Penton: Campbell makes NHL coaching history

By Bruce Penton

When Dan Bylsma went searching for an assistant coach to join him on the Seattle Kraken’s bench, he wasn’t out to make history; he was simply looking for the best coach available.

In Jessica Campbell, he thinks he got both. The best coach available and an historic hire — the first female coach in the National Hockey League.

Campbell, who grew up in Rocanville, a small mining town in eastern Saskatchewan, was eminently qualified for the historic post. A hockey lifer, she has paid her dues on the ice and in the coaching ranks, and now she has almost reached the mountaintop.

Only one step remains, and that would be a head coach. Only time will tell if the best hockey league in the world is ready for that, but Campbell’s credentials are strong and if a woman is ever named to a head coaching position, it would surprise no one if it were her.

Jessica’s parents, Gary and Monique Campbell were in the stands at Climate Pledge Arena Oct. 8 to watch their daughter make history.

Gary recalls saying to Jessica when she was younger, and seemingly obsessed with hockey, ’You don’t get tired of putting on your skates every day, and going out every day?’ And she kind of looked at me and said ‘no, why, dad?’”

After a playing career at Cornell University and a short stint with Canada’s women’s national team, Campbell spent three seasons with the Calgary Inferno of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League. Her strength was skating, and teaching skating to others, and her coaching career blossomed when fellow Saskatchewanian Damon Severson, now a defenceman with Columbus Blue Jackets, worked with her. Through the Severson connection, Campbell eventually wound up with a number of NHLers under her tutelage at her Kelowna power skating school. She later coached in Sweden and Germany and her work was noticed by Bylsma, who later hired her as an assistant with Coachella Valley Firebirds of the American Hockey League.

When Bylsma was hired by the Kraken in late May to replace Dave Hakstol, he knew exactly where to look for an assistant. “We’re going to see a woman behind the bench for the first time in the National Hockey League and it’s monumental,” Bylsma told The Athletic. “But the (goal) was to get the best coach — and it happened to be Jessica Campbell.”

So how did she get behind the bench in Seattle? Campbell was hired by the German national team for the 2022 men’s world championship, and her work helped improve the team’s powerplay. Bylsma was an observer at the event and was impressed with her work ethic, her communication skills and overall success with the powerplay and penalty killing units and hired her in Coachella Valley. After Campbell’s two years behind the Firebirds’ bench, Bylsma knew she had the skills to coach at a higher level. “She has something to provide to players, and they immediately recognize what she has to offer to them and their careers and their growth and development,” Bylsma said in The Athletic story.

  • Comedy writer Alex Kaseberg: “The  selfish divas in the WNBA are complaining bitterly about the media focus on Caitlin Clark whose great play has increased attendance. Those WNBA morons would win the lottery and complain about paying the taxes on it.”

  • Vancouver comedy guy Torben Rolfsen: “You can’t spell Oakland without the A’s”

  • New York Post reader Joe Shepherd, bashing a new version of the Red Sox uniforms: “Nothing says Red Sox like a Clarabell the Clown yellow and blue costume. And that’s what they are: Costumes, not uniforms.”

  • RJ Currie of sportsdeke.com: “One of Canada's legalized-marijuana regulations is it cannot be packaged in any way that will attract teenagers. Look for bags of weed covered with curling photos.”

  • Mike Bianchi of the Orlando Sentinel: “University of Florida coach coach Billy Napier says he still thinks there’s a path to save his job. Unfortunately, the path goes over Mount Everest, through the Amazon Rainforest, into the jaws of an active volcano and is blocked by a bunch of Gator fans with pitchforks.”

  • Super 70s Sports, under a photo of Joe Torre dancing in a night club: “Joe Torre missed the final two months of the 1977 season after being diagnosed with night fever.”

  • RJ Currie again: “Winnipeg opened the NHL season with a 6-0 whipping of the Oilers — in Edmonton. It’s nice to see the Jets getting a promising early-season jump on their eventual playoff collapse.”

  • nother RJ Currie offering: “Someone broke into Ex-Maverick Charlie Villanuevas home in Dallas and stole his toilet. Police say no arrests have been made because there's nothing to go on.”

  • Headline at theonion.com: “Travis Kelce Suffers Film-Career-Beginning Injury”

  • Steve Simmons of the Toronto Sun: “Two days ago, Ivan Ivan, my favourite, favourite name of a hockey player was still on the roster of the Colorado Avalanche. I look forward, forward to the day Ivan Ivan gets recalled.”

Care to comment? Email brucepenton2003@yahoo.ca

Previous
Previous

SPORTS TALK: Not the start to the season that the Oilers wanted

Next
Next

Pop 89: Trust the Joy