Cape Breton Post

Clowe all in with the Growlers

East Coast Hockey League team’s new coach had to prove himself

- BY BRENDAN MCCARTHY brendan.mccarthy@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: @telybrenda­n

Ryane Clowe had to prove it wasn’t some sort of a lark — that he really wanted the job.

The 35-year-old Fermeuse, NL, native was being considered by the Toronto Maple Leafs as the head coach of the Newfoundla­nd Growlers, the Maple Leafs’ news ECHL affiliate. But Clowe had a sense the Leafs weren’t absolutely sure about him, that while most people might have thought his birth certificat­e made him a natural fit for the Growlers, that in fact, it might have been like red flag for the folks representi­ng the blue and white.

“I really don’t think the Leafs put a lot of stock in me being from here,” said Clowe, who was officially introduced as the Growlers’ first coach Wednesday morning in St. John’s. “First and foremost, they were looking for a coach, not a Newfoundla­nder.

“I was thinking maybe they didn’t know if I was really serious about this, that maybe they were concerned I was just interested in coming home to hang out.”

And then there was the fact Clowe, who had spent the past two seasons as an assistant coach with the New Jersey Devils, would be leaving the NHL and everything it represente­d … charter flights, big cities and top-notch venues.

“That was actually their first question,” recalled Clowe. “‘Do you really want to do this?’ You’ve been in the NHL as a player or a coach for 15 years and you want this, the buses and the grind of travel, especially with a team travelling out of Newfoundla­nd?”

“I told them I hadn’t played hockey for the lifestyle or money. Yes, I made good money, but that wasn’t the main reason why I played. And I told them money wasn’t the reason I wanted to coach.

“I didn’t need the money. I could have stayed in Florida, sat at on my ass, except when I wanted to play golf,” added Clowe, who made more than $US40 million in a decade-long NHL playing career, one that was ended prematurel­y three years ago by concussion­s.

The clincher, feels Clowe, was when he let it be known he would be moving his family — his wife Jennifer, daughter Willow and son Bodhi — from Florida, where they’d been living year-round, to St. John’s.

In other words, he wouldn’t be treating this as a trial run.

“Once they found out that I intended on moving my whole family from Florida, I think they … understood I wanted to coach … I think I proved that I wanted this job and that I wanted to do it well.”

Not that it had been an easy call.

“It was actually agonizing. In the first place. I loved New Jersey and working for (Devils head coach) John Hynes. I certainly wasn’t looking to leave, and on top of that, I was in line for a promotion,” said Clowe, who could have been become Hynes’ lead assistant.

Geoff Ward, who held that job last year, had left to join Bill Peters’ staff with the Calgary Flames.

“I won’t say (Hynes) was upset, but it was clear he didn’t want me to leave. At the same time, he understood. I’m looking for a chance to develop as a head coach … I think with it being the Leafs and with kind of the organizati­on you know Glen Stanford will have here, this was a perfect opportunit­y and I had to take it.”

 ?? JOE GIBBONS/THE TELEGRAM ?? A happy Gen Clowe was on hand as her son Ryane was officially named head coach of the ECHL’s Newfoundla­nd Growlers Tuesday in St. John’s, NL.
JOE GIBBONS/THE TELEGRAM A happy Gen Clowe was on hand as her son Ryane was officially named head coach of the ECHL’s Newfoundla­nd Growlers Tuesday in St. John’s, NL.

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