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Inducted
into the Hall of Fame in 1995. Born on May 3rd
1951 in Nipigon in the Thunder Bay region on the shores of Lake
Superior, Alex Dampier became the one of the most successful coaches in
domestic hockey in the modern era, and arguably the most successful GB
national team coach ever. Like
most Canadian youngsters Alex Dampier grew up playing hockey, in his
case able to double between defensive defenceman and the left wing
positions. He combined sport and academic studies at Lakeland
University, where he obtained a degree in Physical Education. By
the time he was 23 years old, Alex Dampier was already coaching
youngsters, and arrived in Britain in 1978 and discovered British ice
hockey. He joined the Murrayfield Racers and they made the most of his
talents as a defenceman and within twelve months as player/coach. From
the opening of the 1983/84 season, he made only occasional on-ice
appearances preferring to concentrate on coaching the Racers. He stayed
three more seasons in Edinburgh during which time the Racers helped
themselves to a veritable haul of trophy silverware. With Dampier in the
line-up, in three straight seasons from 1979-81, the Racers won the
Northern League and lifted both the Autumn Cup and the “Icy” Smith
Cup. Under Dampier the coach, they also appeared in back-to-back British
Championships at Wembley, 1984 and 1985, before he moved to the East
Midlands to take on the coaching role to the Nottingham Panthers in the
summer of 1985. Success
followed Alex Dampier to the Lace City and the Lower Parliament Street
club as the Panthers won the Autumn Cup in 1986 and 1991, and at Wembley
won the play-offs in 1989, made the semi-finals the following season and
were silver medal winners in the 1992 championships. Alex
Dampier took charge of his third British club in January 1993, when he
left Nottingham in mid-season to make the short move up the M1 to join
the Sheffield Steelers. He guided the Steelers to promotion from
Division One in 1992/93 and took them to the championship weekend at
Wembley the following season. At the start of the 1994/95 campaign, he
took on the role of General Manager, bringing in Clyde Tuhl as his head
coach and together they guided the Steelers to their first British
League title. Internationally,
Alex Dampier dipped his toe in the water in 1981, when he coached the
Great Britain senior team in the Pool C tournament of the world
championship Peking. The trip to China proved unsuccessful and it was to
be a further eight years before the seniors again ventured into world
competition. However, in 1984, Alex Dampier was put in charge of the
under-21 juniors for six years and twice they achieved bronze medal
success at Pool C level. In
1990, he was again appointed coach to the senior squad and they won the
Pool D tournament staged in Cardiff. From this point, the GB squad
surged forward via the Pool C tournaments of 1991 in Copenhagen and 1992
in Humberside as winners, to the Pool B event in Eindhoven Holland in
1993. Arguably Great Britain’s finest hour in post-war hockey came as
under Dampier, the team sensationally won the Eindhoven competition and
were promoted to the heady heights of Pool A for the 1994 tournament
staged in Bolzano, Italy. It
had been 32 years since the Great Britain ice hockey team had appeared
in the top flight and while many nations not even considered hockey
powers had made huge progress in that period, most notably the Russians,
for Alex Dampier and the GB team to have qualified at all was a
remarkable feat not seriously dreamt of when he took control. For
his achievements in domestic hockey and for taking the national team to
the highest level and re-alerting the world that ice hockey was played
seriously in Great Britain, Alex Dampier was inducted into the Hall of
Fame in April 1995. Compiled
with research, provided by
Martin C.Harris – April 1995.
Footnotes,
May 2000. The Sheffield Steelers,
under Dampier’s management, made four consecutive championship final
appearances between 1994-97, with three wins, their only loss being a
12-1 thumping at the hands of John Lawless’s Cardiff Devils in their
first final. Alex Dampier left the Sheffield Steelers at the end of the 1997-98 season and joined the ISL franchise in Newcastle, the Riverkings. Midway through the 1999/2000 season, he became Director of Hockey for the Nottingham Panthers, returning to one of his old stamping grounds. At the time, the Panthers were struggling, but under Dampier, they not only reached the final of the Challenge Cup, they became almost unbeatable on home ice in the second half of the season. |