Coyotes name John Slaney assistant coach
GLENDALE, Ariz. -- The Coyotes on Wednesday announced the addition of John Slaney as an assistant coach on head coach Dave Tippett's staff.
The team and Slaney agreed to a multi-year contract. No other terms were disclosed, per club policy.
"We are pleased to add John to our coaching staff," GM Don Maloney said. "John has done a good job developing our young prospects in the American Hockey League and he will continue to do similar work here in Arizona."
Slaney enters his fifth season with the Coyotes organization in 2015-16. He spent the previous four seasons as an assistant coach with the Portland Pirates (AHL). The 43-year-old native of St. John's, Newfoundland, joined the organization in 2011-12 after he finished his playing career with Plzen HC (Czech) following the 2010-11 season.
Leaving his mark as one of the best defensemen in AHL history, Slaney joined the Pirates coaching staff with a wealth of accolades. He was a two-time recipient of the Eddie Shore Award (given annually to the AHL's top defenseman) with the Philadelphia Phantoms in the 2000-01 and 2001-02 seasons, and also won a Calder Cup championship with the Phantoms in 2005.
Slaney became the AHL's all-time leading scorer as a defenseman in 2005-06 until his mark (519 career points) was surpassed by Oklahoma City's Bryan Helmer. He also posted 14-13-27 in 29 games with Portland during its 1993-94 Calder Cup championship season.
Slaney totaled 22-69-91 in 268 NHL games with the Washington Capitals (1993-95), Colorado Avalanche (1995-96), Los Angeles Kings (1995-97), Phoenix Coyotes (1997-98), Nashville Predators (1998-99), Pittsburgh Penguins (1999-00) and Philadelphia Flyers (2001-02; 2003-04). He skated in 14 games for the Capitals (1993-94), Penguins (1999-00), and Flyers (2001-02) during the Stanley Cup Playoffs where he netted two goals and registered an assist.
Slaney was drafted by Washington in the first round (ninth overall) in 1990.