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Former Clubs include Murrayfield Racers,
Peterborough Pirates, Cardiff Devils, Ayr Scottish Eagles,
Manchester Phoenix, Sheffield
Steelers and GB International Programme Paul has over 12 years
experience as a professional head coach with teams including the
Cardiff Devils, Scottish Eagles Manchester Phoenix and Sheffield
Steelers, winning every championship available within the
British game.
Paul has also coached as part of the GB International Squad and
has participated in various junior and senior evaluation
training camps, World Championship Tournaments and International
Coaching Clinics. In the modern era of British Ice Hockey Paul
is held in extremely high regard with a coaching record second
to none. Paul brings tremendous passion, knowledge, experience
and enthusiasm to everything he does concerning the sport.
Paul Heavey, born 19th November 1962 in Glasgow, Scotland began
playing hockey at the age of 15. He was quickly introduced to
the senior Glasgow side before moving to Murrayfield playing in
three consecutive Wembley finals winning the last in 1986. His
playing career as a no-nonsense defenceman saw him move from
Scotland to Peterborough and in 1990 to Cardiff where he went on
to enjoy his greatest successes.
After recovering from a cruciate knee injury (sustained 91-92)
he was made Devils captain by John Lawless and then led the
Devils to five major trophies over the next two seasons (92-93,
93-94). The following season he skippered Cardiff into Europe
where they overcame two former Soviet elite sides in winning
their Europa Cup quarterfinal group and becoming the first
British side to qualify for the semi-final round. Ironically it
was during that glorious weekend that Heavey collected the
injury that spelled the end of his playing career and at the
tender age of 32, Heavey was immediately integrated into the
Devils coaching staff being made assistant to Lawless and
charged with looking after the junior programme to the end of
the season.
The summer of 1995 saw the formation of Manchester Storm and
with it the departure of John Lawless to Manchester. Lawless'
departure meant a change of plans for Heavey who had been
courted by other top flight clubs but suddenly found himself
offered the top spot at Cardiff - and therein commenced his
senior coaching career.
Heavey immediately stamped his authority on Cardiff's methods as
they became more ruthless but no less entertaining. As ice
hockey moved into the Superleague era Heavey - who for many
years was the only British coach in the league - put together
the formidable Devils side that scooped the first Superleague
league title (96-97). Heavey also coached Cardiff to the 97-98
play-off final where they lost 3-2 in OT to Ayr. Heavey was
still at the helm the following season when Devils repeated
their playoff final appearance and lifted the title in the MEN
Arena, beating league champions Storm 5-0 in the semi's and
overcoming Nottingham in the final.
In 2000 Heavey returned to his native Scotland to take up the
coaching reins of the Scottish Eagles outfit. Despite enduring a
turbulent time, Heavey masterminded Eagles Challenge Cup success
when he engineered a 5-0 final win Belfast in Northern Ireland,
ironically smack in the middle of a sequence of league games
between the two, which Belfast dominated throughout. In the
modern era of British ice hockey, (ISL period and later) Paul
Heavey’s success as a coach is bettered only by Mike Blaisdell
and his return to coaching in the top flight will be warmly
welcomed and respectfully feared.
Heavey is a no-nonsense disciplinarian when it comes to his
team; he will expect them to play hard but he will also want
them to entertain. He's a student of the game in every sense of
the word – his preparation is thorough in the extreme and there
will be no animated histrionics on the bench when Heaves is in
town. He watches, he notes and he learns. He will adapt his game
plan to disarm the opponent and he'll expect his players to play
the system with which he arms them.
Despite this however, the calm exterior should fool nobody for
within this giant of a hockey man beats the heart of a lion |