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Chris Gratton
Canadian ice hockey player

Chris Gratton

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Canadian ice hockey player
From
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Brantford, Canada
Age
48 years
Stats
Height:
193 cm
Weight:
230 lbs
Sports Teams
Buffalo Sabres
Colorado Avalanche
Columbus Blue Jackets
Florida Panthers
Philadelphia Flyers
Arizona Coyotes
Tampa Bay Lightning
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Christopher A. Gratton (born July 5, 1975) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who last played with the Columbus Blue Jackets of the National Hockey League (NHL). He is the cousin of Josh Gratton, who had also briefly played in the NHL as a member of the Philadelphia Flyers and the Phoenix Coyotes.

Early Life

Gratton's own father only coached him for one season when he was really young.

Playing career

Junior Hockey

Gratton played his minor hockey in his hometown of Brantford, Ontario, playing for such programs as the Brantford Nodrofsky Steelers (the same program Wayne Gretzky played in many years earlier) and the Brantford CKPC Knights. As a 15-year-old, he played one season with the Jr B Brantford Classics.

In 1991, Gratton was selected third overall in the OHL Priority Selection by the Kingston Frontenacs. After his rookie year in the OHL, Gratton received the Emms Family Award as rookie of the year. In 1993, he was selected third overall in the NHL Draft by the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Tampa Bay Lightning

Gratton made his NHL debut for the Lightning on October 6, 1993, against the New Jersey Devils. He recorded his first career point (a powerplay assist on a Bob Beers goal) in his second game against the New York Rangers the next night. He scored his first career goal against Robb Stauber of the Los Angeles Kings in a 4–3 Lightning loss on October 20, 1993

Philadelphia Flyers

In 1997, Gratton signed with the Philadelphia Flyers as a free agent after four seasons with the Lightning, earning a $9 million signing bonus. In 1997–98, Gratton matched his career-high of 62 points and recorded a career-best plus/minus rating of +11. Gratton was traded back to Tampa Bay the next season.

Second Stint with Lightning

Gratton served as Tampa Bay's captain during the 1999–2000 season until his trade in March, 2000, when Tampa Bay traded Gratton to the Buffalo Sabres.

Buffalo Sabres

Gratton would play for the Sabres from March 2000 until March 2003, when the Sabres traded him to the Phoenix Coyotes for Daniel Briere. One year later on March 9, 2004, Phoenix traded Gratton (along with Ossi Väänänen and a second-round draft pick, ultimately used to select Paul Stastny) in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft to the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for Derek Morris and Keith Ballard.

Florida Panthers

After the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Gratton signed a one-year contract with the Florida Panthers. Gratton signed a two-year contract extension with the Panthers in March 2006. He was traded back to the Tampa Bay Lightning again on June 13, 2007, in exchange for a second-round draft pick (used to select Jacob Markström).

Return to Tampa Bay Lightning

During the 2007–08 season, Gratton scored 21 points in 60 games before tearing the acetabular labrum in his left hip which required season-ending surgery. Gratton re-signed with the Lightning for the 2008–09 season but was waived in December and was assigned to Tampa Bay's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Norfolk Admirals.

Columbus Blue Jackets

Gratton was claimed off of re-entry waivers on February 21, 2009, by the Columbus Blue Jackets. He played in six games for Columbus, recording an assist, before retiring in 2009.

Personal life

Gratton lives in Ancaster, Ontario and has one son, Zachary, who plays hockey, and three daughters. He has coached his son in minor hockey, first in house league in Ancaster, then for AA and eventually with the Hamilton AAA Jr. Bulldogs' bantam team.

Gratton is co-owner of the Florida Jr. Blades Organization (in the 29-team Empire Junior Hockey League).

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1989–90Brantford ClassicsMWJHL10222
1990–91Brantford ClassicsMWJHL3130306028
1991–92Kingston FrontenacsOHL6227396637
1992–93Kingston FrontenacsOHL5855541091251611182942
1993–94Tampa Bay LightningNHL84132942123
1994–95Tampa Bay LightningNHL467202789
1995–96Tampa Bay LightningNHL82172138105602227
1996–97Tampa Bay LightningNHL82303262201
1997–98Philadelphia FlyersNHL82224062159520210
1998–99Philadelphia FlyersNHL2617841
1998–99Tampa Bay LightningNHL5271926102
1999–2000Tampa Bay LightningNHL58142741121
1999–2000Buffalo SabresNHL141781550114
2000–01Buffalo SabresNHL8219214010213641014
2001–02Buffalo SabresNHL8215243975
2002–03Buffalo SabresNHL6615294486
2002–03Phoenix CoyotesNHL1401121
2003–04Phoenix CoyotesNHL6811182993
2003–04Colorado AvalancheNHL13213181100027
2005–06Florida PanthersNHL76172239104
2006–07Florida PanthersNHL8113223594
2007–08Tampa Bay LightningNHL6010112177
2008–09Tampa Bay LightningNHL1802210
2008–09Norfolk AdmiralsAHL24312158
2008–09Columbus Blue JacketsNHL60112
NHL totals1092214354568163840871582

International

YearTeamEvent GPGAPtsPIM
1993CanadaWJC72246
1997CanadaWC1105514
1998CanadaWC41014
Senior totals1515618
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 11 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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