| Chris Spice |
|
|
Chris Spice, a veteran of the international hockey scene, joins the UVa hockey staff for the 2006 season as the program's Associate Head Coach. He comes to Charlottesville after a five-year stint as the Director of High Performance for the England Rugby Union.
While the Performance Director for England Rugby, Spice was
responsible for the development, implementation, and management of the
high performance program. He designed and implemented an elite player
squad program, and developed a strategic plan for the elite game. Under
his watch, England won the 2003 World Cup for the first time and the Six
Nations Championship while finishing as runners-up in the 2002 Six
Nations Championship and the 2003 and 2004 World Series Sevens.
Prior to working with the English Rugby Union, Spice served as
the Performance Director of Great Britain and English hockey from
1997-2001. He was responsible for the performance of the Great British
Olympic and English national sides for both men and women, which
included the appointment and management of all coaches as well as the
implementation of performance targets and Olympic team reviews. During
his tenure, the English women's 11 took home the silver in the 1998
Commonwealth Games while the men's side won the bronze at the same
competition.
Spice came to Great Britain after serving as an assistant
national coach for Women's Hockey Australia from 1993-1997. The national
junior (U21) head coach while also performing as an AIS senior coach,
Spice assisted with technical and tactical player development and
statistical analysis. The Hockeyroos were ranked No.
1 in the world during all of Spice's five years, winning a major
international tournament each year. Australia won the gold at the
1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta and the 1994 World Cup in Dublin, Ireland,
and the Hockeyroos also won the Rabobank Champions' Trophy in 1993, 1995
and 1997.
A 1992 graduate of Edith Cowan University in Perth, Australia,
Spice was awarded the Royal Institute of Parks and Recreation academic
prize as the outstanding student of 1992 and earned an elite hockey
coaching scholarship to the Australian Institute of Sport. He earned his
FIH Grade 1 Hockey Coach certificate in Brussels in 1996.