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Ron Duguay
Canadian ice hockey player

Ron Duguay

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Canadian ice hockey player
From
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
Age
66 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Ronald Duguay (born July 6, 1957) is a retired Canadian professional ice hockey player and coach who played 12 seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) from 1977 through 1989, and served four seasons as a minor league coach. He currently appears as an in-studio analyst during MSG Network's coverage of the New York Rangers. He was born in the Sudbury region of northern Ontario. As a child, he resided in Val Caron, Ontario. He played junior hockey for the hometown Sudbury Wolves of the Ontario Hockey League.

NHL career

Duguay was drafted 13th overall by the New York Rangers in the 1977 NHL Amateur Draft. He played 864 career NHL games, scoring 274 goals and 346 assists for 620 points.

New York Rangers

After being drafted in 1977, Duguay made the jump directly from junior hockey to the NHL, with 20 goals in his rookie year. Duguay played his first six seasons in New York, where he was known as much for his long hair and flashy behaviour as he was for his play on the ice.

With the Rangers, Duguay set a team record, for the fastest goal at the start of a game, at 9 seconds, on April 6, 1980 against the Philadelphia Flyers. Suffering injuries, his production did not progress as hoped, but after playing for Team Canada in the 1981 Canada Cup, his play improved, and in 1981–82 led the Rangers in scoring with 40 goals. That same season, he played in the NHL All-Star Game, representing the Rangers on the Wales Conference squad. In 1982–83 Duguay's numbers dipped, and he only scored 19 goals. Rangers coach Herb Brooks clashed with Duguay over his play and popularity in New York's night life, and on June 13, 1983 Duguay, Eddie Mio and Eddie Johnstone were traded to the Detroit Red Wings, for Willie Huber, Mark Osborne and Mike Blaisdell.

During Duguay's time with the Rangers, he took part in some of team president Sonny Werblin's schemes to make the Rangers more hip and visible in disco-era New York City. This includes singing on "Hockey Sock Rock", written by Alan Thicke. The song featured vocals by Duguay, Phil Esposito, Pat Hickey, Dave Maloney and John Davidson. It was released as a 45, as Platinum Records 1217–75 in 1979.

Detroit Red Wings

Playing in Detroit, Duguay's career was revitalized, and in 1983–84 he was third on the Red Wings with 33 goals, and second on the team with 47 assists, which placed him third overall on the team for points, with 80. In 1984–85 he was second on the Red Wings in all three categories, with 38 goals, 51 assists and 89 total points, the best offensive season of his career. At the trade deadline in 1985–86 Duguay was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins for Doug Shedden.

Pittsburgh Penguins

Duguay played parts of only two seasons in Pittsburgh, and his production was never as good again as it had been in New York or Detroit. On January 21, 1987, Pittsburgh traded Duguay to his original team, the Rangers, in exchange for Chris Kontos, reuniting Duguay with former teammate, and then-Rangers general manager, Phil Esposito.

Return to the Rangers

Duguay re-signed with the Rangers in the summer of 1987. It was towards the end of his second stint with the Rangers that Duguay was sent to the minors for the first time, playing two games with the Colorado Rangers of the IHL.

Los Angeles Kings

After briefly returning to the Rangers, Duguay finished his NHL career with the Los Angeles Kings in 1988–89. An attempted comeback with the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1990, as well as one with the Tampa Bay Lightning, where Phil Esposito was the general manager in 1992 was not successful.

Minor league career as player and coach

San Diego Gulls

Duguay's career continued in the minor leagues for a few years after his final NHL season. He played 22 games in Europe with Mannheim ERC (German Bundesliga) during the 1989–90 season, then returned to the United States where he played two seasons in the IHL with the San Diego Gulls. Following the 1991–92 season he retired, but three years later resumed playing, again, for the San Diego Gulls, who were now members of the WCHL. Duguay explained that he was inspired to return to hockey to help the then injury-riddled team; he also said that he wanted his children, who had been too young to see him play in the NHL, to see him in action.

Duguay finished the 1995–96 season with the Gulls, scoring eight goals and nine assists in only 12 games. Over the next two seasons, Duguay played in just five games for the Gulls. In 1998–99 he jumped to the Jacksonville Lizard Kings of the (ECHL), but skated in just one game before commencing his second retirement.

Jacksonville Barracudas

In 2003, he joined the Jacksonville Barracudas, then playing in the Atlantic Coast Hockey League. Duguay played six games as a Barracudas forward, then took over as the team's head coach. In the 2003–2004 season Duguay led the Barracudas, now playing in the World Hockey Association 2, to the league's best record and playoff championship. In 2004 the Barracudas joined the newly formed Southern Professional Hockey League. With Duguay as coach, the Barracudas' overall record over 314 seasons was 92–92–0–3 with a 6–3 playoff record.

Duguay resigned as coach after an unsuccessful 2005–06 season, in which more than 50 different players left the team as it finished with a 15–39–0–2 record. On his resignation, he told the Florida Times-Union that he was "tired."

Career statistics

  Regular Season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1973–74Sudbury WolvesOHA592020407340334
1974–75Sudbury WolvesOMJHL6426527843151161719
1975–76Sudbury WolvesOMJHL614292134101171192037
1976–77Sudbury WolvesOMJHL61436610910964375
1977–78New York RangersNHL712020404331122
1978–79New York RangersNHL79273663351854911
1979–80New York RangersNHL7328225037952711
1980–81New York RangersNHL501721388314891716
1981–82New York RangersNHL72403676821051631
1982–83New York RangersNHL7219254458922428
1983–84Detroit Red WingsNHL803347803442352
1984–85Detroit Red WingsNHL803851895131017
1985–86Detroit Red WingsNHL6719294826
1985–86Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL1367136
1986–87Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL405131830
1986–87New York RangersNHL3491221962024
1987–88New York RangersNHL4444823
1987–88Colorado RangersIHL20000
1987–88Los Angeles KingsNHL152681720000
1988–89Los Angeles KingsNHL707172448110006
1989–90Mannheim ERC1.GBun221171838301120
1990–91San Diego GullsIHL5115243987
1991–92San Diego GullsIHL601818363240110
1995–96San Diego GullsWCHL1289171070222
1996–97San Diego GullsWCHL21120
1997–98San Diego GullsWCHL30332
1998–99Jacksonville Lizard KingsECHL10000
2002–03Jacksonville BarracudasACHL61342
2008–09Brooklyn AcesEPHL10110
2008–09Jersey RockhoppersEPHL10000
NHL totals86027434662058289312253118

Post-hockey career

Since 2007, Duguay has been an analyst for MSG Network's television coverage of Rangers games, and also appears regularly on MSG's weekly Hockey Night Live! program.

On March 21 and 22, 2009, nearly six years after playing his final professional game, Duguay played two games in the EPHL, one game each with the Brooklyn Aces and the Jersey Rockhoppers, to raise money for the Garden of Dreams Foundation, a nonprofit organization associated with Madison Square Garden. Duguay signed a waiver and played his game with the Brooklyn Aces without a helmet, which allowed his hair to flow free as it did when he played in the NHL. With 37 seconds left in regulation, he assisted on the game-tying goal, but the Aces would lose 4–3 in overtime.

In 2009, Duguay competed in the first season of the Battle of the Blades skating competition on CBC Television, partnered with Barbara Underhill. The charity he skated for was World Vision Canada.

The Sudbury Wolves have retired his jersey. In 2009, Duguay was ranked No. 49 on the all-time list of New York Rangers in the book 100 Ranger Greats (John Wiley & Sons). On New Year's Eve 2011, Duguay participated in the 2012 Winter Classic Alumni game pitting legends of the Rangers against the legends of the Philadelphia Flyers. Less than two minutes into the game, Duguay went in on a breakaway on Flyer's great Bernie Parent in goal and, in an act of class, gently shot the puck into the 65-year-old goaltender's pads.

Personal life

In the NHL, Duguay was noted for his long curly hair which would blow behind him as he skated without a helmet. He and teammates Phil Esposito, Dave Maloney and Anders Hedberg appeared in a TV commercial for Sasson designer jeans.

On December 1, 1983, Duguay married California model Robin Bobo; the couple had two daughters before the marriage ended in divorce. In the 1990s, he married former fashion model Kim Alexis. After marrying Alexis, Duguay moved to Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

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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