Coventry Blaze coach Danny Stewart sees no reason why his assistant Dayle Keen couldnât become a coach in his own right in the future.
The pair are reunited and working together again for the Elite Series as Blaze look to make as big an impression as possible on the competition.
And the 42-year-old paid tribute to the Scot, saying he makes him better as a coach with the role he performs.
ââKeenoâ has been great for this organisation and does a lot of good things on and off the ice,â Stewart said on this weekâs BIH Show. âHe makes me better at my job by dealing with areas that maybe arenât my strengths.
âHe loves the challenge and basically came from coaching kids to this role and itâs great for him to learn at this level as a British coach.
âI think he could quite possibly go on and become a coach in his own right. Heâs getting better every day at what he does. Heâs learning more and more, plus heâs involved with the GB Under 20âs and will pick up more there.
âI know him and I see no reason why he wouldnât make the step up in the future.â
Stewart will have been in charge at the Blaze for five years on 26th April and has taken the club who were skirting in and out of play-off places to a team competing in the top half of the table in that time.
While the premature end of the 2019/20 season leaves a feeling of âwhat might have beenâ for a team who were third at the time, on form and ready to seriously challenge for the title, it showed just how much he has come on as a coach.
And he revealed the biggest things heâs learned and had to focus in a coaching career that started at Newcastle Vipers in far from ideal circumstances in 2010, followed by five years as an assistant to Todd Dutiaume at Fife Flyers before replacing Chuck Weber in 2016.
âItâs been a long decade of coaching,â he added. âI had a couple of turbulent years at the start with the last year in Newcastle and that first year in Fife.
âI think Iâve come a long way in that time and the biggest thing Iâve had to overcome, certainly in my early time with Coventry is the emotion of it.
âBeing a player-coach with Newcastle and with Fife, I had the ability to go on to the ice and finish a check or influence the game in some way.
âOn the bench, Iâm not saying Iâm quiet, but battling those emotions and keeping them in check too and everythingâs about the players as a coach. Nothing should be about you.
âRecruiting is another big thing Iâve learned as well in Coventry over the last couple of years, plus managing players on a day-to-day basis in era. These arenât the kind of guys you can yell at and I think a lot of other coaches will agree with that.
âEach guy is different in their own way and itâs about getting to know them individually and managing them to the best of your ability.
âIâd like to think Iâve matured in the last few years as well.
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