Graham Thomas

Graham Thomas

Seasons with UBC: 13
Overall Record: 308-114-32 (.678)
Canada West Conference record: 228-68-32 (.695)
Canada West Playoff record: 38-22 (.633)
U SPORTS Championship record: 13-8 (.619)

  • 6 Canada West Championships ('12-13, '15-16, '16-17, '21-22, '22-23, '23-24)
  • U SPORTS Silver ('15-16)
  • U SPORTS Bronze ('16-17, '22-23)
  • Coach of the Year, U SPORTS ('12-13)
  • Coach of the Year, Canada West ('12-13)
  • Former Associate Coach of Syracuse University (NCAA)
 *As of March, 2025
 
In his time with the blue and gold, Thomas has built the Thunderbirds into one of the premier programs in U SPORTS, while continually setting new milestones for women’s hockey at the school. Nearly all of UBC’s major team and individual records have come with Thomas at the helm.
 

2024-25:

2024-25 was another history-making campaign for the Thunderbirds, who broke the all-time Canada West regular season wins record (25). The T-Birds started the season 2-2 following a pair of losses to Mount Royal in mid-October, and then did not lose in regulation again all year. Separate win streaks of nine and 14 games had UBC roaring into the playoffs, where they swept Manitoba in the Canada West semifinals. The conference championship was a different story, as the T-Birds were upset by Alberta in a pair of overtime games. Seeded sixth going into nationals, UBC faced off against Bishop's in the U SPORTS quarterfinals and fell 4-3, again in OT, to the eventual national champions. The T-Birds showed their quality in the consolation rounds, defeating UNB and Alberta both by scores of 5-1 to finish in fifth place.

During his 12th season at the helm of the UBC Thunderbirds, Graham Thomas led the 'Birds to their best Canada West record ever, with 24 wins and just a single regulation loss the entire regular season. That one blemish came in late November, and the T-Birds responded by winning their final 12 games of the regular season to head into the playoffs as the clear-cut favourites. They followed through in the postseason, defeating first the Calgary Dinos in the Canada West semifinals and then the Alberta Pandas in the finals, winning their third straight conference championship and sixth overall under Thomas. The Thunderbirds entered the U SPORTS National Championships as the #2 seed, but were upset in the quarterfinals by Montreal. The team bounced back well to end the year on a high note, beating UNB in the consolation semifinals and then the hosts Saskatchewan on the final day of the tournament to earn 5th place.
 
2022-23 was another fantastic year for the T-Birds. Their 24 wins in conference play gave them home ice advantage throughout the playoffs, and that paid off in a big way. It started with a three-game series victory over the Saskatchewan Huskies in the Canada West semifinals. After splitting the first two games, the 'Birds earned a 3-0 victory in the clinching game to punch their ticket to the championship series against Mount Royal. After dropping Game 1 to Mount Royal on March 3rd, the 'Birds responded with back-to-back victories (5-1 and 1-0) to secure their second straight Canada West crown. UBC entered the Women's National Championship tournament in Montreal as the #2 seed and earned a 3-2 overtime quarterfinal victory against St. FX. Unfortunately, their quest for a national championship ended the next day as they fell 3-1 to the hosts from Concordia. However, full credit to the 'Birds who responded positively with a 3-2 victory in the Bronze Medal game against Montreal.
 
A year prior, Thomas led the T-Birds to an impressive overall record of 24-7, and a conference record of 14-6 to secure second place heading into the playoffs. The Thunderbirds handled the Alberta Pandas in the CW Semifinal, and then swept the Saskatchewan Huskies at home to win the Canada West Championship. UBC matched up with Nipissing in the first round of the U SPORTS Championships in Charlottetown, and fell 1-0 in an overtime thriller. 
 
In 2019-2020, UBC battled through four straight overtime playoff games as they marched through to the Canada West semifinal. The Thunderbirds swept Saskatchewan in the Canada West quarter-final in overtime in game one, and double overtime in game two. The conference semifinal was equally thrilling – as UBC did not surrender a single regulation goal to Alberta all series but fell in a triple overtime marathon in game one and came up short in overtime in game two.
 
The 2018-2019 squad went 14-5-4-5 in the regular season to place third in the highly competitive Canada West conference, giving up just 35 goals. The Thunderbirds swept Regina before falling to Manitoba in the league playoffs.
 
Thomas was named the U SPORTS and Canada West Coach of the Year for the 2012-13 season, his first at UBC. He led the Thunderbirds on an improbable run from a one-win team in 2011-12 to Canada West champions the following year. It was the greatest turnaround in U SPORTS history across all sports.
 
The next season, Thomas’ squad became the first in school history to win 20 conference games, while in 2014-15, UBC earned its first-ever top-two finish in the Canada West standings by placing second.
 
Arguably the school’s most successful season was the 2015-16 campaign. The ‘Birds won their second Canada West title, and then the national silver medal at the 2016 U SPORTS Women’s Hockey Championship in Thomas’ hometown of Calgary.
 
The 2016-17 season was another historic one for the UBC women’s hockey program. Early in the year, they became the first UBC hockey team to be ranked No. 1 nationally. During the regular season, the Thunderbirds rattled off a school record 15 straight wins on their way to an all-time program-best 23 regular season victories, which also tied for the most in Canada West history. The team went on to win its second consecutive league championship, before earning the U SPORTS bronze medal in Kingston, Ont.
 
UBC went 14-5-5-4 during the 2017-18 regular season before beating Mt. Royal two games to none in the league quarter-final. The T-Birds fell to Saskatchewan 2-0 in the semifinal round.
 
Thomas came to UBC after working at Syracuse University, where he was with the women’s hockey team since it began play in the 2008-09 season, helping build the program from the ground up.
 
He served as an assistant/associate coach at Syracuse, working with all aspects of team operations and was the team’s recruiting coordinator. He helped build and develop the Syracuse NCAA Division I hockey team from the inaugural start-up year in 2008. Thomas signed and committed 40 players to Syracuse during his time, including two NCAA player of the year nominees.
 
Before Syracuse, Thomas served as head coach of the women’s team at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) in 2007-08. His squad finished in a first-place tie in the regular season standings of the Alberta Colleges Athletic Conference, with a record of 26-8-2.
 
Thomas also spent time as a coach and instructor at the National Sport Academy in Calgary before heading east to Syracuse. He has ‘High Performance 1’ and ‘Coaching Theory Level 1, 2 and 3’ qualifications and is certified by the National Strength and Conditioning Association to develop players through off-ice training.
 
Through the Academy, Thomas imparted his insight to male and female players that have competed at the NHL level, Junior tier I and II, NCAA and national team levels.
 
In his playing days, Thomas suited up for the Drayton Valley Thunder of the Alberta Junior Hockey League. In 1998-99, he also skated for Mannheim Jung Adler in Germany.