Waterloo Region Record

Vallée is stunned by worldwide response

- LORI EWING

TORONTO — Chantal Vallée was just 20 when she appointed head coach of a boys basketball team, more by accident than by design.

That indelible season is forever etched in her brain. She calls it “one of the best memories of my life.”

Vallée was coaching a high school girls squad in Montreal, when the men’s head coach had to leave the program suddenly.

“The athletic director called me at home and said ‘Chantal, you have to coach the boys,’ ” Vallée said. “The guys were 17, 18. He said ‘We have a great team, we can win a championsh­ip, you need to coach that team.’ ”

After some initial trepidatio­n, Vallée took the boys team to the Quebec high school championsh­ips where they finished fourth.

One of the most successful coaches in Canadian university basketball will partly draw on that memorable year when she takes on her new challenge.

Last week, the 43-year-old made internatio­nal headlines when she was hired as both head coach and general manager of the Hamilton Honey Badgers of the fledgling Canadian Elite Basketball League (CEBL), which is slated to tip off in May. She’s the first woman in history to hold both positions on a men’s pro team.

While she cherishes the chance to blaze a trail for young women following in her footsteps, that wasn’t her top priority in accepting the position. And gender never came up when team president John Lashway was wooing Vallée for the job.

“It didn’t cross my mind in the sense of weighing in the decisionma­king,” she said. “But knowing what has happened now for me, I wanted to continue to coach and it’s a great opportunit­y of course, and that’s what the essence of it was.

“But I see now, I remember when I was a young girl and I saw coaches on TV and they were all guys, I’ve never had a female coach myself. Never. Never been coached by a woman. But when I started to see Pat Summitt (Tennessee’s late Hall of Fame coach) ... Then I saw Becky Hammon getting an assistant coaching job with the (San Antonio) Spurs, I thought ‘Oh, that’s cool.’ It’s not something that I necessaril­y wanted to do or I pursued, I just remember thinking ‘It’s good to see women out there.’ But if this appointmen­t can have an effect on younger females, they can say ‘Oh, whether I’m a male or female, I can aspire to coach at the profession­al ranks,’ then that’s fantastic.”

Vallée is the second woman to be named head coach of a men’s pro team. Nancy Lieberman coached Texas in the NBA Developmen­t League (now G League) in 2010-11.

Vallée will maintain her position with the University of Windsor. She’s currently on sabbatical, which has provided more time to dedicate to her GM duties with the Honey Badgers. She’s been stunned by the response. She and Lashway figure she’s at 25 interviews and counting.

“I knew it was going to be a bit of a reaction, because it’s not something you see every day, but the level and extent of what it has turned into, we didn’t expect that at all,” Vallée said.

The CEBL begins play in 2019 with six teams: Hamilton, Edmonton, Niagara (St. Catharines, Ont.), Saskatchew­an (Saskatoon), Guelph, and Fraser Valley (Abbotsford, B.C.). Hamilton’s first game is slated for May 12.

 ?? HO THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Chantal Vallée and the Hamilton Honey Badgers turned heads across the world last week.
HO THE CANADIAN PRESS Chantal Vallée and the Hamilton Honey Badgers turned heads across the world last week.

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