The Guardian (Charlottetown)

A REWARDING OPPORTUNIT­Y

P.E.I.’s Devan Praught loving opportunit­y to teach and coach at Notre Dame

- BY JASON SIMMONDS

P.E.I.’s Devan Praught happy with the chance to teach and coach hockey at Notre Dame

It’s an experience that has provided many memories for Devan Praught.

The 30-year-old Summerside native is employed at Notre Dame, the famed private high school in Wilcox, Sask. He teaches Grade 9 math, and last weekend coached the school’s top midget AAA hockey team to the 2018 Canadian championsh­ip – Telus Cup.

“It’s been very rewarding,” emphasized Praught. “It’s been a great experience working with motivated kids, who are motivated both academical­ly and athletical­ly.

“It’s been very enjoyable to watch them grown. Some players come in at a high level and they push and get better and better, and other kids come in and they work every day. They take themselves from a lower level, and they find themselves on a triple-A team and move on to have opportunit­ies in hockey. I have loved it.”

Praught’s work has not gone unnoticed. He has been named the Saskatchew­an Midget AAA Hockey League coach of the year for the past two seasons – 2016-17 and 2017-18.

“It’s a reflection of the players,” said Praught, deflecting the praise. “I’ve always said to the guys that it’s a team award.

“I can go in and come up with whatever kind of game plan, have practices put together, the messages, mottos and style of play that we want, but if the players are not going to buy in and respond then it’s all for nothing. These guys have been focused and intense right from Day 1.

“I’m proud of these guys for how they’ve handled themselves. . . They lay it on the line every night, and they take pride playing for the Hounds. We like to play ‘Hound Hockey’ as we call it, and it’s an attack mentality and defending with passion. We are at our best when we are doing both of those things.”

Career as a coach? With the success he has enjoyed with the Hounds, has Praught given any considerat­ion to pursuing a career as a coach?

“When I first left P.E.I. for Notre Dame I said I was going to go out for five years,” answered Praught in a phone interview with the Journal Pioneer. “My goal when I got to Notre Dame was I was going to coach the Hounds and I’ve coached them now for two years, having coached the Argos in the same league for two years before that.

“We are sitting here in my fifth year and the plan is I will be back out there next year, and I’m excited for September to go at it again. Notre Dame has been great in providing me an opportunit­y to pursue my profession­al career as a teacher and also coaching.”

Praught said he has “had a lot of great coaches” influence his career in a positive way throughout his playing career, which included stops in the MHL (Maritime Junior Hockey League), Quebec Major Junior Hockey League and Atlantic University Sport. He said he has implemente­d different things from different coaches into his own coaching style.

“Throughout minor hockey Gerard Smith coached me; my father (Kevin Praught), I don’t have to look far there, was always there for me, and even if he was my coach we were talking hockey; Mike (Pinky) Gallant was a great hockey influence, just a positive role model all the time.

“Then as I kind of move on in my career, Forbie Kennedy, the passion he had for the game. One thing I will always take away from Forbie is seeing him at his age showing up to the rink, and I could listen to his stories all day long, and when he said we’d back each other until our noses bleed he literally meant it. That was a lot of fun those two years in Summerside (with the Western Capitals). Then playing for Forbie MacPherson in Charlottet­own at UPEI, and having the opportunit­y to coach with him, was a great experience.

“Maybe you look at it like a golf swing, and take a little bit from everybody. My golf swing is not very good, so I’m kind of fortunate that maybe the coaching is working out for me.”

“Maybe you look at it like a golf swing, and take a little bit from everybody. My golf swing is not very good, so I’m kind of fortunate that maybe the coaching is working out for me.” Notre Dame Hounds head coach Devan Praught

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Summerside native Devan Praught poses with his parents, Kevin and Nelda Praught, and his fiancé, Lindsay Richardson, after coaching the Notre Dame Hounds to the 2018 Telus Cup Canadian midget AAA hockey championsh­ip in Sudbury, Ont., on April 29.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Summerside native Devan Praught poses with his parents, Kevin and Nelda Praught, and his fiancé, Lindsay Richardson, after coaching the Notre Dame Hounds to the 2018 Telus Cup Canadian midget AAA hockey championsh­ip in Sudbury, Ont., on April 29.

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