Greg Ireland

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Greg Ireland (born October 5, 1965 in Orangeville, Ontario) is a Canadian ice hockey coach.

Career

A graduate of York University, Ireland began his career as ice hockey coach in 1991 as head coach of the Milton Merchants. In 1992 he was hired by the Oakville Blades to be their head coach. After two years with the team and after receiving Ontario Hockey Association’s Jr. A Division West Coach of the Year honors in 1994,[1] he took over the Caledon Canadians and guided the team to three Metro Junior A Hockey League runner-up finishes in four years. Under his guidance, the Canadians amassed a 42-3-5 record in 1994-95, making them the number one team in Canadian junior hockey at the time.[2]

Ireland then spent five years (1998 - 2003) at the helm of the Dayton Bombers, serving as head coach and general manager of hockey operations.[3] He coached the team to an EHCL record of 175-134-47 and led the Bombers to an appearance in the 2002 Kelly Cup finals.[4]

In the second half of the 2002-03 season, he had a short stint as assistant coach of the Hamilton Bulldogs of the AHL.[5]

Ireland joined the coaching staff of AHL's Grand Rapids Griffins, affiliate to the Detroit Red Wings, in 2003, serving two years as assistant, before being promoted to head coach in February 2005.[6] The Griffins made the Calder Cup playoff semifinals in Ireland's first full season as head coach (2005–06).[7] Ireland stayed on the job until 2007 and then was appointed as head coach of the San Antonio Rampage in August 2007.[8] In November 2009, he was sacked by the AHL affiliate of the Phoenix Coyotes[9] after a run of ten games without a win.[10]

Ireland was hired by Swiss side HC Lugano in February 2011 only a couple of days before the start of the relegation round.[11] His task was to keep the club in the top flight National League A which he did.

He signed with the Owen Sound Attack of the Ontario Hockey League in August 2011[12] and stepped down from his head coaching position in July 2015 to accept an offer from Germany:[13] He signed with Adler Mannheim, defending champion of the German elite league Deutsche Eishockey Liga, for the 2015-16 campaign,[14] but was sacked in February 2016 after a five-game losing streak. The Adler Mannheim CEO said in a statement, the team had displayed a lack of consistency throughout the season.[15]

External links

References

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