NHL coaches eager to spread knowledge: ‘Giving back to the hockey community’
Ken Hitchcock remembers eagerly attending coaching symposiums in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
The goal was simple: soak up as much hockey information as possible.
Summer seminars lasting up to a week — the programs were held at universities and attendees stayed in dorms — provided a window into some of the game’s most progressive minds, including Clare Drake, George Kingston, Dave King and Wayne Fleming.
“I called them the ‘Group of the Four,'” Hitchcock recalled recently. “All day you would have presenters talk about everything from X’s and O’s to practices to picking captains. That group of coaches was so far ahead of the curve that you felt when you left you had a leg up on everybody.