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John Stevens is living a dream. He wanted to
play 1 000 games in the AHL and when his playing days were over,
he wanted to coach. He fell slightly short of the 1 000 mark but
he is coach of the Philadelphia Flyers and in 2007 became only
the 4th person to be inducted into the Philadelphia
Phantoms Hall of Fame.
John, born in New Brunswick, moved to the
Turkey Point area with his family when he was ‘three or four’. A
product of the Delhi and Simcoe Minor Hockey systems, John
played Junior C in Simcoe before moving on to Newmarket Tier II
A and the Oshawa Generals of the OHL.
A career defenseman, John was a third-round
pick of the Philadelphia Flyers in the 1984 NHL entry draft.
After completing his junior career in Oshawa in 1986, he played
for the Flyers organization for the next four seasons, spending
most of his time with their AHL affiliate in Hershey while
appearing in six NHL games in the 1986-87 and 1987-88 seasons.
In 1988, John was a key member of Hershey’s Calder Cup winning
team.
In 1990, John joined the Hartford Whalers
organization and spent six years in Springfield but played 44
games for the Whalers. In 1991, John won his second Calder Cup
as a member of the Springfield Indians.
During the summer of 1996 major changes
were occurring in the Flyers organization. They moved into their
new arena and the organization was preparing to launch its own
AHL franchise, the Phantoms, in the old Spectrum. They needed a
captain and as Head Coach Bill Barber said, “We needed someone
that was going to be strong and help lead us in the right
direction and John Stevens was our man”.
John accepted the challenge and returned to
Philadelphia and as ‘Rambo’, his nickname, once said, “I don’t
accumulate a lot of points but I come to play every night. I try
to be a good team player and stick up for my teammates. I
believe in hard work and dedication and I try to set a good
example for the younger guys”. This paid dividends for John and
the Phantoms. In his first season back in Philly, he led the
team to the regular season league title and the Mid-Atlantic
championship while representing the Phantoms as captain of Team
Canada at the AHL All-Star game. The next season ended with the
Phantoms claiming their first Calder Cup championship.
As a captain, John seemed to know when and
what messages needed to be sent to his teammates. This kind of
leadership wins championships, gains respect from peers and for
John, probably was a contributing factor in the organization’s
decision to offer him a coaching job.
In January of 1999, an unfortunate eye injury
put an end to his playing career. After his recovery, John
immediately stepped behind the bench as an assistant coach where
he worked with Head Coach Bill Barber for a year and a half
before being named the Head Coach in June of 2000. Over the next
six seasons, John coached the Phantoms to a .551 winning
percentage and a second Calder Cup in 2004-05.
Following the Phantom’s 10th
anniversary season in 2005-06, John was promoted to Assistant
Coach of the NHL Flyers and after only 8 games into the 2006-07
season, he was promoted to Head Coach.
By Don Stewart
February 2008
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