The Guardian (Charlottetown)

A natural leader

Hulton coached Team Canada assistant Luke Pierce during his college days in Kingston, Ont.

- HOCKEY BY JASON MALLOY

Luke Pierce learned a lot from Jim Hulton during his only year playing for him at the Royal Military College in Kingston, Ont.

Pierce is in Charlottet­own this week as an assistant coach with the Canadian squad competing in the World Sledge Hockey Challenge. Hulton, who is in his third season as the Charlottet­own Islanders bench boss, had the Cranbook, B.C., native as his captain during his only year coaching the Paladins in 2006-07.

“He had a huge influence on me getting into coaching,” Pierce said Wednesday night.

“I thoroughly enjoyed my time with Jim and have a ton of respect for him,” he added. “He’s just a real person.

“You see coaches on TV, and some of them put on this persona of being this figure that they’re not really. What I always remember was he was so authentic. When he was angry he was angry, but he’d be compassion­ate, he cared about us and that’s what I wanted to take into coaching.”

Hulton took over at the Ontario Universiti­es Athletic Associatio­n (OUAA) team after having worked for about a decade in junior hockey.

“I learned way more from those men than they did from me because I had to change my methodolog­y,” he explained Thursday. “I was no longer teaching kids, I had to communicat­e with men and I think I became a much better communicat­or.”

Pierce is listed at five-footeight and 170 pounds on www. hockeydb.com. It says he had 223 penalty minutes in 53 games as a right-winger with the Vernon Vipers of the British Columbia Hockey League in 2003-04. He had 14 points in 22 games in 2007-08 with the Paladins.

Hulton said while he was bit undersized he was a guy who played with a chip on his shoulder and was a team-first guy, passionate and intelligen­t.

“Luke, as a player, was a heart-and-soul guy, who was a coach’s dream. Ironically, his style and his demeanour would fit in well on this year’s (Islanders) team,” Hulton said.

A natural leader, Hulton wasn’t surprised when Pierce got into coaching after his playing days.

“It’s always gratifying to see former players that are still involved in the game in some capacity,” Hulton said.

When Pierce was looking to advance his coaching career from tier two hockey in British Columbia, Hulton put a good word in for him with a friend. Hulton had worked with Dean Chynoweth with Hockey Canada and Chynoweth’s family owned the Kootenay Ice of the WHL. Pierce coached them the past two seasons before joining Hockey Canada this year.

Pierce said Hulton always encouraged him to be involved and said it is an honour to be in his third stint with Hockey Canada.

“I remember being over at his house one time in Kingston and looking at pictures on the wall of him at the world juniors and that kind of set the seed then as something I wanted to do and be a part of,” Pierce said.

Pierce watched the Canada-USA final from last year’s world sledge hockey championsh­ip a number of times in preparatio­n for this season.

“When I first started with them in September it was incredible to see them on the ice,” he said, noting the physicalit­y of the sport that was evident during Wednesday’s rematch.

“They’re laying it all on the line out there. . . The skill level is through the roof. I’ve got a ton of respect for what they can do.”

 ?? JASON MALLOY/THE GUARDIAN ?? Luke Pierce is an assistant coach with Team Canada competing this week at the World Sledge Hockey Challenge in Charlottet­own.
JASON MALLOY/THE GUARDIAN Luke Pierce is an assistant coach with Team Canada competing this week at the World Sledge Hockey Challenge in Charlottet­own.
 ??  ?? Hulton
Hulton

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