Ice Hockey
Oct 4 (Sat)
6:07 p.m.

- Title:
- Head Hockey Coach
Coach Williams | |
---|---|
Hometown | Stratford, Ontario |
College | Bowling Green (2001 & 2003) |
Family | Wife, Hollie, children Emerson and Elyse |
Coaching History | |
2002-03 | Bowling Green, Graduate Assistant |
2003-04 | Utica College, Assistant Coach |
2004-07 | Neumann University, Head Coach |
2007-08 | University of Alabama-Huntsville, Assistant Coach |
2008-09 | Bowling Green, Assistant Coach |
2009-10 | Bowling Green, Interim Head Coach |
2010-14 | Amarillo Bulls (NAHL), Head Coach |
2014-17 | Bloomington Thunder (USHL), Head Coach |
2017-21 | Everett Silvertips (WHL), Head Coach |
2021-24 | Everett Silvertips (WHL), Head Coach/General Manager |
Career Head Coaching Record | |
2004-07 | Neuman College, 25-22-7 |
2009-10 | Bowling Green, 5-25-6 |
    2010-14 | Amarillo Bulls (NAHL), 168-44 |
2014-17 | Bloomington Thunder (USHL), 90-69 |
     2017-24 | Everett Silvertips (WHL), 237-98 |
Total | 17 Years, (544-267-14)Â |
 The native of Stratford, Ontario has served as a coach for Hockey Canada, including as head coach for the 2023 World Junior Championship (Gold Medal), an assistant coach for the 2022 World Junior Championship (Gold Medal), an assistant at the 2019 Hlinka Gretzky Cup, and as head coach for Team Canada Black at the 2018 U17 World Hockey Challenge.Â
Williams carries 17 years of head coaching experience across junior and college levels, boasting an overall career head coaching record of 544-267-14. His junior hockey career head coaching winning percentage stands at .700 with a career record of 505-217, while with the Silvertips he is currently 283-120 (.702). During his time with Everett Williams was named Western Conference Coach of the Year twice (2018, 2020) and U.S. Division Coach of the Year (2022). He has boasted 11 NHL draftees since 2018 (second-most in the WHL) and 16 of his players have signed pro contracts at the NHL or AFL levels.Â
Named the fifth head coach in Silvertips franchise history, Williams promptly embarked on a year-long journey which broke the Silvertips record for wins by a first-year head coach (47), earned their third most points (99) in franchise history, set a new single-season franchise record for goals (246), were second in the league for goal differential (+80), and earned eight goals or more in a game on five separate occasions. They broke single game franchise records for most goals in a game (11) and largest margin of victory (11) in an 11-0 victory at Vancouver, while goaltender Carter Hart earned his second CHL Goaltender of the Year award, and six different Silvertips were drafted by NHL clubs or signed to NHL or AHL contracts. Williams followed with another 47-win and 99-point season, the Silvertips' fourth U.S. Division title in five seasons. Goaltender Dustin Wolf was named WHL Western Conference Goaltender of the Year and CHL Scholastic Player of the Year, while two more Tips players were selected in the NHL Entry Draft: defenseman Gianni Fairbrother (Montreal) and Wolf (Calgary).Â
The 2019-20 season was cut short by the COVID-19 pandemic, though Williams and the Silvertips secured another remarkable campaign, winning 46 games with 96 standings points for a second-place finish in the division. Three Silvertips were drafted to the NHL following the season: Gage Goncalves (Tampa Bay, 2nd-round), Kasper Puutio (Florida, 5th-round) and Ronan Seeley (Carolina, 7th-round). He then guided the Silvertips to their eighth U.S. Division title in the shortened 2021 season, posting a 19-4 (38 points) record and the second-highest points percentage (.826) in the league. Defenseman Olen Zellweger was selected in the NHL Entry Draft 34th overall by the Anaheim Ducks. Â
With a full slate of games and fans returning to the arena for the 2021-22 season, Williams and the Silvertips assembled one of the greatest seasons in franchise history. Everett clinched their ninth U.S. Division title with a 45-13-5-5 record, clinched the top seed in the Western Conference for just the fifth time in franchise history, eclipsed the 100-point mark for just the third time and scored the most goals as a team in franchise history (280). The team also strung together the longest win streak to start a season (six games) and the longest point streak (18 games) in the team's 19-year history. Everett netted 79 powerplay goals in 2021-22, the most of any WHL team and most in team history since 2006-07.Â
Despite an injury-riddled season, Williams helped lead the Silvertips back to the postseason in 2022-23 with a 33-32-2-1 team record, placing as the sixth overall seed in the Western Conference. Silvertips captain Jackson Berezowski broke both the career goals record (130; previous record 112) and single-season goals record (48; previously 47) during the season.Â
 In addition to his time with the Silvertips, Williams' experience includes the Bloomington of the United States Hockey League, and Amarillo of the North American Hockey League. After guiding Bloomington to a 29-24-7 record and fifth place in the Eastern Conference in their expansion season of 2014-15, he led the Thunder in 2015-16 to a 36-18-6 record, an appearance in the Eastern Conference Final, and a victory shy of reaching the league's Clark Cup Finals. He led Amarillo to three consecutive 40-win seasons from 2011-14, amassing a career record of 168-44-2-24 and a points percentage of .756 across four years in the NAHL. He delivered three straight South Division titles, back-to-back and league leading 46-win campaigns, and a Robertson Cup title to Amarillo in 2012-13.Â
 Under Williams, the Bulls shattered a 35-year-old record with 99 points in back-to-back seasons (2011-13) and he was named NAHL Coach of the Year after the Bulls' league championship. Williams' teams in Amarillo led the league in goals from 2011-13 and finished second in the NAHL with 207 goals with a +87-goal differential in 2013-14.Â
During his time in Amarillo and Bloomington, he helped 74 players advance to play in the NCAA Division-I ranks, and with the Bulls coached seven division All-Conference selections, two All-NAHL First Team members, one defenseman of the year, and one division All-Rookie honoree. With the Thunder, 12 selections were either chosen for the NHL Entry Draft or for rosters at the U17 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament, U18 World Championships, and the Junior A World Challenge. He assisted with community outreach efforts with every one of his Bulls squads containing a community service award recipient, and his team in Bloomington was selected as recipient of the 2016-17 Curt Hammer Community Service Award.Â
Williams has served Utica College (2003-04) and University of Alabama-Huntsville (2007-08) as an assistant coach and started his head coaching career at the NCAA level with four seasons serving Neumann College. Â
Williams has not only proven himself as a solid teacher of the game of hockey, but he has also proven he has the capability to change the direction of a program at the college level. Before being an assistant coach for former Falcon assistant coach Danton Cole at Alabama-Huntsville in 2007-08, Williams was the head coach at Neumann College in Aston, Pa., from 2003 to 2006. In just three short years, Williams built the Knights into a powerhouse, going from 3-21-1 the year before he arrived to 17-5-5 in his final season behind the bench. In his three seasons with the Knights, he racked up a 35-32-8 record, which included the school's two best seasons in program history.Â
A former right winger for the Falcons, Williams received his bachelor of science degree in sport management from Bowling Green State University in 2001, graduating cum laude. He later earned a master's degree in education from BGSU in 2003. During his BGSU career he appeared in 117 career games, notched 20 points (12 goals, 8 assists), and 198 penalty minutes for the Falcons, while also notching two-game winning goals. He was the Howard Brown Coaches Award recipient following the 2000-01 season, recognizing him as the person who best exemplified professional qualities both on and off the ice en route to leading the Falcons to a CCHA semifinal appearance that season. He joined BGSU's coaching staff as an assistant in 2008 and was named interim head coach for the 2009-10 season.Â
After his BGSU playing career, he spent the 2001-02 hockey season with the Odessa Jackalopes, a New York Islanders affiliate in the Central Hockey League, and the Cambridge Hornets of OHA's Major League Hockey, now Allan Cup Hockey.Â
Dennis and his wife, Hollie, have two daughters, Emerson and Elyse.Â