VANCOUVER, BC ā Cammi Granato has been watching the Vancouver Canucks for years.
As a pro scout for the Seattle Kraken since 2019 ā the first female scout in NHL history ā she spent ample time in the press box at Vancouverās Rogers Arena, checking out talent for the leagueās newest team.
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Now, sheāll have a new view. The Canucks named Granato to assistant general manager Thursday.
āIām very, very excited to take on this role,ā Granato said on a video call.
As assistant GM, Granato will oversee Vancouverās player development department and its amateur and pro scouting department. Itās a job she feels prepared for after three years of scouting for the Kraken.
āOne of the things that I had said coming in here is I havenāt done this job before, but I have great people surrounding me. I have a lot of experience in the game and definitely the experience with Seattle has helped me prepare,ā said Granato, who recently published a childrenās book.
Granato, 50, joins a Canucks front office that has been entirely revamped since former general manager Jim Benning, head coach Travis Green and several other staff were fired in early December.
She has ample playing experience, too, having captained the U.S. team that beat Canada for the gold medal at the 1998 Nagano Olympics. The native of Downers Grove, Illinois, also won silver at the Salt Lake City Games in 2002.
She remains the all-time leading scorer for the American womenās team with 343 points (186 goals and 157 assists), and in 2010 reached the sport's pinnacle as a player ā she and Canadian Angela James were the first women to be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.
āCammi is a tremendous leader and has earned the respect of the hockey world," Canucks president of hockey operations Jim Rutherford said in a statement. "She has a great mind for the game and experience and influence at all levels,ā
Rutherford, who was named president of hockey operations soon after the turnover at the end of 2021, also hired former Penguins assistant general manager Patrik Allvin as general manager and former scout Derek Clancey and former player agent Emilie Castonguay as assistant general managers.
āFor sure, itās a big day to have two women in management on one team," Granato said of her and Castonguay's roles. "It just goes to show Jimās vision to sort of diversify, get different voices, get different peopleās experience and draw them together.
āMaybe this conversation will change and in 10 years it wonāt be a big deal, or five years it wonāt be a big deal, when other teams follow suit.ā
Granato believes she and Castonguay wonāt be anomalies for long. She expects more women to join teams around the league, and soon.
āYou can now look at the position of someone whoās qualified and not just think itās a manās role,ā she said. āThereās women that are qualified, thereās players that will come out of these Olympics that will retire and be able to be in roles in the NHL. I do think that youāll see more of it. I think itās an exciting time.ā
Granato's hire was bittersweet moment for Seattle general manager Ron Francis.
āWe wish Cammi the best and thank her for her work in helping launch the Kraken,ā Francis said. āWe understand this is the right opportunity for her and her family.ā
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