

About Gene P. Harrington (1940 - 1993)
Gene was a husband, father, coach,
counselor, teacher, sportsman, carpenter, promoter,
salesman, and all around fun loving person. Many of us are good at
some of those things, few are excellent at all, he was. Any one who
knew him could write a book trying to describe him. Perhaps you can
best picture him through his own words. The following is a speech he
wrote. This speech reflects a coaching philosophy that permeated his
life.
"After coaching kids for over twenty years I would like to share some of the
things that made my twenty years so enjoyable. Coaching gave me a rare
opportunity to become childlike in its best sense. I have had the
opportunity to savor the moment, be spontaneous, and show sheer delight in being
alive. This is a quality that most adults lose. Coaches can be
among the fortunate few to keep it.
I have met many other coaches in the last twenty years, some great, some
fair, and some poor. Sad to say the poor ones out numbered the fair
and great ones. I have found two main reasons most adults coach are;
1) because they don't trust anyone else with their sons, 2) their own ego.
Unfortunately, we are in a time when winning can be more important than
competing, there is a ever present specter of fathers seeing their sons,
coaches seeing their players, as extensions of their own egos.
Vince Lombardi's most quoted expression is, "winning isn't everything, it is
the only thing." What is forgotten is that he was working with
professionals. What is generally not known is that Vince was a
tremendous teacher, a great motivator, and organizer. He was an
inspirational leader, and always showed concern for the welfare of his
players on and off the field. If I had to compare him with a hockey
personality I would choose Bobby Clark.
I had twenty great years of coaching and hope to have twenty more. I
have seen many boys I have coached grow into men and know that I have had a
part in that. My advise for coaches now coaching kids would be as
follows:
1. Always, Always make hockey fun
2. Teach attitude first, skills
second. (A respect for rules, authority of
officials and
consideration of opponents. Demand they become
gentleman
before hockey players)
3. Teach them to be humble in victory
and proud in defeat. Teach them to
live up to
their potential, no matter what their potential is. This means
to teach them
to do their best and never be satisfied with what they are,
but to strive
to be as good as then can be if they try harder. I have said
many times
over the last twenty years, "you can never make a great
player out of
boy who is not potentially great. But you can make him a
great
competitor, and miraculously, you can make a man out of a boy."
4. Teach him to care about each one
of his teammates, and that the worth
of caring is
always worth it.
Hockey has given me great enjoyment, and I have tried to give it back to the
players I have coached Adults who demand victory, take away the most
important ingredient of all, the sheer love of the game. Demanding
victory is the main cause of hockey burn-out in kids today. Hockey is
a great tool to help a boy's future if used properly. Remember your team may
lose, but you as a coach never lose."
Gene devoted most of his life to coaching and running hockey tournaments for
kids. He did this out of love, love for the kids, and love for the game.
He will long be remembered by those he coached, parents whose children he
coached, and anyone who had the opportunity to work with him. Gene
Harrington was a most unforgettable person.
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