The accidental coach: How a near-fatal injury changed Eric Wellwood’s path

FLINT, Mich. - Flint Firebirds head coach Eric Wellwood gathered his players near the end of practice on a crisp November day to announce a sudden change of plans.

Practice was supposed to conclude with running stairs in the arena. But Wellwood canceled the exercise, citing his team's hard work over the previous 90 minutes. Perhaps he was also rewarding the group for capturing its first win the day before, a 7-4 triumph over the rival Sarnia Sting following an 0-16-1 start to the season.

Wellwood, 28, inherited the worst team in the Ontario Hockey League three weeks prior. As evidenced by his patchy facial hair and the fact some players know him as "Welly," he is the league's youngest head coach.

He wasn't looking for this job. A few years back, he became a coach practically by accident. And just six months ago, the former NHLer was out of hockey completely.

Yet the sport that once nearly killed him proved once again to be his life's passion. So at the close of practice, Wellwood reclined at his desk and did his best to explain how he wound up there.

"What I've realized is that you can't plan for life," he said, laughing. "And you might as well just go with it."

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Claus Andersen / Getty Images Sport / Getty

From the time he first laced his skates as a toddler, at his backyard rink in Oldcastle, Ontario - nine miles south of Windsor - Eric Wellwood had a gift for speed.

"People would come over, literally, around the entire neighborhood, and come and just watch me skate," he said. "Like, they would want me to do circles as fast as I could because they couldn't believe how fast I was."

One of those people watching closely was Eric's older brother, Kyle, who went on to play 489 games in the NHL. He knew Eric's natural swiftness could take him a long way in hockey.

"He always had a skating stride right from a little kid that was above everybody else," said Kyle.

Eric's skating prowess led his local team, the Windsor Spitfires, to select him in the 2006 OHL Draft. Under the new ownership of former pros Bob Boughner and Warren Rychel, the Spitfires found themselves in a similar situation to today's Firebirds: losing a lot with a young team. Wellwood was part of the group who changed that.

In Wellwood's first year, Windsor finished second-last. But in 2009 and 2010, led by Taylor Hall, Ryan Ellis, and Adam Henrique, the Spitfires won back-to-back Memorial Cups. An astounding 16 players from those championship teams have since played in the NHL.

Among them was Wellwood, a long-shot sixth-rounder who debuted with the Flyers in 2010. For context, only 13 players picked after the fifth round have reached the NHL in the past five years.

"He willed his way into the NHL with his tenacious penalty killing and his speed," Rychel said.

Wellwood caught a break as a second-year pro, when the Flyers called him up for the final quarter of the regular season (and playoffs) to replace an injured player.

Andy Marlin / National Hockey League / Getty

A lockout forced Wellwood to start the 2012-13 season with the Adirondack Phantoms, the club's AHL affiliate. He went back to Philadelphia when the NHL season began in January, struggled to produce, and was sent down after four games.

Wellwood was frustrated, but he was only 22. Sticking in the NHL takes time and the Flyers had already demonstrated a willingness to provide opportunities. This was still part of the plan.

That particular plan never came to fruition.

On April 7, 2013, a Sunday afternoon, he played his final professional game. His Phantoms lost on the road to the Bridgeport Sound Tigers - and Wellwood nearly lost his life.

Wellwood has never seen footage of the play, but it's something he'll never forget. "I could tell you everything," he said.

Bridgeport's Nino Niederreiter dragged the puck toward the blue line, put it through Wellwood's legs, and juked to the sideboards. Wellwood reacted quickly, but lost an edge and tumbled into the wall.

He was in pain. He knew something was wrong. But he didn't know how bad it was as he staggered to the bench on his own.

When he got there, his teammate Jon Sim looked down and said, "Welly, you're bleeding everywhere."

When Wellwood fell into the boards, his left skate blade cut deeply into his lower right leg, severing three tendons in his foot and 70 percent of his Achilles tendon. He'd also sliced multiple nerve endings and his posterior tibial artery. Now, blood was gushing out the top of his skate.

"Panic set in," Wellwood said.

He was minutes from fatal blood loss. The puck was still in play when he left the bench and hobbled across the ice, where the trainer's room and ambulance waited on the other side. Phantoms trainer Greg Lowden sped out to help. Wellwood, leaving a trail of blood, could barely keep his balance.

The ride to the hospital was a blur. Wellwood felt weak from the blood loss, but his adrenaline was surging. He tried to keep his mind from wandering to a worst-case scenario.

"You had that sense that you were dying, I guess, which is an odd thing to say," he recalled. "But I just knew something was very, very wrong. And you can tell that your body is getting prepared, too."

Before undergoing two hours of surgery to tie off the artery, Wellwood spoke with his mother on the phone. She had been listening to the game online.

Days later, Wellwood underwent another surgery in Philadelphia, this one conducted by Dr. Steven Raikin, who'd previously worked on Scott Hartnell and James van Riemsdyk.

When the MRIs came back, Raikin made it clear that it wasn't just Wellwood's potential return to the ice that was at stake - there was a chance he might never walk normally again.

"Once he said that, you come to a realization that you're fighting for your normal life," Wellwood said.

The fight began with six agonizing weeks of bed rest. Most of that time, he had to keep his foot elevated, and he required assistance for simple tasks such as preparing dinner. Meanwhile, the body Wellwood had worked so hard to condition to professional quality was of no use. He was helpless - and clueless about what came next.

"You just feel horrible because you're not moving, you're not really eating, and you're on all these drugs," he said. "That was the most difficult part of the entire process."

After his cast was cut, Wellwood took his first unassisted steps on an underwater treadmill surrounded by cameras and monitors. He spent the summer of 2013 rehabbing in Philly. In August, he was back on the ice.

But he was far from ready to resume playing, so he headed home to continue rehab and skated regularly with the Spitfires. Neither the Flyers nor the Phantoms could offer him proper attention with their seasons starting.

Getty Images

What the Flyers did offer, however, was a rather generous extension. Wellwood's entry-level deal had expired, but the team granted him an AHL contract despite knowing he might never play again.

"They could've just said, 'Well, sorry about your luck,'" Wellwood said. "But they're a class-act organization … They essentially paid me to rehab."

As he did so, Wellwood participated in film studies and practices with the Spitfires. He also went to every game - home and away - as the team's "eye in the sky," watching from the press box and passing along observations between periods.

"It organically happened where I became a coach to them," he said. "But I was still a player."

By February 2014, Wellwood returned to Adirondack. Mentally, he was ready to attempt his comeback. Physically, he wasn't.

The reintroduction to pro-level size, speed, and skill was too much to handle. Wellwood missed half the practices in order to recover. Off the ice, he still used crutches. To compensate for the pain in his lower leg, he strained other areas of his body, creating a vicious cycle of injuries that required more treatment and caused more frustration.

After weeks of this, Wellwood visited Dr. Raikin again. The tests showed that Wellwood's current physical state was as good as it would get. And that wasn't good enough.

"I didn't want to, but sometimes you gotta look reality in the face," Wellwood said. "The next day, I called (Flyers president) Paul Holmgren and said, 'I need to meet you.' I went up and saw him and that's when I said I was gonna retire."

What now?, Wellwood thought. Hockey had been everything to him; he had no postsecondary education. The Flyers offered him a position as an off-ice assistant with the Phantoms, but he wanted more time to decide his next move. He considered firefighting in Windsor, where his mother is a captain.

Minas Panagiotakis / Getty Images Sport / Getty

And then, thanks to a casual run-in, Wellwood's plans changed again. He entered a restaurant when Windsor native D.J. Smith, then the coach of the OHL's Oshawa Generals, was walking out.

"I can remember vividly: I'm walking toward D.J., and he just yells, 'There's my new assistant coach!'" said Wellwood, who'd played for the Spitfires when Smith was an assistant coach. "And that's how it happened. That was the interview."

The job was official at the end of May. Oshawa won the Memorial Cup the following spring.

When Smith left to become an assistant with the Toronto Maple Leafs (a job he still holds), the new Generals head coach retained Wellwood. After that second season in Oshawa, another opportunity found him.

Flint Firebirds owner Rolf Nilsen fired, un-fired, and then re-fired the team's coaching staff. In response, players refused to practice. The OHL suspended Nilsen and took control of the coaching search.

Joe Birch, the league's senior director of hockey development and special events, was tasked with searching for the Firebirds' new head coach and an associate coach. Birch also happens to be D.J. Smith's first cousin. Through that relationship and Oshawa's recent success, Birch was familiar enough with Wellwood to consider him for the associate job. In the end, he didn't even interview anyone else.

Under head coach Ryan Oulahen and Wellwood, Flint reached the playoffs one year after finishing third-last. Things were looking up for the beleaguered franchise, and Birch envisioned both coaches sticking around to make sure it stayed that way.

Flint Firebirds

Instead, Kyle Wellwood approached Eric with a business opportunity.

After retiring from hockey in 2014, Kyle went back to school to study business and eventually heard about HeadCheck Health, a concussion software company based in Vancouver. The two brothers decided to join the company as angel investors, and Kyle later moved into a position on the company's board.

Eric became involved with HeadCheck in the latter half of the 2016-17 season, when he was still coaching the Firebirds. In the offseason, after months of thought and many conversations with family and friends, he decided to put his full effort into the company, and eventually took on a role in business development.

The decision to step away from hockey "was not made lightly," Eric said, but it afforded him newfound freedom and flexibility in his schedule - including the opportunity to buy an RV and take a 62-day road trip across Canada with his girlfriend, Jacey Steen. They traveled over 5,000 kilometers from Windsor to Vancouver Island, hitting several provincial and national parks along the way.

Once Eric returned home, it wasn't long before his phone rang with another job offer. In April 2018, the University of Windsor men's hockey team needed to fill two assistant coaching vacancies.

Wellwood had been looking for a new venture, and though he reconsidered firefighting, he ultimately couldn't resist coaching.

"I definitely think that (he) was missing it and he wanted to get back into it," Steen said. "And then obviously he got right back into it a couple months later."

Flint Firebirds

"Right back into it" means Wellwood's return to Flint in October. Oulahen stepped down after the Firebirds started 0-7, and Wellwood did not seek out the opportunity to replace him. But when Birch - again - offered him the job, Wellwood - again - couldn't pass it up.

In five years, Wellwood pinballed from New York and Philadelphia to Oshawa, then Flint, then Windsor, and finally back to Flint. He stepped out of hockey and walked back in. It hasn't always been pretty, and practically none of it has been planned, but now Wellwood is a head coach in the world's premier junior hockey league in his late 20s.

"You start looking around (for) things I'm interested in … and then you realize, you know what? Maybe hockey is what I want to do," he said. "You have a name. You built a long time to build this name. So why not continue it?"

__________

Wellwood's first act as the new head coach of the Firebirds was to take down the standings board in the locker room.

He inherited a team that started the season with 11 straight regulation losses and was allowing nearly six goals per game.

Wellwood knew several of the players because he'd been with the Firebirds two years ago, but joining a group in-season still requires a lot of catching up. He treated his first week-and-a-half like training camp, doing his best to assess the roster's strengths and weaknesses and implement his own systems.

Birch has made it clear that the team's primary goals are player development and experience. In other words, Wellwood has no pressure to quickly turn Flint into a juggernaut. That won't happen this year anyway, as the Firebirds are well behind the rest of the league (they have 10 points through 35 games; every other team has at least 21).

What matters is the feeling that Wellwood is here for the long haul to develop the Firebirds while he continues his own development as a coach.

"I think the Flint team needs some stability in their staff," Steen said. "And I think Eric knows that and he wants to be that for them."

Wellwood's eschewed stability since entering the coaching ranks a few years ago. But now, as he aims to someday coach at the NHL level, he appears to have settled in a place that can help him get there.

Then again, plans change.

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Thornton in sole possession of 10th spot on all-time assists list

San Jose Sharks center Joe Thornton notched his 1,041st career helper Sunday to stand alone at 10th on the NHL's all-time assist leaderboard.

The 39-year-old helped Tim Heed score in the opening frame against the Arizona Coyotes, breaking a tie with Hall of Famer Marcel Dionne.

Rank Player Assists
1 Wayne Gretzky 1963
2 Ron Francis 1249
3 Mark Messier 1193
4 Ray Bourque 1169
5 Jaromir Jagr 1155
6 Paul Coffey 1135
7 Adam Oates 1079
8 Steve Yzerman 1063
9 Gordie Howe 1049
10 Joe Thornton 1041

Thornton began the 2017-18 season sitting in 13th place behind six-time Art Ross Trophy winner Mario Lemieux. On Nov. 23rd versus the Vancouver Canucks, he passed Lemieux for 11th place.

The four-time All-Star and 21-year NHL veteran is eight points shy of tying Detroit Red Wings legend Gordie Howe. He currently has five goals and 11 assists so far this season.

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NHL podcast: Players to watch, teams Canada should fear at the world juniors

Welcome to Puck Pursuit, a weekly NHL podcast hosted by John Matisz, theScore's National Hockey Writer.

Subscribe to the show on iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher, and Google Play.

This week, John's joined by ESPN prospect writer Chris Peters and former OHL scout Jonathan Kyriacou to preview the 2019 World Junior Hockey Championship.

Topics of discussion include:

  • Is Canada the clear-cut favorite to win gold?
  • What to expect from the incredible Hughes brothers
  • Why you shouldn't count out the Czechs
  • Scouting reports on Canada's top players
  • How scouts view the world juniors tournament

... and more!

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Sharks’ Karlsson suspended 2 games for hit to head

San Jose Sharks defenseman Erik Karlsson has been handed a two-game suspension for an illegal hit to the head of Los Angeles Kings forward Austin Wagner on Saturday night, the NHL's Department of Player Safety announced.

Here's the collision that landed Karlsson his first career suspension:

The hit knocked Wagner out of the game - which the Kings won 3-2 in overtime - but went uncalled by officials.

The suspension was handed out quickly as the Sharks take on the Arizona Coyotes on Sunday before the NHL's Christmas break.

Karlsson recorded two assists in Saturday's contest to reach 26 points in 37 games with San Jose.

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Franzen admits he’s living with PTSD: ‘My whole world falls apart’

Former Detroit Red Wings forward Johan Franzen was forced to retire from the NHL three years ago due to concussions and has since been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, as he battles with depression, severe anxiety, and panic attacks.

"Sometimes my whole world falls apart and I can't see the light in the end of the tunnel," Franzen told Gunnar Nordstrom of SportExpressen. "All I can do then is to sleep and lay in my bed. I take antidepressants and try to feel better again. But it quickly gets dark. Very dark."

The 39-year-old's last NHL contest was Oct. 10, 2015, which was the second game of an attempted comeback from a concussion he sustained in January of the same year.

Franzen has continued to feel the effects of that head trauma in the years since.

"Most of the time I think I am moving in the right direction, but when I have the down periods there is nothing positive. I almost give up then, and it is even worse because you think you have been better for a while," he said.

"It's embarrassing. I can speak to one person and the next day I've forgotten his or her name."

His wife, Cissi, wrote a blog in May about her husband's struggles, describing living with him as "not easy" and "like a rollercoaster."

Franzen believes moving back to his native Sweden from Detroit could help ease some of his pain

"I used to go to the mountains. As soon as I see a mountain I feel better."

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Maple Leafs recall Trevor Moore on emergency basis

The Toronto Maple Leafs have recalled forward Trevor Moore from the AHL's Toronto Marlies on an emergency basis, the team announced.

Moore will fill a hole in the Leafs' lineup left by Tyler Ennis, who suffered a broken ankle during Saturday night's win over the New York Rangers.

The 23-year-old is expected to make his NHL debut when the Leafs take on the Detroit Red Wings Sunday night, according to The Athletic's Jonas Siegel.

Moore signed with Toronto in 2016 as an undrafted free agent out of the University of Denver. He's recorded 17 goals and seven helpers in 27 games with the Marlies this season, and was a part of their Calder Cup-winning team last year.

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Sabres announcer Rick Jeanneret ‘doing well’ after being hospitalized

After a scary incident Saturday night, Buffalo Sabres broadcaster Rick Jeanneret is doing well and resting at Buffalo General Medical Center, the team announced in a statement.

"Sabres broadcaster Rick Jeanneret, who was hospitalized at Buffalo General Medical Center last night, is resting and doing well," the statement read. "On behalf of Rick and his family, we'd like to thank everyone for their thoughts and prayers. Rick looks forward to being back in the booth after the break."

Jeanneret was taken away from KeyBank Center in a stretcher during the third period of Saturday night's game against the Anaheim Ducks. He was feeling light-headed and stopped talking during the broadcast.

The 76-year-old also texted The Athletic's John Vogl Sunday morning to update his status.

Jeanneret has been with the Sabres since 1971 and was honored by the Hockey Hall of Fame with the Foster Hewitt Award for outstanding broadcasting in 2012.

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