After winning the world championships as a player for team Canada, Huntley, served as an assistant on the 2006 team that also won gold in London, Canada and orchestrated another world championship win in 2014 as the director of men’s field lacrosse, a position he held until shortly before his death. He helped foster a new generation of Canadian talent, after inspiring others to get into field lacrosse.
Huntley rounded out his coaching with multiple gigs in MLL. He joined as the Toronto Nationals’ first head coach, leading expansion franchise to its first MLL title in 2009. He also served as an assistant with the Chesapeake Bayhawks in 2014 before being named head coach of the Atlanta Blaze in July of 2016.
There, he joined with general manager and assistant coach Spencer Ford, whom he had known since Ford was a child. Huntley and Ford developed a relationship while coaching at Calvert Hall (Md.) starting in 2013. Huntley, a Towson, Md. native, lended his time to the historic program as an aide to coach Bryan Kelly while Ford led the JV team.
It wasn’t necessary, but Huntley was at every home JV game. He’d grab Ford at halftime of those games and ask him about certain offensive sets, always eager to learn.
“He was just a guy that knew everything, but would love to learn,” Ford said. “He had all the knowledge of the game and could teach everybody, and he probably knew more in his back pocket than anyone had in their entire body, but he still wanted to learn and still made you feel like you had something extra to give.”
Working with the Blaze only strengthened Ford’s relationship with the man who would later become the godfather to his son, Jackson. Huntley, an avid “foodie,” arranged all of his meetings around a meal. Even after games, win or loss, you’d find Huntley at Pappasito’s Cantina.
“The only time he’d get mad at you is if you didn’t get a bite to eat and a beer afterwards,” Ford said. “It didn’t matter what time it was or where we were or if we got beat by 15 goals, it was ‘Hey, we’re going to Pappasito’s. Get ready.’”
And it wasn’t just with the Blaze. Huntley’s passion for food sometimes rivaled that of lacrosse.
“We would go from practice to figuring out the next meal,” Cottle said. “Everybody that coaches with him, they laugh about it because it was ‘Where are we going to eat now?’ We started with a breakfast meeting and it turned into lunch.”
Huntley, according to his colleagues, was one of the most genuine people in the lacrosse world. He knew what he loved and pursued a life surrounding it.
He was always willing to sit down and talk lacrosse, hoping to help in any way he could. He took on multiple coaching jobs at once, while working as a principal at HR Investment Consultants. It didn’t matter what was on his plate, he found a way to get the job done.
“What Dave gave, which is so unbelievable, is the gift of time,” Cottle said. “He gave so much of himself to others. He’s coaching Calvert Hall while coaching in the MLL while helping run the Canadian World Games team. He donated so much of his time to the game of lacrosse and to the people of lacrosse.”
Although the loss of such a wealth of lacrosse experience and knowledge hurts, Huntley’s impact on the game will be felt for years to come.
“He brought great energy. He brought great passion. He brought great love for our game,” Ford said. “Every time we are lucky enough to watch a game, whether it’s tomorrow or 10 years from now, we’re going to see skilled plays that are going to happen and somebody is going to turn and say ‘Man, Hunts would be proud.’ … I can’t imagine any of my loved ones going out any other way. I hear the exact words from Hunts. ‘I’m going to have a jammer on the field.’ Damned if he didn't do it that way.”