Garry Kearns
Biographical details
Born1935
Peterborough, Ontario, Canada
Alma materRensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Playing career
1955–1958Rensselaer
Position(s)Forward
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1964–1969Rensselaer
Head coaching record
Overall44–63–4 (.414)

Garry Kearns is a Canadian retired ice hockey head coach and player who was in charge of the program at Rensselaer for five seasons.[1]

Career

Kearns joined the Rensselaer program a year after it won its first national title in 1954. After sitting out his freshman year (a standard practice at the time), Kearns joined the varsity squad for the 1955–56 season and led the engineers in goals (26), assists (32) and points (58), finishing in a tie for second in NCAA scoring.[2] despite his superlative campaign the Engineers finished third out of four teams in the Tri-State League and were left out of the NCAA tournament. The following year Kearns scoring prowess declined but the Engineers managed to win their conference title. Unfortunately they were once again passed over as second-place Clarkson had a superior record (18-2 compared to RPI's 14-6-1). For his senior season Kearns was named as team captain and responded with a resurgent 56 points in 21 games. Despite this the Engineers were left out of the tournament yet again after finishing second to the powerhouse Golden Knights in their conference.

After graduating Kearns pursued a short professional career with Milwaukee of the United States Central Hockey League then turned to coaching high school hockey.[3] In 1964 Kearns returned to Troy, New York to become the head coach for his alma mater. Kearns became the fourth head coach in the span of three years and was entering as the program was in its nadir.[4] After three years with virtually no recruits and no athletic scholarships available the ice hockey program was in jeopardy of becoming an afterthought. The team struggled to a 10-10-2 record in his first season but once the last recruited senior class graduated the Engineers slipped to dead-last in the ECAC the next year, finishing 3-19 and being outscored 42 to 161. Kearns' team again finished last in 1966–67 season but almost tripled their win total (8) when his first batch of recruits began hitting the ice. By his fourth year with the program Kearns had gotten the Engineers back to .500 with an 11–11 record and followed that up with a 12-8-1 mark. In 1969 Rensselaer made their first appearance in the ECAC tournament since 1964 and provided the first of only two losses to the dominant Cornell team headed by Kearns' former coach Ned Harkness.

With program no longer in dire straits, Kearns left to start a career as an architect. He was inducted into the Peterborough & District Sports Hall of Fame in 2010 and the RPI hockey ring of honor the following year.

College Head Coaching record

Source:[5]

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Rensselaer Engineers (ECAC Hockey) (1964–1969)
1964–65 Rensselaer 10–10–25–8–210th
1965–66 Rensselaer 3–19–00–13–015th
1966–67 Rensselaer 8–15–11–14–0t–15th
1967–68 Rensselaer 11–11–08–9–011th
1968–69 Rensselaer 12–8–18–5–17thECAC Quarterfnals
Rensselaer: 44–63–422–49–3
Total:44–63–4

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Awards and honors

Award Year
AHCA First Team All-American 1955–56 [6]

References

  1. "Garry Kearns". Elite Prospects. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  2. "1955-56 NCAA Division I Statistics". Elite Prospects. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  3. "Garry Kearns". Peterborough & District Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  4. "Fans share fond memories of RPI great Garry Kearns". Troy Record. 2011-02-12. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  5. "Rensselaer Men's Hockey Year-by-Year". USCHO.com. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  6. "1955-1956 All-American Team". The American Hockey Coaches Association. Retrieved 2017-06-21.
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