| Title: | The Landry Family Head Coach for Harvard Women's Ice Hockey |
| Organization: | W Ice Hockey |
| Phone: | (617) 495-2281 |
| Email: | whockey@fas.harvard.edu |
| College: | New Hampshire 1989 |
| Experience: | 19th Season |
Katey Stone, the Landry Family Head Coach for Harvard
Women’s Ice Hockey, is the winningest coach in the history of
Division I women’s hockey, as she has amassed 402 victories
over the course of her storied career before the 2012-13
campaign. One of the most successful coaches in the history
of the women’s collegiate game, Stone has spent all 19 of her
seasons as a head coach with the Crimson.
2013-14 will mark the first season since 1993-94 that Stone has not
been on the bench with Harvard, as she will serve as the head coach
of the United States Olympic Women's Ice Hockey team at the 2014
Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.
Stone was named the head coach of the 2014 United
States Olympic Women's Ice Hockey Team on June 8, 2012.
Most recently, she led the USA to gold at the Four Nations Cup in
Finland in November 2012 and has also guided the Red, White and
Blue to silver at the 2012 IIHF Women's World Championship
in Burlington, Vt., and gold at the 2011 IIHF Women's World
Championship in Zurich, Switzerland.
She has led the Crimson to an incredible 402-171-35 (.690) record
in her tenure coming in to 2012-13, including the 1999 AWCHA
national championship, three straight appearances in the NCAA
championship game (2003, 2004, 2005), nine NCAA tournament
appearances in the event’s 13-year history, six ECAC
regular-season titles, five ECAC tournament championships, six Ivy
League titles and 10 Beanpots. Stone is just the fourth coach in
women’s college hockey history to win 300 games and became
the first to reach the 400-win plateau during the 2012-13
campaign.
Stone, who appeared 33rd on New England Hockey
Journal’s “Top 50 Most Influential People in New
England Hockey”, took the coaching reins from John Dooley
prior to the 1994-95 season and posted a 12-11-2 mark in her first
year at the helm. The squad finished just under .500 over the next
three seasons, but Stone orchestrated an extraordinary turnaround
within the program, improving from 14-16-0 in 1997-98 to a
program-record 33-1-0 and claiming a national championship in
1998-99. That year, the team closed the season with 30 consecutive
victories, culminating in a thrilling 6-5 overtime win over New
Hampshire in the AWCHA National Championship.
In addition to the team success, some of the best individual
talent in the sport of women’s hockey has laced its skates in
Cambridge. In 19 years behind the bench, Stone has continued to
develop talent and attract attention on the national and
international stages. She has coached nine Olympians –
including five who competed in the 2010 Vancouver Games – and
six of the 16 winners of the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award,
presented annually to the nation’s best collegiate
women’s hockey player.
Crimson skaters have earned All-America honors a total of 21 times
since 1999, including Jennifer Botterill ’02-03 and Angela
Ruggiero ’02-04, the first players to be four-time first-team
All-Americans. In addition, Harvard has had nine ECAC Players of
the Year, nine Ivy League Players of the Year, four ECAC Rookies of
the Year and six Ivy League Rookies of the Year.
After leading the Crimson to the 1999 national championship, Stone
received ECAC/KOHO and New England Hockey Writers’ Coach of
the Year honors. In addition, she was named the American Hockey
Coaches Association Women’s Coach of the Year and the New
England College Athletic Conference Women’s Division I Coach
of the Year. Stone repeated as the New England Hockey
Writers’ Coach of the Year for the 2000-01 season.
She went on to lead Harvard to three-straight NCAA title game appearances (2003-05), three-straight ECAC regular season titles (2003-05) and ECAC tournament titles (2004-06) and the only back-to-back 30-win seasons in program history in 2003-04 and 2004-05. Harvard also spent 14 consecutive weeks atop the national polls during the 2002-03 season.
Stone helped the Crimson become the second team in ECAC
women’s hockey history to finish the conference season with a
perfect record, leading the 2007-08 squad to a 22-0-0 mark in
league play. She was named ECAC Hockey Coach of the Year at the end
of the season, the third time she earned the award (1999, 2005,
2008). Two years later, Stone broke the NCAA Division I wins
record, as she earned the 338th victory in her legendary coaching
career with a 5-1 win over Princeton in Game 1 of the ECAC Hockey
quarterfinals.
Stone has been an integral voice in the sport of women’s
hockey. She served as a member of the NCAA Championship committee,
the NCAA rules committee, the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award
selection committee and president of the American Women’s
Hockey Coaches Association.
In the summer of 2010, Stone was named the head coach of the U.S.
Women's National Team and led Team USA to a gold medal at the 2011
IIHF World Women’s Championship and silver at the 2010 Four
Nations Cup. Stone is also active within the U.S. National
Development Camps and started her affiliation with the U.S.
National Team in 1996. Stone led the U.S. to the gold medal at the
first-ever IIHF World Women's U18 Championship in January 2008 and
also coached the U.S. Women's Under-18 Team at the 2007 Under-18
Series and the U.S. Women's Under-22 Select Team at the 2006
Under-22 Series.
Stone graduated from New Hampshire in 1989 with a degree in
physical education. She was a captain and four-year letterwinner in
both hockey and lacrosse for the Wildcats. Stone helped the hockey
team win ECAC championships in 1986 and 1987 and the lacrosse team
capture an NCAA title in 1985. She earned All-ECAC honors in hockey
and was a two-time All-America selection in lacrosse.
Before coming to Harvard, Stone served as assistant athletic
director and coach at Tabor Academy and also had coaching stints at
Northfield Mount Hermon and Phillips Exeter Academy.
Her family is deeply rooted in athletics as her father and
siblings have all been involved with coaching and education.
A native of Watertown, Conn., Stone now resides in Arlington,
Mass.
Team Honors
Under Katey Stone
• Beanpot Titles (10): 1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002,
2003, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2010
• Ivy League Championships (6): 1999, 2003, 2005,
2008, 2009, 2013
• ECAC Regular Season Titles (6): 1999, 2003, 2004,
2005, 2008, 2009
• ECAC Tournament Championships (5): 1999, 2004,
2005, 2006, 2008
• AWCHA National Championships (1): 1999
• All-American Tournament Titles (1): 1997
• NCAA Tournament Appearances (9): 2001, 2003, 2004,
2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2013
• NCAA Frozen Four Appearances (5): 2001, 2003,
2004, 2005, 2008
• NCAA Championship Appearances (3): 2003, 2004,
2005

