Lalonde named Iowa’s head coach

Iowa Wild general manager Brent Flahr on Monday announced the American Hockey League club has named Derek Lalonde head coach.

Lalonde, 43, spent the last two seasons as the head coach of the ECHL’s Toledo Walleye. In two seasons with Lalonde at the helm, the Walleye posted a 97-35-7-5 record (.715) with back-to-back playoff appearances. The Walleye went 47-20-2-3 in 2015-16, finishing with the ECHL’s Eastern Conference regular season title. The team fell in the first round of the Kelly Cup playoffs in seven games to Reading.

The Brasher Falls, N.Y., native also has experience as a coach on the international stage. He served as an assistant with the United States World Junior U-19 team, which captured a gold medal at the 2012 World Junior “A” Challenge in Yarmouth, N.S. He also served as the head coach for the United States World Junior U-19 at the 2013 World Junior “A” Challenge, once again winning gold.

Lalonde served as an assistant coach at the University of Denver from 2006-11, helping the team post a 122-63-19 record. During his tenure, the Pioneers claimed two WCHA Championships (2008 and 2010) and four consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances. The team never fell out of the top 15 national rankings in the six seasons Lalonde was an assistant. He recruited and coached NHL first-round picks Joe Colborne and Beau Bennett, as well as second-round picks Drew Shore, Jason Zucker and Patrick Wiercioch. Zucker played for the Iowa Wild in the 2013-14 season.

He began his collegiate coaching career in Big Rapids, Mich., at Ferris State University from 2003-06. With Lalonde as an assistant, the Bulldogs posted a 31-10-1 record in 2003, also capturing their first and only CCHA Championship, as well as qualifying for the NCAA Tournament.

Lalonde played goalie collegiately at Cortland State, earning team MVP honors as a senior. He graduated with a B.S.E in physical education in 1995 and later received an M.A. in education administration from the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts in 1998.