over his first five years. Serino also plays an important role in assisting with fundraising efforts for the entire athletic program and has been instrumental in the development and progress of the S. Peter Volpe Center renovation project. Over the past three years, this project has resulted in the addition of luxury boxes in the arena, a VIP room for the Warrior Club and a spacious hockey locker suite, which includes a new locker room, team meeting room, coaches locker room, equipment room and training room.
Serino came to Merrimack after spending seven seasons as the University of New Hampshire’s assistant hockey and head baseball coach. Serino was part of a UNH hockey program that was the 1996-97 Hockey East regular season co-champions, made four trips to the Hockey East Final Four and went five times to the NCAA tournament including the 1997-98 team that reached the NCAA Frozen Four. As UNH’s head baseball coach, Serino led the Wildcats to its most victories (26) in a season during the spring of 1995. Before joining the UNH coaching staff, Serino spent three seasons as the head coach of the Northfield Mount Hermon hockey program. While at Northfield, Serino compiled a 47-21-3 mark. Prior to his position at Northfield, Serino was the head coach at Saugus High School from 1980-87. In 1986-87, Serino earned the Eastern Massachusetts Coach of the Year award and Northeastern Conference Coach of the Year. During his tenure as head coach, his teams posted a 100-23-14 (.781) record and three conference championships. In 2001, Serino was inducted into the Massachusetts High School Hockey Hall of Fame.
The Saugus, MA native is a 1971 graduate of American International College in Springfield where he earned a bachelor’s degree in elementary education while starring on the baseball, football and hockey teams. He was an All-America baseball player and was an All-ECAC football and hockey player in college. Serino was inducted into the Saugus High School Hall of Fame in 1987.
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Larry Rooney is the head coach of Thayer Academy located in Braintree, MA. He was born in South Boston, MA and played his collegiate hockey at Providence College. Larry was drafted in the 5th round by the Buffalo Sabres in the 1986 NHL Entry Draft. Many of the NHL’s top players have come out of Thayer Academy including Tony Amonte, Jeremy Roenick & Mike Mottau. Additionally, Larry has coached some of the brightest young talent in 2000 Hobey Baker winner Ryan Whitney drafted by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 1st round of the 2002 NHL Entry draft and Brooks Orpik taken in the 1st round of the 2000 NHL draft by Pittsburgh.
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Tim Taylor, who has more wins than any head coach in the history of Yale hockey and is one of the most respected mentors in the game, has made a name for himself and the Yale hockey program by getting involved in every aspect of the sport. Whether he is leading an Olympic team into battle, coaching an unheralded Yale squad into the NCAA playoffs, moderating a panel at the World Hockey Summit, instructing a youth clinic or teaching his Bulldog players a new system for breaking out of the defensive zone, Taylor makes his presence known. Taylor, the head coach of the 1994 U.S. Olympic team at Lillehammer, has spent 25 seasons behind the Yale bench and has coached more games than anyone in the history of ECAC hockey. More importantly, he has sent future Olympians, National Hockey League stars, professional coaches and well-rounded students out on the ice at Ingalls Rink.
The current Taylor-made squad includes three NHL draft picks, though it would have been four if Chris Higgins ‘05, an All-American and Hobey Baker Finalist who is Yale’s highest NHL draft choice, had not signed with the Montreal Canadiens last spring. Taylor led the 2002-03 squad to Yale’s fourth highest win total and a third place finish. The Eli leader led the 1997-98 Yale team that was predicted to finish 10th in the ECAC to its first conference regular-season championship and a berth in the school’s first NCAA Tournament since 1952. That squad (23-9-3, 17-4-1) set school records for overall and ECAC victories, while Taylor swept all three coach of the year awards. Yale’s 1997-98 season of miracles, which included an Ivy League title and the emergence of three All-Americans, was built with a solid recruiting effort and bolstered by a commitment to team defense, something the Eli hockey mentor stresses more than anything else.
His defensive efforts helped produce ECAC Player of the Year and Best Defensive Defenseman Ray Giroux and Ken Dryden Award winning goalie Alex Westlund. The Blue, ranked among the nation’s top 10 all season, led the ECAC in overall goals per game and team defense and earned its first trip to the conference championships since 1986-87. The Taylor regime (310-369- 50, 25 years) in New Haven has produced one ECAC title, six Ivy League champions, 16 ECAC playoff teams, a pair of 20-win seasons and many professional skaters. Taylor, the 1997-98 Spencer Penrose Award winner as the American Hockey Coaches Association University Coach of the Year, is a three-time (1986-87, 1991-92, 1997-98) ECAC Coach of the Year and a two-time (1991-92, 1997-98) New England Coach of the Year.
He has coached all six of Yale’s Hobey Baker Award finalists. Taylor’s 1985-86 squad (20-10), which was his best until 1997-98, shattered 16 team and individual records, beat defending national champion RPI twice, upset national finalist Harvard and climbed as high as No. 4 in the national rankings. It took a 3-2 double overtime loss to Cornell in a classic ECAC semifinal to stop the Elis. In addition to his role with the ‘94 Olympic Team, the 60- year-old Taylor (who passed Murray Murdoch on the Yale hockey coaching victory list with his 279th on Dec. 4, 2001) has had a number of important international assignments over the last eight years, including a role as assistant general manager and assistant coach for the 1984 U.S. Olympic team.
He served as head coach of the U.S. National Team at the International Ice Hockey Federation World Championships four straight years in the 90’s, in addition to leading Team USA to its best finish in the 1991 Canada Cup. Taylor, an assistant in the Canada Cup, took over Team USA after Bob Johnson became ill and led the Americans to second place. A two-time assistant for the U.S. National Team (1981 and 1983), Taylor also led the South to a silver medal in the 1987 Olympic Sports Festival.
Taylor, who ranks 12th among active Division I head coaches in victories with 310, is a 1963 Harvard graduate. He spent seven years as an assistant at his alma mater before becoming Yale’s 10th head coach. He captained the 1963 Crimson team that won the Ivy League and the ECAC championships, and tallied 46 goals and 33 assists for 79 career points in 68 games. Taylor, the recipient of the Angier Trophy for most improved Harvard player his junior season, made the U.S. national team in 1965 and 1967. Taylor and his wife, Diana Cooke, reside in Guilford.
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Dave Tippett was named as the 19th head coach in Dallas Stars franchise history on May 21, 2002, and he led the club to a Pacific Division title and a Western Conference-best 111 points in his first season behind the bench.
In Tippett’s first season, Dallas went 46-17-15-4, which is by far the best start for a Stars coach in his first 82 games. The Stars’ 111 points in his first campaign are the fourth-highest in NHL history for a first-year head coach.
He led the Stars to a six-game victory over Edmonton in the opening round of the playoffs before falling at the hands of eventual Western Conference champion Anaheim in the conference semifinals.
Tippett made his NHL coaching debut in a 1-1 tie at Colorado on Oct. 9 and he earned his first NHL win on Oct. 11, as the Stars defeated the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim 4-2 in their home opener.
Tippett came to Dallas from Los Angeles, where he helped turn the Kings into perennial playoff contenders. Serving as an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Kings the prior three seasons, Tippett used his vast experience by focusing on the offensive side of the ice. In all three seasons Tippett was in Los Angeles, the Kings qualified for the playoffs while making the post-season just once out of the previous six seasons.
Prior to becoming a coach, the 44-year old native of Moosomin, Saskatchewan, played 11 years as a forward in the National Hockey League with the Hartford Whalers, the Washington Capitals, the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Philadelphia Flyers. In 721 career NHL outings, he registered 93 goals and 169 assists for 262 points with 317 penalty minutes.
He ended his playing career in 1995 as a player-assistant coach with the Houston Aeros of the International Hockey League (IHL). He led the Aeros to the 1999 Turner Cup Championship while serving as general manager/head coach and he was also named IHL Coach of the Year that year as Houston earned the Fred A. Huber Jr. Memorial Trophy for the league’s best regular season record (54-15-13).
A highly regarded coach with tremendous work ethic, Tippett posted two 50-win seasons at Houston and had a 165-85 regular season record with 36 shootout losses. At the 1998 IHL All-Star Game, he was the co-coach of the victorious Western Conference squad.
During his career with Hartford, Tippett served as assistant captain and earned the Community Service, Unsung Hero, Mr. Hustle and Best Defensive Forward awards. Internationally, he captained the 1984 Canadian Olympic Team in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, and he earned a silver medal as a member of the Canadian Olympic Team in Albertville, France, in 1992. While at the University of North Dakota, he was a member of the 1982 NCAA Division I Championship squad.
Dave and his wife, Wendy, have two daughters, Nicole and Natalie. The family resides in Plano, TX.
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Dan Fridgen was named the 11th head coach of the Rensselaer men’s hockey program on July 20, 1994, and is now in his tenth season at the helm. He owns a 183-154-30 (.540) career record, including five 20-win seasons, which is just shy of tying the school record for career wins.
Fridgen began his coaching career at Union College as an assistant to Charlie Morrison and later to Bruce Delventhal (1985-89). Well-respected in hockey circles, especially for his work ethic, he has built a reputation as one of the top recruiters in all of college hockey.
A 1982 graduate of Colgate University, Fridgen has a brilliant career as a high-scoring left wing for the Raiders. As a junior, he helped Colgate to the NCAA quarterfinals while leading the raiders in goals (37), assists (31), points (68) and penalty minutes (164). A three-year captain and the team’s top offensive player as a junior and senior, he finished his career in third place on Colgate’s all-time scoring list with 192 points (114 goals, 78 assists) and first in penalty minutes (387).
Fridgen signed a free agent contract with the Hartford Whalers of the National Hockey League after his senior season at Colgate. He played two years in the Whalers organization, spending part of one year with Hartford in the NHL and the rest of the time with the Binghamton Whalers of the American Hockey League. In 13 NHL games he tallied two goals, three assists and two penalty minutes. In 125 AHL contests, he had 45 goals and 43 assists. He also had 85 minutes in penalties.
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Kevin Dineen played one year of Junior B hockey with the Toronto St. Michael’s team, then played two years with the University of Denver where scored 26 goals in two seasons. He turned pro in 1984-85 with the AHL’s Binghampton Whalers and scored 15 goals in 25 games before making his NHL debut during the season.
Selected in the third round of the 1982 NHL Entry Draft by the Hartford Whalers, Kevin Dineen made his NHL debut on December 3, 1984 against the Montreal Canadiens. It was against those same Canadiens less than two weeks later that Dineen scored his first NHL goal against Doug Soetaert finishing his his rookie season with 25 goals.
In just his second year with the Whalers, Dineen helped the club improve 15 points in the standings and advance to the playoffs for the first time in five years. In 1985-86, the Whalers lost in a game-seven overtime thriller against the eventual Stanley Cup champions from Montreal. In 1986-87, the Whalers followed up a strong post-season with a team best 43 wins and 93 points to win their first regular season Adams Division title. Dineen led the Whalers with 40 goals and won the Shawmut Bank Favourite Whaler Award. He represented the NHL at the Rendez-Vous ‘87 series against the Soviet All-Stars in February. In 1987-88, Dineen co-led the Whalers with 25 goals and was voted to play in his first mid-season All-Star Game.
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Asst Captain, U of Maine NCAA Div. I Championship Hockey Team (1992 - 1993)
Elected to All - Hockey East Academic Team (1992 - 1993)
Harold Westerman Coach’s Award (1991 & 1993)
Most Inspirational Player Award (1992)
The University of Maine NCAA CHAMPIONS (1992 - 1993)
The University of Maine NCAA Final 8 (1991 - 1992)
The University of Maine NCAA Final 4 (1990 - 1991)
The University of Maine NCAA Final 8 (1989 - 1990)
The Gunnery School (Captain) Div. II NE Prep School Champions (1987 - 1989)
The Gunnery School Div. II NE Prep School Finalists (1987 - 1988)
USA SELECT ‘16 (TEAM WHITE) / USA CUP CHAMPIONS (1986 - 1987)
The Gunnery School Div. II NE Prep School Champions (1986 - 1987)
Hamden High School CIAC Div. I State Championship Team (1985 - 1986)
Roanoke Express - ECHL (1/96 - 4/96)
Raleigh Ice Caps - ECHL (10/95 - 1/96)
Asst. Captain, Charlotte Checkers (1994 - 1995)
Charlotte Checkers - ECHL (1993 - 1995)
Signed NHL contract with Boston Bruins (1993)
Drafted by the Boston Bruins / 102nd pick overall (1989)
HOCKEY NIGHT IN BOSTON, N. Andover, MA / Instructor (1997 - 2003)
TEAM CONNECTICUT / Sophomore Coach (2001)
TEAM CONNECTICUT / SOPHOMORE CHAMPIONS (2001)
Jr./ Sr. TEAM CONNECTICUT / Assistant Coach (1998 - 2003)
John Gardner Hockey School / Instructor (1998 - 2004)
1991 CT YANKEES / Head Coach (2002 - 2004)
Head Coach The Taft School (2004 - )
Asst. Coach Avon Old Farms School (1998 - 2004)
Asst. Coach Avon Old Farms School Div. I NE CHAMPIONS (1999 - 2000 and 2003 -2004)
Asst. Coach The Gunnery School (1996 - 1998)
Yankee Hockey Conference Festival Select ‘89 (2002)
Yankee Hockey Conference Festival Select ‘85 (2001)
CONNECTICUT HOCKEY CONFERENCE, West Haven, CT (2000 - present)
Skill Development Camp - Instructor
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April 30th, 2008 admin
Dan got his first taste of boarding school life as a postgraduate student at Loomis Chaffee School. He grew up in the Boston area and attended Catholic Memorial High School. He decided he needed another year of secondary school before pursuing college and had “a tremendously successful experience at Loomis and enjoyed the close relationship fostered between teachers and students.”
Dan graduated from Boston University where he majored in education and played both hockey and baseball for the Terriers. During his college summers, Dan played baseball in the prestigious Cape Cod Baseball League for both the Hyannis Mets and Falmouth Commodores. Dan played a season of minor league baseball for the Mason City Bats of the Great Central Independent League after graduation. After the season, Dan decided he’d try coaching and was hired as an assistant baseball coach at Harvard University. He enjoyed the work immensely and was intent on staying at Harvard, but in the middle of his first year, the New York Yankees invited him to attend a free-agent camp. Dan wound up playing four years in both the New York Yankees and Tampa Bay Devil Rays organizations. A real highlight was going to spring training with the Devil Rays in 1997. “Getting to meet and play with big league players was a great experience and a dream come true for me.”
During the winter months, Dan worked as a substitute teacher in different inner-city Boston public schools. He also coached at baseball clinics with Major League stars like Mo Vaughan and Nomar Garciaparra. Tampa asked him to play for another year, but Dan realized he was ready to move on to another dream: teaching and coaching kids. He will do much of both in his position here at Salisbury. Danny is head hockey coach and head baseball coach at Salisbury and lives on campus with his wife Renee, daughter Emily, and son Dan in Carr Dormitory.
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