Malcolm Cameron (ice hockey)

Malcolm Cameron (born August 30, 1969) is a Canadian professional ice hockey coach currently with the Wichita Thunder of the ECHL.[1] He has been the head coach for several other ECHL teams, including the Long Beach Ice Dogs, Texas Wildcatters, Florida Everblades and Elmira Jackals. Cameron was also the head coach of the Regina Pats in the Western Hockey League, having been promoted from his position as one of the team's assistant coaches in 2013 until being released in 2014.

In the ECHL, he is tied for eighth in wins (317), 10th in games coached in league history (555), 12th in playoff wins (34), and ninth in playoff games coached (68) as of the 2015–16 ECHL season.

Career

Born in Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia, Cameron played ice hockey with Dalhousie University and Acadia University. He followed this with five seasons of professional hockey for several minor league teams. Cameron then joined the coaching ranks as an assistant with the Lubbock Cotton Kings of the Western Professional Hockey League.

Malcolm led two ECHL teams to significant turnarounds, which rank seventh and eighth-best for improving a team from one year to the next in ECHL history. In the 2004–05 season, he took over as head coach for the Long Beach Ice Dogs and guided them to a 43-20-9 record and a 44-point improvement. Cameron later took over as the bench boss of the Texas Wildcatters for the 2006–07 season and led them to a 41-22-9 record and 46-point improvement. In the 2007–08 season, he set an ECHL record for fewest regulation losses in a season, going 52-9-11 and recorded 115 points, which is tied for second-most in league history.

After the Elmira Jackals fired Cameron following the 2010–11 season, Cameron joined the Western Hockey League's Regina Pats as an assistant coach for the 2011–12 and 2012–13 seasons. He was promoted to head coach the following season, winning the WHL’s East Division regular season title with a record of 39-26-4-3. He was released after one season in 2014.

In 2016, Cameron returned to the ECHL with the Wichita Thunder as head coach.

References


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