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Drafted by the Washington Capitals in 1974, John Paddock spent most of his
playing career as a hard-nosed forward in the American Hockey League. He
scored 26 goals and racked up 206 penalty minutes during his rookie season
with the Richmond Robins and skated for a season with the Springfield Indians,
but his greatest on-ice successes came with the Maine Mariners. Paddock
played parts of seven seasons in Portland, winning Calder Cup championships
in 1978 and 1979 and hitting the 30-goal plateau on two separate occasions.
Playing for coaches Larry Wilson, Bob McCammon, Pat Quinn and Tom McVie in the AHL, Paddock also
honed his own skills as a hockey educator and prepared himself for a future behind the bench. He was
just 27 years old when he made his first foray into coaching in 1981-82, and he played the first six weeks
of the 1983-84 season with Maine before trading in his skates for a whistle full-time, taking over the
Mariners when Tom McVie was promoted to New Jersey. The Mariners finished third in the division that
season but stormed through the playoffs and captured the franchise’s third Calder Cup.
McVie returned to Maine in 1984-85 and retained Paddock as his co-coach, and the duo led the
Mariners to a division title. Paddock was then hired by Frank Mathers to guide the storied Hershey
Bears, and one of the winningest stretches in franchise history ensued. Paddock led the Bears to two
division crowns, the first 50-win season in club history and a place in AHL annals with a perfect
postseason in 1988 as Hershey went 12-0 en route to the Calder Cup. Paddock also won the Louis A.R.
Pieri Award as the AHL’s outstanding coach in 1987-88.
After four seasons coaching Philadelphia’s top prospects in Hershey, Paddock was promoted to assistant
general manager of the Flyers, a position he held for a year before returning to the AHL as head coach of
the Binghamton Rangers in 1990-91. Another successful AHL campaign earned the Oak River, Man.,
native the position of head coach and later GM of the Winnipeg Jets, and he remained with the
organization through their move to Phoenix in 1996.
After two seasons scouting for the New York Rangers, Paddock returned to coaching in 1999-2000 and
promptly led the Hartford Wolf Pack to the best record in the AHL during the regular season and the
Calder Cup title, becoming the first coach ever to win the AHL championship with three different teams.
He returned to Binghamton in 2002 and spent three seasons with the Senators’ new affiliate there
before being promoted to Ottawa in 2005. Paddock was back in the AHL as head coach of the
Philadelphia Phantoms in 2008-09, and today is back in a familiar role as assistant GM of the Flyers, a
post he was named to on July 9, 2009.
With his career record of 585-424-98, Paddock places third on the AHL’s all-time list of coaching wins
and games coached (1,107), and only Bun Cook has more Calder Cups won as a coach than Paddock’s
three. He has never missed the postseason in 14 tries as an AHL head coach, and his 82 playoff wins and
149 playoff games coached both stand as league records.
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