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Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2005. The
name Kewley is synonymous with Scottish ice hockey of the 1940s and
1950s. Toronto
sports journalist Claude Kewley was
the Canadian scout of the Scottish Ice Hockey Association, responsible
for selecting the line-ups of the seven teams of the Scottish National
League until 1949. Four of his six sons were to play successfully in
Scottish ice hockey – Keith, Herb, Hal and Danny. William
Keith
Kewley, born at He
was particularly supportive of the discovery and development of Scottish
players, and was able to mould some outstanding home-grown talent into
key components of Canadian-dominated line-ups: the Syme brothers and
Johnny Rolland at Although
he was genuinely interested in the development of young players, and had
great admiration for the determination shown by Scottish youngsters to
compete on equal terms with Canadian players, who had enjoyed all the
advantages of growing up in an environment where hockey was a way of
life, his reasons were not wholly altruistic. Above
all, Keith Kewley wanted to win. It was his livelihood, and he was
pragmatic enough to look at any angle which would give his teams an
advantage. He realised that a small roster of 10 or 12 Canadian imports,
playing in a punishing schedule of 60-plus games, was going to need
replacements during the season. The cost-effective option was to develop
the local youngsters to provide cover – and it also produced a
talented legacy to British ice hockey. Keith
had first started playing hockey when growing up in Keith
played as a winger for the 1944-45 Ontario Hockey Association Junior
‘B’ champions, Toronto Victory Aircraft (along side younger brother
Herb.) The team was sponsored by the wartime Victory Aircraft federal
agency, which built He
came to Scotland
in 1946, aged 21, and captained
Dunfermline Vikings in the first post-war season of the revived Scottish
League. As left wing on the second line, he contributed 22 goals and 14
assists for 36 points, accumulating 37 penalty minutes. As captain,
however, his interest in coaching was given free rein by Head Coach
‘Scotty’ Cameron, and Kewley was a major influence in Vikings’
success in 1946-47 – winning the Play-Off Championship, Autumn Cup and
Canada Cup, and finishing close runners-up to Perth in the Scottish
National League. Dunfermline
Rink Manager Bill Creasey asked Keith to coach the Vikings the following
season, and he guided them to the Simpson Trophy in 1947-48. He had also
met his wife to be while in The
newly-wed Kewleys returned to Toronto
for two years, until Keith was
approached by Ayr Rink Manager Ross Low in the summer of 1950 and
invited to coach the Ayr Raiders. His wife was keen to return to Scotland, and Keith enjoyed two seasons at The
opportunity to team up again with his former Kewley’s
Pirates dominated Scottish hockey during 1953-54, winning the treble of
Scottish League, Autumn Cup and Canada Cup. He took great pleasure from
the significant contribution made by his five-man Scottish unit: the
Syme brothers on defence, with a forward line of Dave Ferguson, Billy
Brennan and Billy Crawford, augmented by Joe Brown – vindication
indeed for Kewley’s faith in local talent. He
oversaw At
the age of 31, and with British hockey then in serious decline, Kewley
took his wife and two young sons – Harold and Keith – back to Canada
in the summer of 1956. They settled in St Thomas, Kewley’s
All-Time Scottish League/British League coaching record reads:
The
lure of hockey was still strong, however, and he coached the Senior
‘A’ St Thomas Royals from 1956 to ’58, signing Canadian players
like Ed Lochhead, Cece Cowie and Art Sullivan who had played for him in He
took up the coaching role again in 1961, with the introduction of Junior
‘B’ hockey to St Thomas, and again showed his aptitude for
developing young players over the next seven years with the St Thomas
Barons, taking the Barons to the All-Ontario finals in their first
season, and to a runners-up slot in the Canadian national championship
in 1967-68. He
subsequently wound down his hockey coaching career after 1968, working
for several seasons at Midget level in His
wife, May, sadly passed away in 1969. Keith lives in retirement in A
very private person, Keith has always preferred to stay out of the
limelight in order to allow his players to take the credit. Fitting
testimony to his coaching abilities, however, is provided by two of his
Scottish players, who are also now in the Hall of Fame, ‘Tuck’ Syme
and Billy Brennan. Billy remembers his first coaching session with Keith
Kewley when he was just 17: "It really opened my eyes - I learned
more in that hour than I had picked up in the previous four years." ’Tuck’ is equally generous to
both Keith and his late brother Herb, who was an All-Star defenceman at
both
Compiled with research, provided by David Gordon – 2005. |