PyeongChang2018 – More women behind the benches in Olympic women’s hockey tournament

There was a time in Melody Davidson’s coaching career when female referees and linesmen would skate to the bench after a game and shake the hands of her male assistants.

“They didn’t even recognize a female would be a head coach and they were females,” she said.

For the first time in an Olympic women’s hockey tournament, there are three female head coaches: Laura Schuler (Canada), Sarah Murray (Korea) and Daniela Diaz (Switzerland).

In each of the five previous Winter Olympics, there was one: Shannon Miller (Canada) 1998; Danielle Sauvageau (Canada), 2002; Davidson (Canada) 2006, 2010; Katey Stone (U.S.) 2014.

The NHL is full of hockey executives who hire former teammates or people who have helped their careers in the past — Maple Leafs president Brendan Shanahan hiring Lou Lamoriello as GM just one example.

There are currently few women in hockey who have the power to give other women paying jobs.

“We’ve always talked about having our own old girls’ club,” said Davidson, now Hockey Canada’s general manager of women’s hockey.

“For men to advance, it’s all about who they played hockey with and who they grew up with. That’s how they advance in a lot of cases right? Women need to have that same connection.

“The more we have coaches coaching in the Olympics and world championships that are female, the bigger that group forms.”

Schuler, the first former Olympic player to be Canada’s head coach, started her coaching career at her alma mater Northeastern before working as an assistant to Miller at the University of Minnesota-Duluth from 2008 to 2016.

Ylva Martinsen – Sweden 

ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN : The globe and Mail