peoplepill id: willi-plett
WP
Paraguay Canada
1 views today
1 views this week
Willi Plett
Canadian ice hockey player

Willi Plett

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Canadian ice hockey player
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Asunción, Paraguay
Age
68 years
Stats
Weight:
205 lbs
Awards
Calder Memorial Trophy
(1977)
Sports Teams
Atlanta Flames
Boston Bruins
Calgary Flames
Minnesota North Stars
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Willi Plett (born June 7, 1955) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey right winger who played 834 games in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Atlanta Flames, Calgary Flames, Minnesota North Stars and Boston Bruins.He was a fifth-round selection of the Atlanta Flames in the 1975 NHL Amateur Draft, 80th overall.Plett was a member of the Tulsa Oilers' Adams Cup championship team in 1975–76 and won the Calder Memorial Trophy in 1977 as the NHL's top rookie. He transferred with the Flames franchise to Calgary in 1980 and a 1982 trade sent him to Minnesota where he played five seasons.Plett retired in 1988 following one season in Boston.

Early life

Plett's parents, who had lived in the Soviet Union and then Germany, fled to South America to escape the Second World War.They settled in Asunción, Paraguay, where he was born on June 7, 1955.His family moved to Canada one year later, settling in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario.

Plett first played organized hockey at the age of 12 and played junior hockey near his hometown. He played three years in the St. Catharines Black Hawks system, but left the team midway through the 1974–75 Ontario Major Junior Hockey League season following a dispute with coach Hap Emms, joining the tier II Niagara Falls Flyers.His playing style was comparable to a modern power forward, as Plett combined scoring ability with physical play and a willingness to fight.The Atlanta Flames selected him with their fifth round selection, 80th overall, at the 1975 NHL Amateur Draft.

Playing career

The Flames assigned Plett to their minor league affiliate, the Tulsa Oilers of the Central Hockey League (CHL), for the 1975–76 season where developed under the team's coach, and former NHL enforcer, Orland Kurtenbach. He scored 30 goals in 73 games, added 163 penalty minutes, and helped the Oilers win the Adams Cup as CHL champions. Plett also made his NHL debut during the season, appearing in four games with the Flames.

Plett was returned to Tulsa to begin the 1976–77 season where he scored 12 points in 14 games. He spent the majority of the campaign in Atlanta, appearing in 64 games with the Flames. He scored 33 goals and 23 assists for the Flames, enough to win the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL's rookie of the year. He scored 22 goals in 1977–78 and 23 in 1978–79 and amassed nearly 400 penalty minutes over those two seasons as he established a reputation as an enforcer who could also score. Plett scored only 13 goals in 1979–80, but set a Flames' franchise record with 231 penalty minutes.

Plett transferred with the franchise when it relocated to Canada to become the Calgary Flames in 1980–81. Playing on the Flames' top line alongside Kent Nilsson and Guy Chouinard, Plett enjoyed his greatest season statistically, setting career highs with 38 goals, 68 points and 239 penalty minutes. He established himself as a fan favourite in Calgary, and shared the team playoff scoring lead with Bob MacMillan with eight goals as the Flames reached the semi-finals of the Stanley Cup playoffs. His offensive production fell to 21 goals in 1981–82, a season in which Plett became an outspoken critic of head coach Al MacNeil.The Flames replaced MacNeil as coach following the season, but also chose to trade Plett in a June 7, 1982 trade.He was sent to the Minnesota North Stars in exchange for Steve Christoff and Bill Nyrop, both teams also exchanged draft picks.

The NHL suspended Plett for eight games early in his first season with the North Stars after he was given a match penalty for slashing Detroit Red Wings goaltender Greg Stefan in the head. He scored 25 goals on the season but he recorded 19 fewer points than the year before and his 170 penalty minutes was his lowest total since his rookie season. He scored only 15 goals and 38 points in 1983–84 and quarreled with coach Bill Mahoney over playing time.Plett received more time after the two resolved their differences and he re-focused on the physical side of his game which had been lacking in the previous few seasons. He finished the season with a career high 319 penalty minutes. Plett was dogged by injuries in his following three seasons, missing time due to a groin injury and injuring his shoulders on several occasions.His offensive production decreased each year, falling to 11 points by 1986–87.

The North Stars traded Plett to the New York Rangers, in exchange for Pat Price, on September 7, 1987. He never played a game for New York, however, as the Boston Bruins took him in the waiver draft prior to the season's start.Plett appeared in 65 games for the Bruins in 1987–88, scoring two goals, five points and recording 170 penalty minutes. He appeared in 17 playoff games, scoring six points, as the Bruins reached the 1988 Stanley Cup Finals before losing to the Edmonton Oilers.Plett retired following the season.

Personal life

Plett returned to the Atlanta area following his retirement.He opened Willi Plett's Sports Park, now out of business, a golf course and theme park in Woodstock, Georgia. Afterwards, he worked at his son's landscaping business.

Career statistics

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1974–75St. Catharines Black HawksOMJHL22681463411242
1975–76Tulsa OilersCHL76302050163954921
1975–76Atlanta FlamesNHL40000
1976–77Tulsa OilersCHL14841268
1976–77Atlanta FlamesNHL64332356123310119
1977–78Atlanta FlamesNHL78222143171
1978–79Atlanta FlamesNHL74232043213210129
1979–80Atlanta FlamesNHL76131932231410115
1980–81Calgary FlamesNHL7838306823915841289
1981–82Calgary FlamesNHL78213657288312339
1982–83Minnesota North StarsNHL71251439170913438
1983–84Minnesota North StarsNHL731523383161662851
1984–85Minnesota North StarsNHL47141428157936967
1985–86Minnesota North StarsNHL5910717231501145
1986–87Minnesota North StarsNHL676511263
1987–88Boston BruinsNHL652351701724674
NHL totals834222215437257283242246466
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 29 Mar 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Willi Plett is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Reference sources
References
Willi Plett
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes