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sarah murray

A whole new hockey world

The National Teams’ Summer Showcase is helping Sarah Murray prepare for her job as head coach of the Korean national women’s team

Wendy Graves
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August 15, 2015
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Five years ago Sarah Murray ended her collegiate playing career at the University of Minnesota Duluth with a second NCAA women’s hockey championship.

Three years ago she finished her second of two seasons with HC Lugano in Switzerland.

One year ago she played what she calls beer league hockey while teaching kindergarten in China.

Today she’s the head coach of the Korean national women’s team, a role that has finally brought her home to Canada, if only for a short while.

Murray has spent the week at Canada’s National Women’s Development Team selection camp, part of Hockey Canada’s National Teams’ Summer Showcase in Calgary. For 10 days she’s been shadowing Team Blue’s coaching staff.

“I help with practice planning, including running a couple of drills,” says Murray. “Most of the time I’m watching and observing, seeing how things are done here and what things I can implement at home in Seoul.”

As host of the 2018 Olympic Winter Games, Korea has automatically qualified to make its debut in the competition. Currently there are fewer than 200 registered female hockey players in the country so Murray, never one to shy away from a challenge, has some work to do.

A chance meeting with Melody Davidson, Hockey Canada’s general manager of national women’s team programs, last year when the Canadian Olympic Committee visited Seoul led to an invitation for Murray to come to the Summer Showcase. (Players from eight different countries, including national team member Jiyeon Choi from Korea, are competing at camp as an IIHF development team.)

“I’m absorbing everything I’m seeing here,” says Murray. “I want us to maintain a good relationship with Hockey Canada, where we can continue to send even managers and strength coaches because it would be amazing for us to learn from this.”

Murray hopes to instill the same level of order – with every person having a specific job – that she’s observed so far in Calgary. “Everything’s so pristine as far as scheduling and we [still] need to get to that point,” she says. “We can’t just continue to fly by the seat of our pants and hope things work out.”

The camp has also allowed her to reconnect with Laura Schuler, who was her head coach at UMD and is part of the coaching staff at camp, as well as the head coach of Canada’s National Women’s Team for the 2015-16 season. Schuler has helped her former player tweak drills, offering constructive feedback about things to change and encouraging words about what to keep.

But Schuler isn’t the only mentor Murray has been able to turn to. Her dad, Andy, is currently at the University of Western Michigan, but was the head coach of Canada’s gold-medal-winning National Men’s Team at the 1997, 2003 and 2007 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championships.

After getting the job in Korea, Murray spent 10 days in Michigan shadowing her dad. She went to video meetings, poured over practice plans and sat in coaches meetings. “It was a short time but I was like a sponge – I just absorbed everything in.”

When Murray started her job nine months ago dad preached patience to his initially frustrated daughter. “Right away I wanted to blow stuff up and start over,” she says. “He was like, pick your battles. Don’t take it on all at once because things aren’t going to change overnight. They’ve done the same things for a long time and it’s a totally different culture.”

She’s had to get used to her new position of authority, not so much as a boss but as a figure head.

“When I first ran practice I didn’t realize that because I’m in a higher position of power, my players aren’t supposed to ask me questions or disagree with me,” says Murray. After explaining her first drill, she received a round of nods from the players when she asked, via translator, if they understood. Half the team stayed at the boards when Murray skated away to start the drill. “They had no idea what I was talking about,” she says. “We had to get over that hump. It’s OK to ask questions.”

Until two years ago the Korean team was a 12-month practice team. There simply were no other women’s teams to play against. The basic hockey skills are there, says Murray, but the ability to read the game is still a work in progress.

When Jim Paek, then an assistant coach with the Grand Rapids Griffins, was named director of the Korean Ice Hockey Association, he called Andy Murray for some advice and in passing asked about his kids. Despite Sarah having no high-level coaching experience, Paek liked her thoughts on how to build the women’s program.

And she was excited about the idea of being involved in a national program, even one still in its infancy.

“It’s the dream, and to have it come up so quickly it seemed like a great opportunity,” says Murray. “I didn’t think twice about it.”

For more information:

Esther Madziya
Manager, Communications
Hockey Canada

(403) 284-6484 

[email protected] 

Spencer Sharkey
Manager, Communications
Hockey Canada

(403) 777-4567

[email protected]

Jeremy Knight
Manager, Corporate Communications
Hockey Canada

(647) 251-9738

[email protected]

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