Merrimack Valley first-year head coach Jennifer Otis (right) goes over plans with her team during practice Monday afternoon at Merrimack Valley High School. Once a dominant player for the Pride, Otis now roams the sidelines in her first year coaching.
Merrimack Valley first-year head coach Jennifer Otis (right) goes over plans with her team during practice Monday afternoon at Merrimack Valley High School. Once a dominant player for the Pride, Otis now roams the sidelines in her first year coaching. Credit: By JAY McAREE / Monitor staff

Nearly a decade after emerging as one of the most dominant field hockey players in Merrimack Valley High School history, Jennifer Otis has traded in her stick for a chance to roam the sidelines at her alma mater.

Otis, a Penacook native, was hired to replace longtime varsity field hockey coach Kim Kenney at MV earlier this year, and a little over halfway into the season, the former player turned coach is excited about what the future holds for the Pride โ€“ and herself.

โ€œI feel like Iโ€™m learning something new every day, which is great,โ€ Otis said. โ€œBeing only eight games into the season, I know I still have a long way to go, but just having a hard-working group of girls makes everything easier.โ€

Around Penacook, Otis is best known for helping bring home the only state championship in program history when she led the Pride to a perfect 18-0 season in 2008, capped by a 2-1 victory over Kennett in the Class I title game.

Otis was named Class I Player of the Year that season and earned First Team All-State honors before moving on to play at Merrimack College. It was there where she finished fifth all-time in scoring (113 points), third all-time in goals (46) and played the role of hero several times with 11 career game-winning scores.

During her time at Merrimack College, the program reached the Final Four of the Division II NCAA Tournament in back-to-back seasons (2011-2012) and won 17 games in both of those years. Before that, the Warriors had only won double-digit games once โ€“ 13 in 2009, Otisโ€™s first year with the team.

โ€œComing from a program that wasnโ€™t very successful, working hard and seeing those changes happen while youโ€™re there is exceptional and itโ€™s pretty amazing to be a part of a program that came from nothing and went to the Final Four two years in a row,โ€ Otis said.

Otisโ€™s playing background also provides proof to her players that, despite being a rookie coach, she knows what sheโ€™s doing.

โ€œIโ€™m definitely a players coach,โ€ Otis said. โ€œI have that perspective where I did play at the high school, college level, so Iโ€™m able to connect with players on that level. They trust my knowledge of the game, they trust me and they know that I know what Iโ€™m talking about. Itโ€™s just having that trusting relationship with my players that I know what theyโ€™re going through.โ€

The challenge in her first year coaching at Merrimack Valley wonโ€™t be quite as steep as the turnaround she led in college, but the Pride is still a rebuilding bunch.

Merrimack Valley won just a single game last season and returned seven starters to small team. Under Otis, the Pride (2-6) has already surpassed last yearโ€™s win total and could have a few more if not for a pair of one-goal defeats to Pelham and most recently Pembroke.

โ€œI have a great booster club behind me, the community, the athletic director, everyone is behind me,โ€ Otis said. โ€œIโ€™m just taking it day by day, learning new things and trying to get better from it.โ€

And if Otis ever needs help or some words of advice, she knows exactly where to turn.

Jenniferโ€™s father, Rich Otis, has been coaching since as long as she can remember. Rich currently serves as the varsity boysโ€™ basketball coach at Pembroke Academy, but has had coaching stops at Bishop Brady, Merrimack Valley, Trinity, Franklin and Manchester Central.

โ€œMy dadโ€™s been coaching since before I was born. My brother played basketball and my mom played in high school, too, so (sports) has always been an emphasis,โ€ Jennifer said. โ€œ(My dad) is definitely my biggest coaching role model. The biggest things he ever said to me, which I still find applicable, is that good players make other players better.โ€

So do good coaches, and Rich believes Merrimack Valley found one in his daughter.

โ€œWe talked a little about the commitment, parents and stuff like that, and I did tell her that itโ€™s hard to win,โ€ the elder Otis said. โ€œPeople think itโ€™s easy sometimes, but itโ€™s hard to win and she seems to have taken all those things and went with it. She decided to do it and sheโ€™s doing a nice job.โ€

(Jay McAree can be reached at 369-3371, jmcaree@cmonitor.com or on Twitter @JayMcAree.)