Marcel Comeau

Marcel Comeau (born March 1, 1952) is a Canadian retired ice hockey player, coach, scout, and National Hockey League team executive. He played eleven seasons in the International Hockey League (IHL), where he was the league's top scorer and won the IHL Most Valuable Player Award in 1981. He later coached in the Western Hockey League (WHL), winning two WHL Coach of the Year Awards, and a Canadian Hockey League Coach of the Year Award. He also led Team Canada to a gold medal at the 1996 World Juniors, and later served as a team executive for the Atlanta Thrashers, and the Winnipeg Jets.

Marcel Comeau
Born (1952-03-01) March 1, 1952
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
OccupationIce hockey scout
EmployerWinnipeg Jets
Known forIce hockey coach & player
AwardsIHL Most Valuable Player (1981)
CHL Coach of the Year (1993)

Early life

Marcel Comeau was born on March 1, 1952, in Edmonton, Alberta.[1][2] His parents, Emile and Anita Comeau, moved to Ponoka and operated the local Massey Ferguson retailer. He played minor ice hockey in town and attended Ponoka Composite High School. He played shortstop on the Ponoka Royals fast-pitch softball club as a youth, and played semi-professional softball in summers.[3]

Playing career

Comeau was a centreman during his playing career, listed at 6 feet (183 cm) and 165 pounds (75 kg) with a right-hand shot.[1][2] He began playing junior ice hockey with the Ponoka Stampeders, and was named the Alberta Junior Hockey League rookie of year in the 1970–71 season, and led the league with 42 goals scored.[3][4] He finished the 1970–71 season playing 11 games with the Edmonton Oil Kings in the Western Canada Hockey League.[3] After one full season with Edmonton, he was drafted 148th overall by the Minnesota North Stars, in the tenth round of the 1972 NHL Amateur Draft.[1][2]

Comeau never played in the National Hockey League, and spent eleven seasons playing with the Saginaw Gears in the International Hockey League (IHL).[1][4] He was named an IHL second-team all-star in the 1973–74 IHL season, and the 1977–78 IHL season.[4][5] Comeau led the league with 82 assists in the 1980–81 IHL season, led the league with 126 points and won the Leo P. Lamoureux Memorial Trophy as the top scorer, was named a first-team all-star, and won the James Gatschene Memorial Trophy as the IHL's most valuable player.[1][2][4][5] In the 1976–77 IHL season, Comeau and the Saginaw Gears finished first place overall in the league winning the Fred A. Huber Trophy, and won the playoffs to capture a Turner Cup title.[6][7] The team was inducted into the Saginaw County Sports Hall of Fame in 2014.[6][7]

Comeau finished his playing career with the Maine Mariners in the American Hockey League (AHL), with seven games during the 1982–83 AHL season playoffs.[1]

Coaching career

Comeau began his coaching career with the Saginaw Gears during the 1981–82 IHL season, and the 1982–83 IHL season, until the team folded, acting as the player-coach and general manager.[4][8] He became a full-time coach with the Calgary Wranglers for the 1983–84 WHL season.[4]

Comeau switched to the Saskatoon Blades for the 1984–85 WHL season, and stayed with the team for five seasons.[1] He led Saskatoon to improved records in three successive seasons, reaching the third round of the playoffs in the 1986–87 WHL season. Comeau led Saskatoon to 47 wins and the east division title in the 1987–88 WHL season, and was awarded the Dunc McCallum Memorial Trophy as the WHL Coach of the Year.[4][9] The Blades moved out of Saskatoon Arena during his fifth season, into the new Saskatchewan Place, and were scheduled to host the 1989 Memorial Cup.[9] Comeau led Saskatoon to second place in the east division with 42 wins, and into the third round of the 1988–89 WHL season playoffs.[9] At the 1989 Memorial Cup, Comeau's Blades won 5–3 over the Laval Titan, lost 3–2 to the Peterborough Petes, and won 5–4 over the Swift Current Broncos to reach a berth in the finals.[10] Saskatoon was leading in the third period of the Memorial Cup championship game, but were defeated 4–3 in overtime by Swift Current.[10] Comeau stepped down from his position with the Blades on August 10, 1989.[4]

Comeau was named director of hockey operations and head coach of the New Haven Nighthawks on August 11, 1989.[4] In his first season coaching in the AHL, Comeau led the New Haven to seventh-place finish, and missed the playoffs. The following season, his team struggled again and Comeau became the first AHL coach to be fired mid-season in nearly six years, on November 29, 1990.[4] Comeau took over as head coach of a struggling Winston-Salem Thunderbirds team in the East Coast Hockey League on January 12, 1991, but was unable to get his new team into the 1990-91 ECHL season playoffs.[4]

Comeau was hired as the first head coach for the expansion Tacoma Rockets in the WHL, on April 17, 1991.[4] In his 1992–93 WHL season with Tacoma, he led the team to 45 wins, and won his second Dunc McCallum Memorial Trophy as WHL Coach of Year.[4] He also received the Coach of the Year Award for the Canadian Hockey League in the same season.[11] Comeau served five seasons total with the Rockets, four of those in Tacoma, and a fifth season being the team's first year as the Kelowna Rockets in the 1995–96 WHL season.[4]

International duties

Comeau was head coach of the Canada men's national under-18 ice hockey team which captured the gold medal at the 1994 La Copa Mexico in Mexico City.[4][8][12] Two years later he was head coach of the Canada men's national junior ice hockey team at the 1996 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, which won a fourth consecutive gold medal at the World Juniors.[8][13] Canada finished the round-robin winning all four games, defeated Russia 4–3 in the semifinals, and defeated Sweden 4–1 in the finals.[13]

Later career

Comeau served as the executive director of the Sno-King Amateur Hockey Association in the Snohomish County and King County areas, from 1996 to 2000.[4] He also worked as a scout with the Independent RHO Hockey Service, and coached the Pacific under-17 team at the 1999 USA Hockey Festival.[4][3] He was hired as a part-time scout for the Atlanta Thrashers by Don Waddell, a former teammate on the Saginaw Gears.[4][3] He scouted part-time in Western Canada and the United States from October 1998, until becoming a full-time scout in the same regions in June 2000.[4] On July 9, 2003, he was named director of amateur scouting for the Thrashers.[4] He remained in the same position with the organization when it became the second incarnation of the Winnipeg Jets in 2011.[8][14] In 2015, Comeau stepped down from his position, but remained with the Jets as an amateur scout.[8][15]

Playing statistics

Season-by-season career playing statistics.[1][2][4]

    Regular Season   Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1970–71Ponoka StampedersAJHL4942388032
1970–71Edmonton Oil KingsWCHL11612180
1971–72Edmonton Oil KingsWCHL4816294527
1972–73Saginaw GearsIHL6820365618
1973–74Saginaw GearsIHL7631518240133584
1974–75Saginaw GearsIHL711940591619511168
1975–76Saginaw GearsIHL6433447712113586
1976–77Saginaw GearsIHL5827325917199142311
1977–78Saginaw GearsIHL6442611031653584
1978–79Saginaw GearsIHL8045651102330004
1979–80Saginaw GearsIHL7433579026782102
1980–81Saginaw GearsIHL8144821262013110114
1981–82Saginaw GearsIHL66336910226144151910
1982–83Saginaw GearsIHL3012223428
1982–83Maine MarinersAHL71120
IHL Totals732339559898242104366710353

Coaching record

Season-by-season career coaching record.[1][8]

SeasonTeamLeagueGPWLTPTSPctStandingPlayoffs
1981–82Saginaw GearsIHL8236388800.4885th, IHLLost, IHL finals
1982–83Saginaw GearsIHL8229449670.4094th, eastOut of playoffs
1983–84Calgary WranglersWHL7236360720.5006th, eastLost, round 1
1984–85Saskatoon BladesWHL7229412600.4176th, eastLost, round 1
1985–86Saskatoon BladesWHL7238286820.5694th, eastLost, round 2
1986–87Saskatoon BladesWHL7244262900.6252nd, eastLost, round 3
1987–88Saskatoon BladesWHL7247223970.6741st, eastLost, round 3
1988–89Saskatoon BladesWHL7242282860.5972nd, eastLost, round 3
1989 Memorial Cup finalists
1989–90New Haven NighthawksAHL8032417710.4447th, northOut of playoffs
1990–91New Haven NighthawksAHLStatistics incomplete7th, northFired November 30, 1990
1990–91Winston-Salem ThunderbirdsECHLStatistics incomplete6th, westOut of playoffs
1991–92Tacoma RocketsWHL7224435530.3686th, westLost, round 1
1992–93Tacoma RocketsWHL7245270900.6252nd, westLost, round 1
1993–94Tacoma RocketsWHL7233345710.4933rd, westLost, round 2
1994–95Tacoma RocketsWHL7243272880.6112nd, westLost, round 1
1995–96Kelowna RocketsWHL7235334740.5144th, westLost, round 1
WHL totals792416345318630.5451 division1 Memorial Cup
appearance
IHL totals1646582171470.4481 finalist

References

  1. "Marcel Comeau hockey statistics and profile". hockeydb.com. Retrieved September 28, 2018.
  2. "Marcel Comeau". Elite Prospects. Retrieved September 28, 2018.
  3. Rainone, Mike (January 9, 2013). "Former Ponokan still enjoying exciting hockey career!". Ponoka News. Ponoka, Alberta: Black Press. p. 19. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  4. "1972 NHL Amateur Draft – Marcel Comeau". Hockey Draft Central. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  5. "International Hockey League (1980–89)". Hockey League History. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  6. Butzin, Cory (October 30, 2014). "Skill carried 1976-77 Saginaw Gears to the Turner Cup and into the Saginaw County Sports Hall of Fame". MLive.com. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  7. "Saginaw Gears Hockey Team (1976–77)". Saginaw County Sports Hall of Fame. 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  8. "Marcel Comeau Team Staff Profile". Elite Prospects. Retrieved September 28, 2018.
  9. Eremondi, Tom (2003). "History". Saskatoon Blades. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  10. Lapp, Richard M.; Macaulay, Alec (1997). The Memorial Cup: Canada's National Junior Hockey Championship. Madeira Park, British Columbia: Harbour Publishing. pp. 237–239. ISBN 1-55017-170-4.
  11. "CHL Awards". chl.ca. Canadian Hockey League. Retrieved December 24, 2017.
  12. "National Men's Under-18 Team". Hockey Canada. Retrieved October 2, 2018.
  13. Bell, Aaron (January 3, 2003). "Golden Memories – 1996". Ontario Hockey League. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  14. Mirtle, James (July 14, 2011). "Jets take several Thrashers staffers with them". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  15. Hobson, Russ (September 1, 2015). "Winnipeg Jets revamp scouting staff". Globalnews.ca. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
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