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Tony Hand
Position Center
Shot Right
Height
Weight
5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
181 lb (82 kg)
Team
F. Teams
retired
SNL
Murrayfield Racers
Northern
Murrayfield Racers
BHL
Murrayfield Racers
Sheffield Steelers
WHL
Victoria Cougars
BISL
Sheffield Steelers
Ayr Scottish Eagles
BNL
Dundee Stars
Edinburgh Capitals
EIHL
Belfast Giants
Edinburgh Capitals
Manchester Phoenix
EPIHL
Manchester Phoenix
Teams Great Britain
World Championships 1989 D, 1990 D, 1991 C, 1992 C, 1993 B, 1994, 2000 B, 2001 I, 2002 I, 2007 I
Coaching 2001-2003 Dundee Stars
2003-2004, 2005-2006 Edinburgh Capitals
2004-2005 Belfast Giants
2006-2017 Manchester Phoenix
2008-2009, 2012-2013 British National Team
2017-2018 British National U18 Team
2018-present Murrayfield Racers
2020-present British National Junior Team
Nationality Scottish
Born August 15, 1967,
Edinburgh
NHL Draft 252nd overall, 1986
Edmonton Oilers
Pro Career 1981 – 2015

Tony Hand (born on August 15, 1967 in Edinburgh) is a retired Scottish ice hockey center who became the first British-born and raised player to be drafted by an NHL team when he was picked by the Edmonton Oilers in 1986. He is currentlythe director and head coach for Murrayfield Racers and the team manager for British National Junior Team. He holds several national records, and has scored over 4000 points in his career.

Hand grew up in the Muirhouse area of Edinburgh, the second son to David and Lorraine Hand and attended St Augustine's Catholic School. He started his ice hockey career with the Edinburgh based Murrayfield Racers, playing for their junior team the Raiders and working part-time at the rink. His older brother Paul was also an ice hockey player.

Professional career[]

Early playing career[]

He made his senior debut on September 20, 1981 at the age of fourteen against the Fife Flyers when the Murrayfield Racers had a player shortage. He gained his first point against the Billingham Bombers on October 17, 1981 with an assist to a Chris Kelland goal. He finished the 1981/82 season having played 19 games with figures of 4 goals, 7 assist and followed it up the following year with 20 goals and 22 assists from 24 games.

He established himself as a regular first choice player for Murrayfield side that finished 5th in the 1983/84 season, scoring 52 goals and 43 assists in 30 league games after scoring 12 goals and 8 assists in 7 Autumn Cup games. He reached his first Championship Playoff Final with Murrayfield but despite Hand scoring 10 goals and 5 assists in 6 games, they lost 5–4 to Dundee Rockets. He went on to represent Great Britain at the World Junior Championships scoring 6 goals and 3 assists.

In the 1984/85, Hand clocked up his career 100th league goal against Durham Wasps, scoring 72 in the season and broke Roy Halpin's league assists record with 92. He also scored 27 goals and 24 assists in 14 Autumn Cup and Championship Playoff games. With Murrayfield, he reached his second successive final after the Racer finished 3rd in the league but again they lost, this time to Fife Flyers. Representing Great Britain at the Pool C European Championships in Feltre in Italy, he played 3 games and scored 4 points. He also scored 2 goals while guesting for Dundee in the European Cup.

In the 1985/86 season, Hand continued to clock up the points scoring 79 goals and 85 assists from 32 games to help Murrayfield finish 2nd in the League behind Durham, including his 200th goal against Peterborough Pirates on February 8, 1986. In 15 cup and playoff games, he also scored 35 goals and 36 assists as Murrayfield won both competitions. They beat Durham 8–5 in the Autumn Cup and Dundee 4–2 at Wembley. Personally, he was awarded the Young Player of the Year award winning a couple of weeks attendance at the Calgary Flames training camp to train with NHL players.

NHL draft pick[]

Instead of attending the Flames training camp, Hand went to the Edmonton Oilers' training camp after they had selected him in the 12th round (252nd and last overall) of 1986 NHL entry draft. There he survived the full fourteen days of camp without being cut, despite breaking his one and only stick on the first day and having to borrow one from Marty McSorley. Playing alongside players such as Wayne Gretzky and Mark Messier, he impressed coach Glen Sather and was offered a contract to play Junior Hockey for a year. Suffering from homesickness, Hand turned it down but agreed to return the following year. Hand was the first of only two British born and trained player ever to have been drafted by an NHL team (the second being Colin Shields).

Before returning home to Scotland, Hand played briefly for the Junior Western Hockey League's Victoria Cougars, with whom he had trained with before the Edmonton camp, scoring eight points in only three games, but returned to Scotland a few months later due to exhaustion from the demands of training, playing and press interest.

Despite the interest of other British clubs Hand returned to play for the Racers, where he won his first Heineken League Premier title, the Regal Scottish Cup and Scottish League. He broke the 200 league point barrier for the first time, scoring an amazing 105 goals and 111 assists in 35 games, scoring his 300th career goal against Nottingham Panthers in February 1987. He also won a bronze medal with the Great Britain Under-21's in Pool C of the World Championships in Denmark. However, they lost the play-off to Durham Wasps.

The following season, Hand went back to Canada to train with the Cougars before heading to Edmonton where he played for the Oilers against Team Canada and assisted a Kevin Lowe goal. Again he was offered a contract with the farm team in Nova Scotia but again turned it down, afraid of being stuck in Junior hockey earning less than his contract in Edinburgh.

In his autobiography, Hand concedes that this was perhaps a mistake and that perhaps he should have re-negotiated the offer. In the foreword, Sather expressed his disappointment that "he didn't accept my deal because he could have advanced in North America. His progress would have been celebrated." Indeed, Sather also says "At the training camp I could see that he had a great ability to read the ice and he was the smartest player there other than Wayne Gretzky. he skated well: his intelligence on the ice stood out. he was a real prospect."

Return to Britain[]

Hand returned in October 1987 for Murrayfield's first ill-fated trip onto the continent to play in the IIHF's European Cup where, after beating Bulgarian side Slavia Sofia in a preliminary round, the semi-pro team from Scotland were thrashed by full-time sides from Holland, Sweden and Germany.

On the domestic front they again won the Heineken League as well as the Scottish League and Cup double. However, in the Norwich Union Cup & Championship play-offs, Durham Wasp again proved to be their nemesis. After beating Murrayfield 11–5 in the final of the Autumn Cup competition, Durham also knocked them out of the Wembley Semi-final 11–8 despite Hand scoring a Championship record 7 points in the match. Hand ended the 1987–88 season with 125 goals and 135 assists in 52 league and cup games having scored his 400th league goal against Whitley Warriors on March 13.

During the close season, Hand trained with Geneve-Servette and was offered a contract as their fourth import, but in the top Swiss league which allowed only three imports to play in game, he turned it down. Instead he returned to Murrayfield where, in an indifferent year, he scored 114 goals and 162 assists in 49 games, including his 1,000th point and 500th goal.

Having won the Scottish league and cup double with Murrayfield, Hand was selected for the GB senior team for the first time, making his debut in the World Championships Pool D competition in Belgium. In 4 games, he scored 6 goals and 12 assists to help Britain to a third-place finish and receiving his first World Championship medal.

At the end of the 1989–90 season, after winning the Norwich Union Cup and the Scottish double, Murrayfield reached the Wembley play-off for the fifth time in seven years but lost to Cardiff Devils on penalty shots with Hand missing the deciding shot. He played 45 games, scoring 73 goals and 117 assists. In March 1990, he won a Gold medal and the MVP award during Great Britain's Pool D promotion campaign in Cardiff scoring 5 goals and 8 assists in 4 one-sided games against Australia and Spain.

The following season was a disappointing one for Hand as Murrayfield won only one trophy, the Capital Foods Scottish Cup and Great Britain could only finish fifth in the Pool C competition in Denmark. On a personal front, Hand scored his 600th league goal against Durham Wasps and a record 11 assists against Trafford Metros in the quarter-final stage of the Norwich Union Cup. Overall, he scored 85 goals and 147 assists for Murrayfield in 52 games plus 9 goals and 12 assists in 8 games for the GB side.

1991–92 started badly for Hand with an eight-game ban for a drug offence when a cold remedy gave a positive result for traces of ephedrine. However, the domestic season got better for him personally as he was awarded a place on the All-Star team and was voted Players' Player of the Year. He was also the League's top scorer with 60 goals and 80 assists in 36 games and captained the Scotland side that beat England 7–6 in the 49th Home International, scoring three of the goals. For the Murrayfield team though, the season was full of controversy and disappointment which ended without qualifying for the play-offs.

In March 1992, the Pool C competition was held in Hull and in a group containing Australia, Belgium, Hungary, North Korea and South Korea, the GB team won the gold medal and promotion to Pool B. Hand finished top scorer with 6 goals and 12 assists in the 5 games to win the Best Forward award.

End of an era[]

Despite good offers from many teams over the years, Hand had remained with the Murrayfield Racers until they folded in 1994. Even then he joined the newly-formed Edinburgh Racers, scoring over 200 points in a season for the third time in his career. However, after a single season with the Edinburgh Racers who also went bankrupt, Hand finally moved to the Sheffield Steelers, in the Superleague. Four years later, another return to Scotland came with a move to the Ayr Scottish Eagles. It was also around this time that Hand was offered a place on the roster of HPK of Finland's SM-Liiga

Coaching career[]

In 2001, Hand started a coaching career as player-coach of the newly formed Dundee Stars of the British National League, before returning to Edinburgh to be the player-coach with the Edinburgh Capitals, where he has coached twice (2003–2004 and 2005–2006). Between these two spells at Edinburgh Hand was player-coach of the Belfast Giants. In 2004 Hand received an MBE for services to ice hockey.

On 19 April 2006, Hand was announced as the head coach of the Manchester Phoenix for the 2006–07 season. Hand has released his autobiography, Tony Hand: A Life in British Ice Hockey, telling all the stories from his career. It is written with Ice Hockey Journalists UK member, Mike Appleton. Aged 41, in November 2008 he scored his 4000th career point against Hull Stingrays. Hand played with Manchester until the end of the 2014-15 season when he retired. He stayed with Machester until 2017. In seasons 2015-16 and 2016-17, Hand was their head coach.

Since 2018, Hand is the director and head coach for Murrayfield Racers.

He was/is also the coach of British National Teams. He was the assistant coach of the British National Team in 2008 - 2009, including 2008 World Championship Division I, the head coach of the British National Team in 2012 - 2013, including 2012 and 2013 World Championships Division IA, the head coach of the British National U18 Team at the 2018 World U18 Championship Division IIA and the team manager of the British National Junior Team at the 2020 World Junior Championship Division IIA.

Honours and awards[]

Career statistics[]

Club[]

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1983–84 Murrayfield Racers BHL 30 52 43 95 28 6 10 5 15 6
1984–85 Murrayfield Racers BHL 36 72 92 164 36 6 13 11 24 4
1985–86 Murrayfield Racers BHL 32 79 85 164 49 6 13 13 26 4
1986–87 Murrayfield Racers BHL 35 105 111 216 86 6 9 19 28 4
1987–88 Murrayfield Racers BHL 36 81 111 192 54 5 17 6 23 16
1988–89 Murrayfield Racers BHL 35 86 126 212 57 4 8 10 18 12
1989–90 Murrayfield Racers BHL 32 53 91 144 26 6 9 10 19 10
1990–91 Murrayfield Racers BHL 34 60 96 156 46 7 8 17 25 8
1991–92 Murrayfield Racers BHL 36 60 80 140 46 5 8 12 20 2
1992–93 Murrayfield Racers BHL 35 66 119 185 100 7 14 19 33 8
1993–94 Murrayfield Racers BHL 44 73 149 222 44 6 9 15 24 10
1994–95 Edinburgh Racers BHL 42 71 136 207 28 8 13 21 34 20
1995–96 Sheffield Steelers BHL 35 46 77 123 65 8 6 10 16 4
1996–97 Sheffield Steelers ISL 41 13 32 45 26 8 3 6 9 4
1997–98 Sheffield Steelers ISL 28 9 30 39 16 9 2 9 11 4
1998–99 Sheffield Steelers ISL 36 11 27 38 6 5 1 4 5 0
1999–00 Ayr Scottish Eagles ISL 40 8 35 43 52 7 0 4 4 0
2000–01 Ayr Scottish Eagles ISL 46 19 36 55 42 7 2 5 7 0
2001–02 Dundee Stars BNL 44 25 79 104 18 10 7 17 24 4
2002–03 Dundee Stars BNL 35 22 56 78 99
2003–04 Edinburgh Capitals BNL 36 21 63 84 38 11 2 14 16 2
2004–05 Belfast Giants EIHL 30 10 27 37 48 8 0 6 6 34
2005–06 Edinburgh Capitals EIHL 45 15 38 53 4 4 2 2 4 0
2006–07 Manchester Phoenix EIHL 51 17 55 72 60 2 0 0 0 20
2007–08 Manchester Phoenix EIHL 61 24 63 87 60 2 0 0 0 0

International[]

   
Year Team Event GP G A Pts PIM
1986 Great Britain World Junior Championships Pool C 5 10 1 11 6
1991 Great Britain World Championships Pool C 8 9 12 21 12
1992 Great Britain World Championships Pool C 5 6 12 18 4
1993 Great Britain World Championships Pool B 7 6 8 14 2
1994 Great Britain World Championships Pool A 6 0 0 0 0
1999 Great Britain World Championships Pool A Qualifiers 4 1 0 1 6
2000 Great Britain World Championships Pool B 7 2 8 10 2
2001 Great Britain World Championships Division I 5 3 13 16 0
2002 Great Britain World Championships Division I 5 2 4 6 2
2007 Great Britain World Championships Division I 5 0 3 3 0


External links[]

Preceded by
Paul Heavey
Manchester Phoenix Head Coach
2006-2009
Succeeded by
Current Incumbent


This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Tony Hand. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


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