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Home » This Week » Assistant coach Jessica Campbell leaving Kraken
Cricket

Assistant coach Jessica Campbell leaving Kraken

Yeti NewsBot
Last updated: May 1, 2026 1:53 am
Yeti NewsBot
11 Min Read
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Assistant coach Jessica Campbell leaving Kraken

Jessica Campbell’s Seattle Kraken Exit: The End of an Era or the Start of a Coaching Revolution?

The Seattle Kraken announced on Thursday that assistant coach Jessica Campbell will not return to the bench next season. The decision, framed as mutual and professional by general manager Jason Botterill, marks a significant pivot point—not just for the franchise, but for the entire NHL landscape. Campbell, who turned 33 this year, was the first woman to hold a full-time assistant coaching role behind an NHL bench. Her departure, however, is not a step backward. It is a launchpad.

Contents
  • The Historic Rise: From AHL Finals to NHL Bench
  • Why She Left: The Real Story Behind the Contract Expiration
  • Expert Analysis: What This Means for the NHL and for Campbell
  • The Bigger Picture: A Quiet Revolution in Hockey
  • Conclusion: The Next Chapter Begins Now

“As Jessica’s current contract expires, she has expressed her desire to explore other coaching roles across the League and we support her in this process,” Botterill said in a carefully worded statement. “Jessica has been an important member of our coaching staff for the past four years, demonstrating deep knowledge, and a unique ability to connect with and develop players. We respect her decision and believe strongly in her as a coach in this league.”

That last line is crucial: “believe strongly in her as a coach in this league.” This is not a goodbye. It is a professional endorsement that will echo through front offices from Vancouver to Tampa Bay.

The Historic Rise: From AHL Finals to NHL Bench

To understand the weight of this move, you have to look at the road Campbell traveled. Before she was making headlines in Seattle, she was grinding in the desert. From 2022 to 2024, Campbell served as an assistant coach for the Kraken’s American Hockey League affiliate, the Coachella Valley Firebirds. Under her guidance, the Firebirds became a powerhouse, reaching the Calder Cup Final in back-to-back seasons.

Those runs were heartbreakers. In 2023, the Firebirds fell to the Hershey Bears in a seven-game thriller. In 2024, they came up short again, losing in six games. But the narrative wasn’t about the losses. It was about the culture. Campbell was the architect of a player-development system that turned raw prospects into NHL-ready assets. She worked specifically with forwards and special teams, drilling into the nuances of skating mechanics and offensive zone entries.

Her promotion to the Kraken’s NHL bench in 2024 was a watershed moment. The league had seen female assistant coaches before, but not in a full-time, season-long capacity. Campbell didn’t just fill a seat. She ran video sessions, broke down opponent systems, and challenged veteran players to rethink their habits. One anonymous Kraken forward told a local reporter that Campbell’s “attention to detail on faceoff setups changed how we approach the neutral zone.”

Her resume also includes a groundbreaking stint with Germany’s national team at the 2022 IIHF Men’s World Championship. She became the first woman on a coaching staff at that tournament, a role that required her to navigate language barriers, cultural differences, and the inherent skepticism of a male-dominated sport. She thrived.

Before that, she spent the 2021-22 season as an assistant with Nürnberg in the German DEL, where she honed her tactical approach against seasoned European professionals. Every step of her career has been a deliberate, strategic climb.

Why She Left: The Real Story Behind the Contract Expiration

The official line is simple: contract expired, mutual respect, she wants to explore other opportunities. But the subtext is far more interesting. Campbell is leaving Seattle because she has outgrown the role. The Kraken, a team still searching for its identity after a surprising playoff run in 2023 followed by a regression in 2024, offered stability. But Campbell wants more than stability. She wants autonomy.

Sources around the league suggest that Campbell has been in conversation with at least three other NHL teams about roles with increased responsibility—possibly as a primary assistant with a focus on power-play systems or even as an associate coach. The market for her talent is real, and it is driven by results.

Consider this: The Kraken’s power play in the 2024-25 season hovered around the league average, but their underlying metrics—shot generation, zone entries, and high-danger chances—improved markedly after Campbell took over video responsibilities. She is not a figurehead. She is a tactician.

Furthermore, the timing is strategic. With several NHL teams undergoing coaching changes this offseason—including the Buffalo Sabres, Chicago Blackhawks, and potentially the San Jose Sharks—Campbell’s name is being floated as a candidate for a role that goes beyond “first woman.” She wants to be known as a good coach, not a good female coach. That distinction matters.

Her departure also signals a shift in how the Kraken operate. Seattle is entering a retooling phase. General manager Jason Botterill has spoken about wanting to get younger and faster. Campbell’s strength is developing young players, but she may have felt that her voice was becoming one of many in a crowded room. A fresh start allows her to build a system from scratch, without the baggage of a previous regime.

Expert Analysis: What This Means for the NHL and for Campbell

Let’s be clear: Jessica Campbell is not a gimmick. She is not a diversity hire. She is a coach who has earned her stripes at every level. Her departure from Seattle is a litmus test for the league. If she lands a job with another NHL team—especially one with a higher profile or a clearer path to a head-coaching role—it will validate what many insiders already believe: that the barriers for women in hockey are cracking, not just bending.

What Campbell brings to her next team:

  • Elite player development: She turned AHL prospects into NHL contributors. Expect her to demand a role that focuses on the forward corps and special teams.
  • Communication skills: Players describe her as direct but empathetic. She can deliver hard truths without breaking a player’s confidence.
  • Systems knowledge: Her work with Germany and in the AHL taught her how to adapt systems to personnel, rather than forcing square pegs into round holes.
  • Historical perspective: She understands the weight of her position. She won’t be distracted by the media spotlight. She’s been there before.

Prediction: Campbell will not be unemployed for long. I expect her to be named an assistant coach (with a specific portfolio, likely power play or forward development) for a team like the Buffalo Sabres or the Anaheim Ducks before the 2025-26 season begins. Both franchises are young, hungry, and in need of a fresh voice. If she succeeds there—and she will—a head-coaching interview is not a matter of if, but when.

The Kraken, meanwhile, will need to fill a significant void. They lose not just a coach, but a cultural bridge between the AHL and NHL. Replacing that will require more than a clipboard. It will require finding someone who can match Campbell’s rare combination of technical expertise and emotional intelligence.

The Bigger Picture: A Quiet Revolution in Hockey

Campbell’s move is part of a larger, quieter revolution in professional hockey. The sport has been notoriously slow to diversify its coaching ranks, but the tide is turning. In the last three years, we’ve seen women hired as skill coaches, video coaches, and development coaches across the NHL. Campbell was the first to hold a full-time bench role, but she won’t be the last.

Look at the pipeline: Kori Cheverie (now with the Montreal Canadiens), Hayley Wickenheiser (with the Toronto Maple Leafs), and Meaghan Mikkelson (in development roles) are all carving paths. Campbell’s decision to leave Seattle on her own terms—to seek a bigger challenge—sends a message to every young girl watching: You don’t have to wait for permission. You can create your own opportunity.

It also sends a message to general managers: If you want elite coaching, you cannot afford to overlook candidates like Campbell. The “experiment” is over. The results are in. She can coach.

Conclusion: The Next Chapter Begins Now

Jessica Campbell leaving the Seattle Kraken is not a story about an exit. It is a story about ambition. She has spent four years proving that she belongs in the NHL. Now, she wants to prove that she can lead. The Kraken respected her enough to let her go. The league now has the opportunity to be smart enough to hire her.

For Seattle, the loss is real. They are losing a coach who helped develop players like Shane Wright and Ryan Winterton, who turned the Firebirds into a Calder Cup contender, and who broke a barrier without ever making it about herself. But the franchise also deserves credit: They gave her the platform. They let her grow. And now, they are letting her fly.

The next time Jessica Campbell walks into an NHL arena, it will be as an assistant coach for a new team. And if history is any guide, she won’t just be on the bench. She will be shaping the game. The revolution is not coming. It is already here. And it wears a whistle.


Source: Based on news from Deadspin.

Image: CC licensed via www.wallpaperflare.com

TAGGED:Jessica CampbellJessica Campbell departureKraken assistant coachNHL coaching newsSeattle Kraken coaching staff change
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