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Dale Hunter
Canadian ice hockey player

Dale Hunter

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Canadian ice hockey player
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Petrolia, Canada
Age
64 years
Family
Siblings:
Stats
Weight:
200 lbs
Sports Teams
Colorado Avalanche
Quebec Nordiques
Washington Capitals
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Dale Robert Hunter (born July 31, 1960) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player and the former head coach of the Washington Capitals of the National Hockey League and current co-owner, president, and head coach of the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League. Hunter was born in Petrolia, Ontario, but grew up in Oil Springs, Ontario, and was one of three brothers, with Dave and Mark, to play in the NHL.

NHL career

Quebec Nordiques

He was selected 41st overall by the Quebec Nordiques in the 1979 NHL Entry Draft and played seven seasons in Quebec.

According to his former Quebec Nordiques coach Michel Bergeron, even though Hunter was nicknamed the "Nuisance" on ice (La Petite Peste in French), he was known to be "humble" in the dressing room and a sort of "gentleman", close to all the players. He was the "perfect player", always the first to arrive at practice and ready to do all his best for the team. Thanks to his charisma, Hunter was a fan favourite in both Quebec and Washington. His leaving Quebec was seen as an obvious "mistake" linked to the team's future decline.

Hunter was traded to the Washington Capitals along with Clint Malarchuk in return for two players and a 1987 first-round draft pick the Nordiques then used to select Joe Sakic.

Washington Capitals

In the 1993 Patrick Division Semifinals between the Capitals and New York Islanders, Hunter led his team with seven postseason goals. That performance, however, was marred by an illegal and vicious check on Islanders' star Pierre Turgeon. This illegal check occurred after Turgeon had stolen an errant pass of Hunter's and subsequently scored.As Turgeon was celebrating, Hunter came up from behind and checked an unsuspecting Turgeon into the boards. As a result of the incident, Hunter was suspended for the first 21 games of the 1993-94 season as part of new commissioner Gary Bettman's effort to crack down on violent play.

He broke the 1,000 points barrier (and is the NHL record holder for requiring the most games to do so by a forward, at 1,308, as well having the most penalty minutes when reaching that scoring milestone). He played in the NHL All-Star game in 1997. He also served as team captain from 1994 to 1999.

IN 1998 he led the fourth seeded Capitals to their first appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals, defeating the Boston Bruins, Ottawa Senators, and Buffalo Sabres. In the finals, the Capitals were swept by the defending Cup champions, the Detroit Red Wings, with the first three games being decided by one goal.

Colorado Avalanche

Hunter finished off his career with the Colorado Avalanche, the successor to the Nordiques, and helped the team to reach the Western Conference finals, losing in seven games to the eventual Stanley Cup champion Dallas Stars. On that team, he often played on the same line as two other renowned pest role players -- Claude Lemieux and Theoren Fleury.

Post-NHL

Hunter's sweater number (#32) was retired by the Capitals on March 11, 2000. During the ceremony, the Capitals presented Hunter with one of the penalty boxes from the Capital Centre (the Capitals former home arena), symbolic of his exceptional amount of time served for penalties.

In 2000, Hunter and his brother, Mark—also a former NHL player—teamed up with Dale's former teammate on the Nordiques, Basil McRae, to buy the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League. Dale became team president and head coach. He led the Knights to the 2005 and 2016 Memorial Cup. On January 1, 2006, the Hunter brothers were named to the 2006 Mayor's New Year's Honours List for Sports by the City of London, Ontario. Hunter's older brother Dave Hunter is also a former NHLer. His son Dylan Hunter is an assistant coach for the Knights and his other son Tucker also played for the London Knights before pursuing his education at the University of Western Ontario.

On November 28, 2011, Hunter resigned his position as head coach of the Knights to take the same position with the Washington Capitals, succeeding Bruce Boudreau. His brother Mark then took over as Knights coach. Hunter's defense oriented system caused some conflict with star Alexander Ovechkin but it helped the struggling Capitals make the playoffs, where they upset the defending Stanley Cup champions Boston Bruins in the first round before being eliminated by the New York Rangers, both postseason series going to seven games. On May 14, 2012, Hunter announced he was not returning to coach the Capitals in the 2012-2013 season, choosing instead to return to the London Knights.

On May 14, 2019, Hockey Canada named Hunter as the Head Coach for Canada’s National Junior Team at the 2020 IIHF World Junior Championship.Hunter guided the team to the gold medal with a dramatic come-from-behind victory over Russia in the final game.

Accolades and controversy

Late in the deciding Game 6 of the 1993 Patrick Division Semifinals between the Capitals and New York Islanders, Pierre Turgeon stole the puck from Hunter and scored, putting the game out of reach. Hunter, who was trailing Turgeon on the play, checked Turgeon well after the goal as he started to celebrate. Turgeon sustained a separated shoulder from the hit, causing him to miss all but Game 7 against the Pittsburgh Penguins in the second round, as well as most of the series against the Montreal Canadiens in the conference finals.New NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, who had earlier promised to crack down on violence, suspended Hunter for the first 21 games of the 1993–94 season—at the time, the longest suspension in league history for an on-ice incident (in terms of games missed). Years later, Hunter admitted that he'd gone too far.

With amassing a staggering 3565 penalty minutes, Hunter currently has the second-most penalty minutes in NHL history, after Dave "Tiger" Williams (although Hunter played 1,407 games to Williams' 962). The Capitals retired his No. 32 jersey. Hunter is the only NHL player ever to score over 1,000 points and rack up over 3,000 penalty minutes (1,020 points and 3,565 PIMs over 1,407 NHL games).

He scored in overtime for Quebec in Game 5 of their 1982 opening round best-of-five series vs. the Montreal Canadiens, and in 1988 scoring against Ron Hextall on a breakaway in overtime for Washington in Game 7 of their opening round best-of-7 series vs. the Philadelphia Flyers, making Hunter the first player in NHL history to score two overtime series-clinching goals in the playoffs.

In July 2006, Hunter was arrested and charged with DUI. The charges were dropped when the presiding judge ruled that his rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms were violated for unlawful detention and being denied his right to his lawyer.

In September 2005, Hunter was suspended by the Ontario Hockey League for four games after a player left the bench to initiate a fight in an exhibition game.

On January 20, 2006, Hunter was suspended for two games and his team was fined $5,000 for Hunter's off ice abuse of the officials. In May 2006, Hunter was fined $5,000 by the OHL for criticizing officials after the Knights were eliminated from the playoffs in four straight games. In September 2006, Hunter was suspended by the OHL for two games after forward Matt Davis left the bench to engage in a fight during a game; OHL rules state that there is an automatic suspension for both the player and the coach if a player leaves the bench to become involved in an altercation.

Career statistics

Playing career

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1977–78Kitchener RangersOMJHL68224264115910132
1978–79Sudbury WolvesOMJHL594268110188104121647
1979–80Sudbury WolvesOMJHL613451851899691545
1980–81Quebec NordiquesNHL80194463226542634
1981–82Quebec NordiquesNHL8022507227216371052
1982–83Quebec NordiquesNHL80174663206421324
1983–84Quebec NordiquesNHL77245579232923541
1984–85Quebec NordiquesNHL8020527220917461097
1985–86Quebec NordiquesNHL80284270265300015
1986–87Quebec NordiquesNHL461029391351317856
1987–88Washington CapitalsNHL7922375924014751298
1988–89Washington CapitalsNHL80203757219604429
1989–90Washington CapitalsNHL8023396223315481261
1990–91Washington CapitalsNHL7616304623411191041
1991–92Washington CapitalsNHL80285078205714516
1992–93Washington CapitalsNHL84205979198671835
1993–94Washington CapitalsNHL5292938131703314
1994–95Washington CapitalsNHL4581523101744824
1995–96Washington CapitalsNHL82132437112615624
1996–97Washington CapitalsNHL82143246125
1997–98Washington CapitalsNHL82818261032104430
1998–99Washington CapitalsNHL50055102
1998–99Colorado AvalancheNHL12246171913438
NHL totals1407323697102035651864276118729

Coaching career

NHL

TeamYearRegular seasonPost season
GWLOTLPtsDivision rankResult
Washington Capitals2011-126030237(92)2nd in SoutheastLost in Conference Semi-Finals

OHL

TeamYearRegular seasonPost season
GWLTOTLPtsFinishResult
LDN2001–02682427107655th in WestLost in second round
LDN2002–0368312773722nd in MidwestLost in second round
LDN2003–04685311221101st in MidwestLost in third round
LDN2004–0568597201201st in MidwestWon Memorial Cup
LDN2005–06684915-41021st in MidwestLost in OHL Finals
LDN2006–07685014-41041st in MidwestLost in third round
LDN2007–08683824-6822nd in MidwestLost in first round
LDN2008–09684916-31011st in MidwestLost in third round
LDN2009–10684916-31011st in MidwestLost in second round
LDN2010–11683429-5735th in MidwestLost in first round
LDN2011–1226205-1(99)1st in Midwest(left to take Capitals coaching job)
LDN2012–13685013-51051st in MidwestWon J. Ross Robertson Cup
LDN2013–14684914-51033rd in MidwestLost in second round
LDN2014–15684024-4843rd in MidwestLost in second round
LDN2015–16685114-31052nd in MidwestWon Memorial Cup
LDN2016–17684615-7993rd in MidwestLost in second round
LDN2017–18683925-4823rd in MidwestLost in first round
LDN2018–19684615-7991st in MidwestLost in second round
LDN2019–20624515-2921st in MidwestPost-season cancelled
Total12448223262175174010 Division Titles2 Memorial Cups
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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