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James Patrick (ice hockey)
Canadian ice hockey player

James Patrick (ice hockey)

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Canadian ice hockey player
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Winnipeg
Age
61 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

James Patrick (born June 14, 1963) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey defenceman. Until recently, he was a coach with the Buffalo Sabres of the National Hockey League. He is half Ukrainian (father Stephen Patrick (born Stepan Patrebka in Ukraine) played for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and was born into a prominent family from the Lviv region) and half English.

Playing career

After a successful collegiate career at the University of North Dakota, Patrick represented Canada at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. After the Olympics, Patrick signed his first professional contract on March 5, 1984, and made his NHL debut two days later in Minnesota. Patrick scored his first NHL goal on March 17, 1984, in Philadelphia. Patrick enjoyed ten productive seasons in New York before being traded to the Hartford Whalers and then to the Calgary Flames during the 1993–94 season.

After several years in Calgary, Patrick signed with the Buffalo Sabres as a free agent after the 1997–98 season. Though he was chosen to play in the 1987 Canada Cup and many other international events, Patrick was never selected to the NHL All Star game. He ranks high among defenceman in both all times game played (1280) and total points (639). Patrick set a record (since broken) for career games played by a Team Canada player with 40 career games, breaking previous record of 37 games in 2002. On September 8, 2005, Patrick announced his retirement from the NHL at the age of 42. He was immediately named to the Sabres' staff as a skill development coach. However, he left the team before the season to play in Germany's Deutsche Eishockey Liga with the Frankfurt Lions.

Patrick joined the Sabres as assistant coach in 2006. He made his debut as a NHL Head Coach in February 2012, when Lindy Ruff was incapable of coaching due to an injury. After Ruff was fired in February 2013, Patrick stayed remained with Sabres' coaching staff until the end of the season and then was let go.

After the 2013 season he re-joined Lindy Ruff as an assistant coach with the Dallas Stars.

Awards and honours

AwardYear
All-WCHA Second Team1981–82
All-NCAA All-Tournament Team1982
All-WCHA First Team1982–83
AHCA West All-American1982–83
  • Canadian Tier II Player of Year (1981)
  • SJHL All-Star First Team (1981)
  • SJHL Championship (1981)
  • Centennial Cup First Team All-Star (1981)
  • Centennial Cup Championship (1981)
  • WCHA Freshman of the Year (1982)
  • NCAA Championship (1982)
  • Played in the World Junior Championships for Team Canada (1983)
  • Played in the World Championships for Team Canada (1983, 1987, 1989, 1998, & 2002)
  • Played in the Sarajevo Olympics for Team Canada (1984)
  • Played in the Canada Cup Tournament for Team Canada (1987)
  • “Honoured Member” of the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame
  • Ranked No. 44 on the all-time list of New York Rangers in the book 100 Ranger Greats (John Wiley & Sons, 2009).

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1980–81Prince Albert RaidersSJHL59216182162
1981–82University of North DakotaWCHA425242926
1982–83University of North DakotaWCHA3612364829
1983–84New York RangersNHL12178250332
1983–84CanadaNat-Tm637243152
1984–85New York RangersNHL75828367130004
1985–86New York RangersNHL75142943881615634
1986–87New York RangersNHL781045556261232
1987–88New York RangersNHL7017456252
1988–89New York RangersNHL681136474140112
1989–90New York RangersNHL73144357501038110
1990–91New York RangersNHL741049595860006
1991–92New York RangersNHL80145771541307712
1992–93New York RangersNHL605212661
1993–94New York RangersNHL60332
1993–94Hartford WhalersNHL478202832
1993–94Calgary FlamesNHL15224670116
1994–95Calgary FlamesNHL43010101450110
1995–96Calgary FlamesNHL80332353040002
1996–97Calgary FlamesNHL193146
1997–98Calgary FlamesNHL606111726
1998–99Buffalo SabresNHL45178162001112
1999–00Buffalo SabresNHL6658132250112
2000–01Buffalo SabresNHL54491312131232
2001–02Buffalo SabresNHL56581316
2002–03Buffalo SabresNHL694121626
2003–04Buffalo SabresNHL55471112
NHL totals12801494906397591176323886

International

YearTeamEvent GPGAPtsPIM
1982CanadaWJC70226
1983CanadaWJC70224
1983CanadaWC911210
1984CanadaOLY70334
1987CanadaWC80112
1987CanadaCC60112
1989CanadaWC102248
1998CanadaWC60110
2002CanadaWC70220
Junior totals1404410
Senior totals533111426

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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