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Giving Tuesday: Player to Coach

By FHO Team, 07/06/22, 12:30PM EDT

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Back To Our Roots

Here at Field Hockey Ontario we believe in the importance of “See it, believe it, and achieve it” and we keep that mindset throughout our organization in order for our members to reach their goals. Three members of FHO, Amy Butler, Laurie Montgomery, and Rachel Spekking are examples of amazing female coaches that grew up playing field hockey in their own respected clubs and have now returned to the sport to coach young athletes and help them develop their own careers in sport. It is important to have women in athletic leadership positions such as coaching and refereeing positions because they are seen as role models to the younger athlete generation. Please read below to see Amy, Laurie and Rachels story of their experience as female role models and coaches within Field Hockey Ontario. 

Amy Butler



 

Please describe a brief background of yourself?

I grew up in a small town in New Brunswick (Sussex). I am the oldest of five siblings and loved all sports throughout junior high and high school, but I found my true passion in grade 7 when I tried field hockey for the first time. Although I played many different sports throughout junior high and high school, field hockey was my first love. 

I attended the University of Waterloo and played all five years of my eligibility with the Warriors. I was named the University of Waterloo Rookie of the Year (1995-96) and was named the University of Waterloo Female Athlete of the Year (1999). I was a first team All-Canadian for all five years of my eligibility. I played both indoor and outdoor hockey. 

I played for the 1997 Canadian women’s national under 21 field hockey team. We participated in the 1997 JWC held in Seoul Korea.

 

I am now the mother of three daughters who all play field hockey with the KW Dragons and also their high school field hockey teams.

 

Professionally, I am a CA, CPA and the CFO of a small reinsurance company.

 

Hometown, where and when did you start to play Field Hockey? Did you play field hockey in College/University? If so, what school? 

Hometown: Sussex, New Brunswick

Started playing field hockey in grade 7. Played provincially for Team NB from grade 8 onwards. I went to the University of Waterloo and played for 5 years under coach Sharon Crewman. We went to Nationals twice while I was a player and we won OUAs in my first year. I was a member of the 1997 Canadian women’s national U21 field hockey team.

 

What made you decide to come back to the sport to coach, and why is it important for female athletes to be role models to younger girl athletes?

I decided to come back to field hockey after many years away because I felt that field hockey and the coaches I had throughout my career had been pivotal factors in my life. As the mother of 3 daughters whose predominant athletic experience was with male coaches, I felt it would be a missed opportunity if I didn’t share my experience in a coaching capacity. Young female athletes being coached and mentored by female coaches instills the idea that girls can be leaders as well. I love the idea that a great coach can help young female athletes with developing character, confidence, and assertiveness while at the same time encouraging them to perform to the best of their ability. 

 

Favorite memory of coaching?

My favorite coaching moment has come very recently.

The U16 KW Dragons battled hard, got better every time they stepped on the field and translated that effort into a GOLD medal at the 2022 May Meltdown!

The KW Dragons turned a lot of heads and made everyone in the stands feel proud to witness the grit and determination of this group of girls.

As further proof that field hockey forges friendships that last a lifetime, my teammate from over 20 years ago at UW, has now become my coaching mate :)

 

Rachel Spekking:

 

Please describe a brief background of yourself?

My Name is Rachel Spekking, I presently work for a policing agency offering critical incident response support to first responders.  My educational background is Bachelor of Arts, major in criminology and psychology as well as a bachelor of business administration.  I am looking to complete my masters in counseling psychology.  

 

Hometown, where and when did you start to play Field Hockey? Did you play field hockey in College/University? If so, what school? 

Burlington, Ontario.  I started playing in grade 9 at Aldershot high school. I was always an ice hockey player but fell in love with field hockey the moment I picked up the stick.  One of the toughest choices I had to make was to choose my university based on the program and unfortunately it did not have a field hockey team.  Out of my four schools, that was the only one at the time that was able to offer me the double major and I had to make a choice for my career over my love of the sport.  The good thing about field hockey is no matter what, there is a team you can play on to continue with the camaraderie and be able to stay within the community. 

 

What made you decide to come back to the sport to coach, and why is it important for female athletes to be role models to younger girl athletes?

I actually started coaching at 16 years old as my junior house league team did not have a coach.  Then I graduated and headed to university and my best friend remained for a victorious year, she was able to continue playing for the regional team, so I came back to be assistant coach at 19 years old to keep being involved in the sport that I missed while at university.  My favorite thing about coaching is being able to be a role model for the younger athletes, not only in sport but in life.  My motto when it comes to coaching is that I want the athletes to leave better people than when they started, to be able to be successful in life, not just on the field.  I am trying to teach the athletes how to be confident in themselves, how to be comfortable losing and how to bounce back from a loss because they are going to come across many struggles in their lives and my goal is to teach them how to be resilient.  

 

Favorite memory of coaching?

I have built relationships with many players over the years, my favourite memories all stem from seeing them succeed in both sport and in life.  Watching them get into universities, get jobs, build friendships and become confident in themselves.  Coaching athletes is so much more than the sport specific skills you can teach them, that is only a small part of what coaching is.  An athlete is so much more than just an athlete, they are friends, students, partners and everything in between.  When they come to the field, they bring their difficulties and successes and that can impact the way they play, so to only coach sport specific skills is only impacting a small part of who these athletes are as people, each one is unique in their own way.  So my favourite memory is watching those athletes succeed, and grow and develop into such amazing people. 

 

Laurie Montgomery

 

 

Please describe a brief background of yourself?

I am a physical education teacher/coach at Laurel Heights Secondary School in Waterloo, ON where I live with my husband and two kids. I have been teaching/coaching in some capacity for over 20 years now at a variety of levels.

 

Hometown, where and when did you start to play Field Hockey? Did you play field hockey in College/University? If so, what school? 

I grew up in Waterloo and started playing field hockey in middle school and then continued on in high school. There was not a super strong club system at the time in Kitchener-Waterloo, but after leaving high school and saying goodbye to my softball career, I was fortunate enough to play at the University of Waterloo under the leadership of Sharon Creelman, a three-time Olympian, and alongside some extremely talented teammates that taught me so much about the sport. 

 

What made you decide to come back to the sport to coach, and why is it important for female athletes to be role models to younger girl athletes?

Coaching came naturally as a part of my teaching career and also when my daughter was old enough to start playing. I think it is so important for young females to see themselves represented in their sport - whether it be coaching or officiating. I know personally it paved a path for me by having strong female role models to look up to, to learn from, and to try to emulate. Not only were my coaches talented athletes themselves, but they were also good people - I still stay in contact with many of them more than 30 years later! 

 

Favorite memory of coaching?

There are so many amazing coaching memories I can reflect on - putting a stick in a 6 year old hands for the first time and watching her learn those beginner skills, growing a high school program at a brand new school and within 6 years finding ourselves as 3-time silver medallists at OFSAA (2010-2012) and then finally capturing OFSAA gold in 2013, or winning gold at May Meltdown this year in our first year with a competitive program within the KW Dragons Club system! Sport is such a powerful tool in so many ways. It is central to so many of my memories growing up, throughout my career and now as a parent. I wish everyone had the opportunity to experience it!