Andy Murray (ice hockey)

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Andy Murray
File:Andy Murray ice hockey coach.png
Biographical details
Born (1951-03-03) March 3, 1951 (age 73)
Gladstone, Manitoba, Canada
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1976–1978 Brandon Travelers
1978–1981 Brandon University
1981–1984 Kloten Flyers
1984–1987 EV Zug
1987–1988 Hershey Bears (asst.)
1988–1990 Philadelphia Flyers (asst.)
1990–1992 Minnesota North Stars (asst.)
1992–1993 HC Lugano
1993–1995 Winnipeg Jets (asst.)
1996–1998 Canada
1998–1999 Shattuck-Saint Mary's
1998–1999 Kölner Haie (GM)
1999–2006 Los Angeles Kings
2006–2010 St. Louis Blues
2011–2021 Western Michigan
Head coaching record
Overall 167–156–43 (.515) [college]
Tournaments 0–2 (.000)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1997 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships
2003 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships
2007 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships
2012 CCHA tournament champions
2013 Great Lakes Invitational Champions
2016 Great Lakes Invitational Champions
Awards
2012 IIHF Hall of Fame (builder)

Andy Murray (born March 3, 1951) is the former head coach for the Western Michigan Broncos men's ice hockey team of the NCAA Division I National Collegiate Hockey Conference (NCHC). He is a former head coach of the Los Angeles Kings and the St. Louis Blues in the National Hockey League.

Murray has 20 years of NHL experience as an assistant or head coach. He has also coached at the junior, high school, and college levels, as well as in the North American minor leagues and European professional leagues.[1][2] He was inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame in 2012.

Early life and career

Andy Murray's family had an auto dealership in Souris, Manitoba that was started by Murray's grandfather.[citation needed] Once Murray was old enough, he began to work there.[citation needed] In 1976, when Murray was 25 years old, his uncle hired him to be the coach of the Brandon Travellers after a brawl.[citation needed] Three years later, he got the head-coaching job at Brandon University in Manitoba while still working at the dealership during the day.[citation needed] In 1981, his father died the day after a victory that qualified Brandon for a National tournament. After that season, he needed to get away, and took a coaching job in Switzerland.[3] In 1988, he went to the United States to be the assistant coach for the Hershey Bears of the American Hockey League.[4] That year, the Bears won the AHL championship and the Calder Cup, and he was promoted as an assistant coach of the Philadelphia Flyers under head coach Paul Holmgren. He spent two years there before joining as an assistant coach with the Minnesota North Stars under head coach Bob Gainey, where the team made it to the 1991 Stanley Cup Finals. In 1992, he went back to Switzerland to coach for Lugano.[5] Two months later, he quit because of a fan revolt and is replaced by former head coach John Sletvoll. After that, he took a job in Germany before returning to assistant coaching with the Winnipeg Jets under John Paddock, where he stayed until 1995. Murray was named the coach of the Canadian National Hockey Team in 1996, a post he held until 1998. He served as head coach at Shattuck-St. Mary's School for the 1998–99 season.

NHL coaching career

On June 14, 1999, Andy was named to replace Larry Robinson as the new head coach of the Los Angeles Kings, where he stayed for seven seasons. By the end of his tenure, he was the all-time franchise leader in wins (215) and games coached (480).[6]

His best success came in 2001,[6] when the Kings forced the Colorado Avalanche to a seven-game series in the Western Conference Semifinals. The Kings forced the seventh game after previously being down three games to one. He garnered a lot of media attention after publicly stating that anyone on his team that wasn't going to give 100% was not to travel with team back to Colorado for game five of the series.[7] The Kings responded, winning game five, 1–0. They made Murray proud once again in game six,[8] when Glen Murray scored in the second overtime to win the game for the Kings, 1–0.

On March 21, 2006, Murray was fired by the Kings and was replaced on an interim basis by John Torchetti. At the time of Murray's dismissal, the Kings had posted a 37–28–5 record.[6] He provided colour commentary for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation during their Hockey Night in Canada telecasts of the 2006 Stanley Cup playoffs.[9]

On December 11, 2006, the St. Louis Blues hired Murray to replace Mike Kitchen as head coach after a seven-game losing streak.[10] He coached the Blues to a record of 33–36–13 in his first full season as coach in 2007–2008. On April 10, 2009, Murray coached the Blues from a 15th place showing in the Western Conference at the All-Star Break to a 25–9–7 record down the stretch to clinching the sixth playoff spot, marking the team's first Stanley Cup playoffs appearance since the 2004–05 lockout. Murray's Blues took on the Vancouver Canucks in the opening round of the 2009 Stanley Cup Playoffs and were swept.[11] Murray was named a finalist for the Jack Adams Award for coach of the year during the off-season but lost to Claude Julien of the Boston Bruins.[12]

On January 2, 2010, Murray was fired as Blues coach with a 17–17–4 record. He was replaced with Davis Payne, the head coach of the Blues AHL affiliate Peoria Rivermen.[13]

International coaching career

He coached Canada to three gold medals at the IIHF World Championships in 1997, 2003 and 2007. He was the first coach in IIHF World Championship history to win three championships. In the 2010 World Championships, he acted as a consultant to the Swiss team.[14]

Murray served as associate coach for Team Canada under Marc Crawford at the 1998 Olympics in Nagano, Japan – the first Olympics to feature current NHL players.[6][15] Murray, who was in his third year as head coach of the Canadian National Team, was hired in part for his experience with the international rink, a larger playing surface.[16] The Canadians concluded the tournament with a loss to Finland in the bronze medal game.

Murray has a record six gold medals as a coach for Canada at the Spengler Cup tournament in Davos, Switzerland,[6] earning the title "Mister Spengler Cup". He headed Team Canada six times – 1984, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1995,1997 – and won the cup each time.[17]

In 2012, Murray was inducted into the builder category of the IIHF Hall of Fame.[18][19]

Collegiate coaching career

On July 25, 2011, Murray was announced as the head coach of the Western Michigan Broncos.[20] Murray replaced Jeff Blashill, who left WMU after one season to join the NHL's Detroit Red Wings as an assistant coach.[20] Murray had no prior experience coaching college hockey in the United States, although he did spend several seasons as head coach in the late 1970s at Brandon University in Manitoba, Canada.[2] Murray stated at his introductory press conference that coaching college hockey was on his bucket list, and that he loved the college atmosphere and college sports. Murray signed a five-year, $1.5 million contract.[21] Other known finalists for the position included Ron Rolston, a veteran assistant coach of several college and minor league programs, and former WMU player and incumbent WMU assistant coach Pat Ferschweiler.[21] Ferschweiler was retained by Murray and elevated to the position of associate head coach in 2013.[22]

In his first season with WMU (2011–12), the Broncos went 21–14–6, good enough for second-place in the CCHA regular season standings. The team went on to claim the 2012 CCHA men's ice hockey tournament championship with a 3–2 victory over Michigan in the championship game.[23] It was the second CCHA championship for the Broncos, the first coming in 1986.[24] The Broncos then participated in the 2012 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament for the fifth time overall, and second year in a row. The fourth seeded Broncos fell in the first round to WCHA champion and number one seed North Dakota by a score of 3–1.[25]

In Murray's second season (2012–13), WMU finished 19–11–8, good for third place in the season-ending CCHA standings. After earning a first round bye in the CCHA tournament, the Broncos fell in the second round to the lower-seeded Michigan, ending their season.[26] The CCHA disbanded following the season as a result of conference realignment stemming from the start of sponsored hockey in the Big Ten Conference.

In his third season at WMU (2013–14), Murray's Broncos finished 19–16–5, including conference play in their new home with the National Collegiate Hockey Conference, a startup of former CCHA and WCHA programs. In December, WMU won the Great Lakes Invitational, a four team tournament held outdoors at Comerica Park in Detroit, Michigan. The Broncos prevailed over runner-up Michigan Tech in the final for the championship, as well as outpacing third-place Michigan State and fourth-place Michigan. It was the second GLI championship for the Broncos, who also won in 1986. Western finished the season in a tie for 4th place in the inaugural NCHC league standings, considerably higher than pre-season polls had predicted for the newer, stronger conference.[27][28]

Personal life

Andy and his wife, Ruth, have three children (all hockey players): sons Brady Murray and Jordan Murray, and daughter Sarah Murray. Brady played college hockey at North Dakota and was a fifth round draft pick of the Los Angeles Kings in 2003 while his father was head coach. Jordan Murray played college hockey at Wisconsin and daughter Sarah Murray played college hockey for the Minnesota–Duluth Bulldogs women's ice hockey program. All three of the Murray children hold US–Canadian dual citizenship[29] and played professional hockey in Switzerland.[2]

Murray is a former co-owner of the Salmon Arm Silverbacks of the British Columbia Junior Hockey League. He sold his stake in the team in 2007.[6][30]

Andy Murray is a distant cousin to former NHL veteran center Marty Murray.[31]

In 2017 he was conferred with an honorary Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) from Brandon University.[32]

Head coaching record

NHL

Team Year Regular season Postseason
G W L T OTL Pts Finish Result
LAK 1999–2000 82 39 27 12 4 94 2nd in Pacific Lost in Conference Quarterfinals (DET)
2000–01 82 38 28 13 3 92 3rd in Pacific Lost in Conference Semifinals (COL)
2001–02 82 40 27 11 4 95 3rd in Pacific Lost in Conference Quarterfinals (COL)
2002–03 82 33 37 6 6 78 3rd in Pacific Missed playoffs
2003–04 82 28 29 16 9 81 3rd in Pacific Missed playoffs
2005–06 70 37 28 5 79 (fired)
STL 2006–07 56 27 18 11 65 3rd in Central Missed playoffs
2007–08 82 33 36 13 79 5th in Central Missed playoffs
2008–09 82 41 31 10 92 3rd in Central Lost in Conference Quarterfinals (VAN)
2009–10 40 17 17   6 40 (fired)
Total 740 333 278 58 71 795   4 playoff appearances

College

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason

Template:CIH yearly record subhead

2011–12 Western Michigan 21–14–6 14–10–4–4 T–2nd NCAA West Regional semifinals
2012–13 Western Michigan 19–11–8 15–7–6–3 3rd CCHA Quarterfinals
Western Michigan: 40–25–14 29–17–10–7

Template:CIH yearly record subhead

2013–14 Western Michigan 19–16–5 11–11–2–2 T–4th NCHC Third-place game (loss)
2014–15 Western Michigan 14–18–5 6–13–5–4 7th NCHC Quarterfinals
2015–16 Western Michigan 8–25–3 5–18–1–2 7th NCHC First round
2016–17 Western Michigan 22–13–5 13–9–2–1 3rd NCAA East Regional semifinals
2017–18 Western Michigan 15–19–2 10–13–1–0 T–5th NCHC Quarterfinals
2018–19 Western Michigan 21–15–1 13–10–1–1 3rd NCHC Quarterfinals
2019–20 Western Michigan 18–13–5 12–9–3–2 4th Tournament Cancelled
2020–21 Western Michigan 10–12–3 10–11–3 6th NCHC Quarterfinals
Western Michigan: 127–131–29 80–94–18–12
Total: 167–156–43

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References

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External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Head coach of the Los Angeles Kings
1999–2006
Succeeded by
John Torchetti
Preceded by Head coach of the St. Louis Blues
2006–10
Succeeded by
Davis Payne
Preceded by Herb Brooks Coach of the Year
2016–17
Succeeded by
Bob Motzko