Northern
names new volleyball head coach
George Ferguson
Havre Daily News sports editorMontana State
University-Northern athletic director Dave Gantt has a
new head volleyball coach. And as successful as the
Skylight program has been over the last decade, the new
Skylights head coach brings an extremely impressive
resume to MSU-N.
On Wednesday afternoon,
Gantt announced the hiring of University of Calgary
men's volleyball coach Greg Ryan, who will take over the
program after Lisa Handley resigned in late March.
Handley was at the helm of the Skylight program for the
last seven seasons, and she guided them to back-to-back
third-place finishes at the Frontier Conference
tournament in 2004 and 2005.
Ryan has been the head
coach at Calgary since 1986 and he brings a tremendous
amount of success with him from the men's game. During
his tenure he coached the Dinos to Canadian Intervarsity
Sports national championships in 1989 and 1993, the CIS
silver medal in 1992 and the CIS bronze medal in 1988
and 2001.
“We are fabulously happy to
have Greg as our new head coach,” Gantt said. “He has an
amazing track record in the sport of volleyball and he
has been in the business for a very long period of time.
“That experience and the
system of networking he brings with him was very
important to our program,” he added. “And it gives our
program instant credibility with him as our coach.”
Said Ryan: “This is a very
exciting time for me and a great opportunity as a head
coach in this sport. Initially, what attracted me to the
position was the fact that Northern is an NAIA school
and I think that the NAIA has great volleyball
tradition. I also knew a few of the kids that are coming
down here to play and that was a big factor as well.
Plus, the fact that Havre is still close to Calgary
played a lot into why I felt so strongly about this
job.”
Ryan, a native Calgarian
played high school volleyball in Calgary before joining
the Dinos. He was a starting member of the 1977 Canada
West Conference Championship team that was CIS silver
medalists.
Ryan began his coaching
career as an assistant coach with the University of
Calgary women's team and he served as interim head coach
in 1984. He became the Dinos' men's head coach in 1985.
Besides his medals at the
CIS national tournament, he had five other teams that
reached the semifinals. In addition, Ryan's teams have
won five Canada West Conference championships and he has
been named the conference coach of the year on five
different occasions. During his tenure in Calgary, Ryan
compiled a conference record of 202 wins versus 134
losses.
All of that success on the
court didn't make Ryan's decision to leave Calgary easy.
But he said that several factors weighed into it in the
end.
“First off, I think Lisa
Handley did a great job with this program and I felt
like we have a very good team coming back. There are a
lot of good players here and we are already very strong
in the middle. So as a coach, it is nice to come into a
situation where the program is already in very good
shape. It isn't like starting over from scratch.” Ryan
said. “What also weighed into the decision was the fact
that things were becoming increasingly difficult in
Calgary. There was a time when we had a lot a lot of
success. We were beating some of the best teams in the
United States like UCLA and Stanford as much as they
beat us. But entrance standards are so high at Calgary
now that it was becoming very difficult to find male
players who were qualified to play for us and qualified
to meet our entrance requirements. That was becoming
pretty frustrating over the last few years.”
And recruiting is just one
of the things that Gantt knows that Ryan's presence will
have an immediate impact on at MSU-N. Ryan has traveled
through most of the Canadian provinces playing, coaching
and recruiting and those connections will certainly
serve him well in Havre. He has also coached the
Canadian national team in international competition.
“Obviously, Greg's
recruiting network is very vast and extensive,” Gantt
said. “That is one of the things that made him such a
great fit for us. But it is also how he recruits that
makes him such a great fit for our what we want our
program to be. We know he can recruit quality players,
but he will also recruit the type of student-athlete we
want in our program. He is a family-oriented guy and
that is the way he approaches coaching, so we know he
will not only bring in quality athletes to MSU-N, but
quality young people as well.”
Said Ryan: “I think that my
recruiting connections will certainly help us get to
where we want to be, and that is to win an NAIA national
championship. But I want to build a solid base here in
Havre too. I am hoping to get a club system going here
to further develop our local players, and that will take
some time, but it is definitely something we are going
to get up and running. We want Havre and local kids to
be a part of our program and our success.”
Of course, making a
transition from one coaching job to another is never
easy. But Ryan is about to embark on a change from men's
volleyball to women's volleyball where there several
differences. But he sees it as a challenge that is
nothing but positive.
“There might be some
changes in strategy on the court and things like that,”
Ryan said. “But I am excited about the change. I coached
my daughter's club team the last few years in Calgary so
and I really enjoyed it. So I am looking forward to the
change.”
And the transition to the
Skylight program and the NAIA ranks shouldn't be much
different either. Ryan said that he has an immense
respect for the type of volleyball that is played at the
NAIA level and in the Frontier Conference. And Gantt is
just happy to have him leading the Skylights into the
2006 season.
“Again, we are extremely
happy to have found Greg and to have him as our head
coach,” Gantt said. “Because of what we wanted for this
program we went out and recruited for a new head coach
pretty aggressively. The search really came down to two
guys who separated themselves from the rest of the
candidates. One was Greg and the other was Jerry Wagner,
who was just named the new head coach at the University
of Montana. And we definitely feel like we have not only
the right man for the job, but a quality person who's
impact on our volleyball program and our athletic
department won't be truly known for a long time.”
The Skylights return a host
of talented players from last year's third-place team,
including middles Jeanna McPherson and Tera O'Haire.
With a solid nucleus already in place and a plethora of
talented recruits already signed, Ryan feels that the
the sky is the limit for his program in 2006 and beyond.
“We are going to sign a few
more kids right away,” Ryan said. ‘We need a setter to
go along with all of the strength we have in the middle
and on the outside too. But there isn't any heavy
lifting to be done. We have work to do, but the pieces
are in place. There is a lot of talent here so I am just
really excited about getting the season started. And I
am looking forward to this great opportunity.”