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USA
Field Hockey News
USA Field
Hockey’s Nick Conway to take on new role as Men’s High Performance Coach
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Nick Conway |
Colorado Springs, Colo. –
USA Field
Hockey’s Nick Conway will take on a new role for the sport’s National
Governing Body as Men’s High Performance Coach
In his new position,
Conway will serve as coach at both the junior and senior levels in the men’s
program while helping prepare the U.S. teams for international competition
including the 2007 Pan American Games.
“I am delighted to be given
this opportunity with the USA Men’s High Performance Program,” said Conway
on his new appointment. “This is an exciting change to work with a group of
very talented athletes. We will have a very clear and determined vision of
where we want to go, what we want to achieve and how we are going to achieve
it.”
The move comes as part of a
restructuring of the U.S. men’s program under USA Field Hockey Technical
Director of High Performance Terry Walsh. In addition to Conway’s move to
men’s high performance, former U.S. national coach Shiv Jagday will continue
his work with younger athletes as a development coach in the field
hockey-rich San Francisco Bay area.
“The USA Men’s program has
had significant difficulties in achieving success on the international
scene,” said Walsh. “We have to reset a structure which will enable us to
have a much better contribution from different parts of the country. We must
have players from regions all around the USA contributing. There is no
reason why we can’t be much more successful within the Pan American region
at the very least. However we must have a performance program towards which
our top performers can aspire. Nick Conway is the integral link in this
whole program.”
A member of the USA Field
Hockey staff since 2003, Conway previously served as the women’s national
team assistant coach and served as acting women’s head coach from May 2004
to March 2005. He served as head coach of the U.S. men’s junior team at the
Junior Pan American Championships in February and continued to work with the
women’s centralized training program in Virginia Beach in addition to
growing responsibilities with the U.S. men’s program.
Among Conway’s first
responsibilities will be overseeing training weekends and the preparation of
a team for a tournament in Chile in December and a Under-16 series in Canada
in September. Conway will also be instrumental in preparing the U.S. team in
its bid to qualify for the Pan American Games in 2007. The USA men will need
to qualify for the Pan Am tournament by winning a best-of-three series
against a South or Central American/Caribbean team in 2006 or early 2007.
“We have been given a chance
to qualify for the Pan American Games in 2007 and must be prepared to take
the opportunity,” said Conway. “Equally as important is the restructure that
Terry wants to bring as we move forward. We are planning to bring together
representatives from seven regions around the USA and put together a model
to allow us to grow as a sport in the USA. For us to develop and have a
chance of bringing together a successful program, we must develop our
numbers.”
“Nick has impressed me with
his coaching knowledge and willingness to learn,” said Walsh who has seen
and coached considerable talent in the men’s game as an Olympic
medal-winning coach of Australia (2000) and The Netherlands (2004). “He has
displayed amazing resilience and ability to retain consistency, confidence
and direction within the overall structure of elite performance coaching in
the USA.”
usfieldhockey.com
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