Gregg Pilling

Gregg Pilling (born September 25, 1943) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey player and coach. He was named coach of the year in the International Hockey League in 1977–78, winning the Fred A. Huber Trophy as regular season champions. He also won coach of the year awards in Southern Hockey League, and North American Hockey League, while guiding his teams to league championships. Pilling made headlines as a coach for his colourful in-game protests and ejections. Prior to coaching, he had a brief playing career, including a 1963 Memorial Cup championship with the Edmonton Oil Kings, and was voted the most valuable player in his final full season as a player.

Gregg Pilling
Gregg Pilling and the Lockhart Cup in 1976
Born (1943-09-25) September 25, 1943
Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Weight 180 lb (82 kg; 12 st 12 lb)
Position Right wing / Head coach
Shot Right
Playing career 19621976

Playing career

Pilling was born in Lethbridge, Alberta.[1][2] He began his playing career with the Lethbridge Native Sons, and then played in the Big 6 Hockey League, before joining the Edmonton Oil Kings.[3][4] He was a member of the 1963 Memorial Cup champion Edmonton team coached by Russ Brayshaw, that included future NHL coaches Glen Sather, Pat Quinn, and Bert Marshall.[5][6] Pilling admits that he had a reputation as a vicious junior player.[7] He was also described as hard, tough, fiery, and creating fireworks on ice.[8][9]

Pilling began playing professional hockey when he signed with Detroit Red Wings organization, and was assigned to the Memphis Wings.[3] He later played with the Buffalo Bisons, and the Omaha Knights, before returning to Alberta after four seasons. He then played two seasons in the Alberta Senior Hockey League, one each with Medicine Hat Blades, followed by the Drumheller Miners.[3] He earned the nickname Zorro in senior hockey due to his reputation for stickwork.[10]

Pilling moved up to the Eastern Hockey League in 1970–71, playing with the Charlotte Checkers. He scored 25 goals, 63 points, and earned 142 penalty minutes, for the regular season Walker Cup champions.[11] Charlotte were also playoff champions, winning the Atlantic City Boardwalk Trophy. He briefly spent time coaching in Switzerland, then returned to played with the St. Petersburg Suns for the 1971–72 season.[3][12] Pilling was named the team's first captain, and received the most valuable player award from the Charlotte Observer, as voted by members of opposing teams.[12][13][14][15][16]

Coaching career

Pilling began his full-time coaching career at age 28, when offered a one-year contract with the Roanoke Valley Rebels for the 1972–73 season.[16] He played eight games during the season, and led the Rebels to 40 wins, and a first-place finish in the south division.[1] Roanoke reached the playoff finals, but lost to the Syracuse Blazers.[17] Roanoke switched to the Southern Hockey League for the 1973–74 season, and Pilling stayed with the team. The team's roster that season included eleven French Canadians,[18] and a young Mike Keenan.[6] The Rebels finished first place in the regular season with 53 wins. In the playoffs, Pilling's team trailed 3 games to 1 versus the Winston-Salem Polar Twins, but rallied to win the series in seven games, then defeated the Charlotte Checkers in seven games to win the Crockett Cup.[19] Pilling was named the SHL Coach of the Year.[18][20][21] He resigned on July 29, 1974.[22]

Coach Gregg Pilling in the middle of the front row, with the 1976–77 Philadelphia Firebirds, and the 1976 Lockhart Cup

Pilling was named the coach and general manager of Philadelphia's expansion team in the North American Hockey League.[23] The Philadelphia Firebirds were announced in August 1974, resulting from a name-the-team contest.[24] During the 1974–75 NAHL season, Pilling was fined $1000, and suspended five games due to forfeiting a game by pulling his team off the ice when a referee refused to allow a warm-up for the substitute goaltender, when the starter was injured.[25] Pilling led the Firebirds to forty wins, and second place during the regular season.[26] His team faced the seventh place Long Island Cougars in the first round of the playoffs, but were upset in four games.[27] Pilling was named NAHL coach of the year, his second such award in two seasons.[3] He was considered for Edmonton Oilers coaching vacancy in 1975.[28] In the 1975–76 NAHL season, Piling led the Firebirds to 45 wins, and a second-place finished in the west division.[26] He even played one game that year, accumulating 17 penalty minutes.[1] In the playoffs, Pilling led Philadelphia past the Mohawk Valley Comets three games to one, then defeated the defending champion Johnstown Jets four games to one to reach the finals.[29] Pilling won his second playoffs championship as a coach, as Philadelphia captured the Lockhart Cup in six games over the Beauce Jaros.[29][30] He was named the league's general manager of the year.[28] In the 1976–77 NAHL season, Pilling led the Firebirds to 38 wins, and fourth overall in the league.[26] He made headlines by wearing an army helmet on the bench in protest of player helmets being mandatory.[7] He later served a five-game suspension in January for waving a towel at a referee.[31] Philadelphia faced the fifth place Erie Blades in the first round of the playoffs, and lost the series in five games.[32]

After the season, Pilling was interviewed for the Maine Mariners coaching position in the American Hockey League, but later signed with the Fort Wayne Komets in the International Hockey League.[33] He led the Komets to 40 wins, and 97 points, and a first overall finish in the 1977–78 IHL season, winning the Fred A. Huber Trophy.[34] In the playoffs, the Komets won the first round against the Muskegon Mohawks in six games, but faltered in round two in five games, losing to the Toledo Goaldiggers. Pilling was named the IHL's first-team all-star coach, equivalent to coach of the year, prior to the introduction of the Commissioner's Trophy.[3][34][35] It was Pilling's third coach of the year award in the last five seasons. He resigned on June 2, 1978,[36] and was the preferred choice to become head coach of the Indianapolis Racers, but a contract was not finalized due to NHL–WHA merger talks.[37]

Pilling was named the new coach and general manager of the Regina Pats, receiving a one-year contract in June.[38] He accepted the job in Regina over other offers, since he preferred to have both positions, not just one.[7] Later in July, he was given a raise by Regina when Indianapolis expressed further interest in Pilling.[39] The season did not go as planned for Pilling, as the Pats struggled near the bottom of the standings, and his frustrations manifested into numerous ejections.[8] During a game on October 22, Pilling was assessed three minor penalties while protesting decisions of the referee, and later received a gross misconduct when he began the third period by putting himself into the penalty box to serve the bench minor that he was assessed, instead of a player.[40][41][42] He was later fined $1,000 for "complete disrepect and irresponsible actions", and the club had to put up a $1,000 bond against further actions.[42] When the 1978–79 WHL season was completed, Regina won 18 games, earned 43 points, and finished second last in the league, out of the playoffs. Pilling was not retained for the next season after the team changed ownership.[43][44]

Pilling served as an interim coach for the Toledo Goaldiggers, after coach Ted Garvin had a heart attack in the offseason.[45] The team was sold partway through the season, and Pilling was retained until the end of the playoffs.[46] In the 1979–80 IHL season, Toledo earned 28 wins, 74 points, and second place in the south division. In the playoffs, they lost in four games to Fort Wayne. Pilling was named coach of Sherwood Park Crusaders in the Alberta Junior Hockey League, when Dennis Smith resigned.[47][48] His team won 36 out of 60 games, finished first place in the south division, and lost in the second round of the playoffs.[49]

Personal life

Pilling has been involved with running hockey schools in Medicine Hat and Lethbridge.[10][50] He has done fundraising for Kin Canada Christmas programs.[51] As a member of the 1962–63 Oil Kings, he was honoured by Hockey Alberta with an induction into the Alberta Hockey Hall of Fame.[5] As a member of the 1962–63 Oil Kings, he was inducted into the Alberta Sports Hall of Fame in 2011.[52][53][54] Pilling is an organizer of the Oil Kings alumni association.[6]

Playing statistics

Season-by-season career playing statistics.[1][2]

    Regular Season   Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1962–63Edmonton Oil KingsCAHL
1963–64Edmonton Oil KingsCAHL
1964–65Memphis WingsCPHL2344831
1965–66Memphis WingsCPHL684121680
1966–67Buffalo BisonsAHL40281022
1967–68Omaha KnightsCPHL1031427
1967–68Buffalo BisonsAHL44235410000
1968–69Medicine Hat BladesASHL
1969–70Drumheller MinersASHL
1970–71Charlotte CheckersEHL7225386314213461023
1971–72St. Petersburg SunsEHL60242852124600010
1972–73Roanoke Valley RebelsEHL812318
1975–76Philadelphia FirebirdsNAHL100017
CPHL Totals101111728138
AHL Totals84411152610000
EHL Totals140506811828419461033

Coaching record

Season-by-season career coaching record.[1][19][49]

SeasonTeamLeagueGPWLTPtsPct %StandingPlayoffs
1972–73Roanoke Valley RebelsEHL76402511910.5991st, southLost in finals
1973–74Roanoke Valley RebelsSHL72531901060.7361st, SHLWon championship
1974–75Philadelphia FirebirdsNAHL7440313830.5612nd, NAHLLost in round 1
1975–76Philadelphia FirebirdsNAHL7445290900.6082nd, westWon championship
1976–77Philadelphia FirebirdsNAHL7438333790.5344th, NAHLLost in round 1
1977–78Fort Wayne KometsIHL80402317970.6061st, southLost in round 2
1978–79Regina PatsWHL7218477430.2994th, eastOut of playoffs
1979–80Toledo GoaldiggersIHL80283418740.4632nd, southLost in round 1
1980–81Sherwood Park CrusadersAJHL6036231730.6081st, southLost in round 2
TOTALS662338264607360.5564 titles2 championships
gollark: Are we able to do this without a unanimous vote? I don't believe the bylaws were amended since this last came up.
gollark: We'd have to use the tiebreak algorithm.
gollark: If we had an even number of people there might be ties.
gollark: Fear it, although it isn't technically from that.
gollark: This application is LITERALLY a particle of weight W placed on a rough plane inclined at an angle of θ to the horizontal. The coefficient of friction between the particle and the plane is μ. A horizontal force X acting on the particle is just sufficient to prevent the particle from sliding down the plane; when a horizontal force kX acts on the particle, the particle is about to slide up the plane. Both horizontal forces act in the vertical plane containing the line of greatest slope.

References

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  2. "Gregg Pilling". Eliteprospects.com. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
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  4. Sullivan, Pat (June 8, 1978). "Interesting year". Lethbridge Herald. Lethbridge, Alberta. p. 29.
  5. "Hall Of Famers". Edmonton Oil Kings. February 12, 2009. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  6. Greig, Murray (April 17, 2013). "Team alumnus Gregg Pillling says Memorial Cup champion 1963 Edmonton Oil Kings still a tight bunch". Edmonton Sun. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  7. "A promoter is patrolling behind the Regina bench". Brandon Sun. Brandon, Manitoba. September 19, 1978. p. 6.
  8. "Wheaties add to Pilling's frustrations". Brandon Sun. Brandon, Manitoba. January 8, 1979. p. 6.
  9. Sullivan, Pat (January 4, 1969). "Sully Says". Lethbridge Herald. Lethbridge, Alberta. p. 10.
  10. Johnson, Phil (February 12, 1971). "A letter from Zorro Pilling". Medicine Hat News. Medicine Hat, Alberta. p. 5.
  11. Mancuso, Jim (2005). Hockey in Charlotte. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. pp. 1970–71. ISBN 0-7385-4230-X.
  12. "The Gregg Pilling Story". Suncoast Suns. Roanoke Valley Rebels program. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  13. Little, Todd (July 30, 2013). "A look back at the Suncoast Suns". Florida Hockey History. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  14. "Suns Photo Gallery". Suncoast Suns. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  15. Telaar, Tom (2014). "EHL All Star Teams and Awards". TheEHL.com. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
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  17. "Eastern Hockey League (1954–73)". Hockey League History. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
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  45. "Sanko is named". Defiance Crescent News. Defiance, Ohio. June 3, 1980. p. 29.
  46. "Arena purchases Diggers". Defiance Crescent News. Defiance, Ohio. February 28, 1980. p. 34.
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