Chris McSorley

Chris McSorley (born March 22, 1962 in Hamilton, Ontario) is a Canadian ice hockey coach and executive. He is currently head coach and general manager of Swiss NLA side Genève-Servette HC.

Career

McSorley played professionally in minor leagues in North America, spending some time in the IHL, AHL and ECHL.

His first head coaching job came in 1989 at the Winston-Salem Thunderbirds of the East Coast Hockey League. He worked for the Richmond Renegades the following season and took over the Toledo Storm for the 1991-92 season. During his three-year tenure at the helm, he led the Storm to back-to-back ECHL championships in 1993 and 1994.[1]

In 1994, McSorley joined the coaching staff of IHL’s Las Vegas Thunder as an assistant and was promoted to head coach the following season. He remained in that job until the end of the 1997-98 campaign.

McSorley continued his career overseas, taking over the London Knights of the British Elite Ice Hockey League in 1999. He had immediate success, steering the Knights to the EIHL championship his first year.

From 2000 to 2004, he also served as head coach of the British national team.[2]

He left London after the 2000-01 season,[3] in which the Knights had advanced to the finals of the IIHF Continental Cup, to accept the position as head coach and general manager at Genève-Servette HC of Switzerland. In 2002, McSorley guided the team to promotion to the Swiss top-tier National League A (NLA). McSorley led the team to the NLA finals in 2007-08, 2009–10 and to the semis in 2003-04, 2013–14, 2014-15. Under his tutelage, Genève-Servette won the 2013 and 2014 Spengler Cup.[4]

At the 2012 Spengler Cup, McSorley served as an assistant coach of Team Canada and helped win the title.

External links

References

  1. "The ECHL - Premier 'AA' Hockey League | ECHL Championship Players". www.echl.com. Retrieved 2016-03-20.
  2. "Ice Hockey Journalists UK". www.ihjuk.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-03-20.
  3. "McSorley quits Knights". BBC. 2001-04-06. Retrieved 2016-03-20.
  4. "Servette gewinnt den Spengler Cup – weil Chris McSorley besser ist als Napoléon". watson.ch. Retrieved 2016-03-20.
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