
Brust Named Rbk X-Pulse/AHL Goaltender of the Month
April 18, 2008 - ECHL (ECHL) News Release
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. - The American Hockey League announced that
former Reading and current Houston goaltender Barry
Brust has been named the Rbk X-Pulse/AHL Goaltender of the Month
for April. The 24 year old helped Houston secure a berth in the Calder Cup
Playoffs after going 3-2-0 with a shutout, a goals-against average of 1.22
and a save percentage of .948 in five games.
The ECHL has affiliations with 26 of the 29 teams in the AHL, marking the
seventh consecutive season that it has had affiliations with 20 or more
teams in the AHL. In the last six seasons the ECHL has had more call ups to
the AHL than all other professional leagues combined with more than 2,300
call ups involving more than 1,200 players. In each of the last three
seasons there have been more than 225 players who have played in both the
ECHL and the AHL in the same season. The AHL has 10 former ECHL coaches who
are head coaches and 14 others who are assistant coaches while almost 500
players with ECHL experience have played in the league this season.
In his rookie season in 2004-05, Brust was second in the ECHL with a
goals-against average of 1.96 while going 27-9-4 with four shutouts and a
save percentage of .928 in 42 regular season games for Reading. In the
Kelly Cup Playoffs he was 4-4 and finished second with a goals-against
average of 1.74 and two shutouts while ranking third with a save percentage
of .943 and fifth with 233 saves and 481 minutes. He was 3-3-0 with a
goals-against average of 3.00 and a save percentage of .906 in six games
for the Royals in 2005-06 while going 19-14-1 with two shutouts, a
goals-against average of 2.71 and a save percentage of .916 in 35 games for
Manchester.
Seven times in the last eight years the winner of the AHL Coach of the
Year award has been a former ECHL coach including the last three selections
with Scott
Gordon, Mike
Haviland and Kevin
Dineen. Former ECHL coaches won the award four consecutive years from
2001-04 with Don
Granato, Bruce
Cassidy, Geoff
Ward and Claude
Noel. The first former ECHL coach to win the award was current Carolina
Hurricanes head coach Peter
Laviolette in 1999.
For the 18th year in a row in 2007 there was a former ECHL player on the
Calder Cup champion as Hamilton had a record 12 players with ECHL
experience on its roster.
Former ECHL players won the CCM/AHL Player of the Month award in November
(Martin St. Pierre), December
(Pascal Pelletier) and January
(Grant Stevenson). Trevor
Smith, who played in the ECHL with Utah this season, was the Rbk
Edge/AHL Rookie of the Month for January
while John
Curry, who played this year for both Las Vegas and Wheeling, was the
winner in December.
The Rbk Hockey/AHL Player of the Week award was won eight times by
former ECHL players.
ECHL
Celebrating its 20th Anniversary in 2007-08, the ECHL is the Premier 'AA'
Hockey League and the third-longest tenured professional hockey league
behind only the National Hockey League and the American Hockey League.
ECHL began in 1988-89 with five teams in four states and has grown to be a
coast-to-coast league with 25 teams playing 900 games in 17 states and
British Columbia in 2007-08.
The league officially changed its name to ECHL on May
19, 2003.
The ECHL has affiliations with 26 of the 30 teams in the NHL in 2007-08,
marking the 11th consecutive season that the league has had affiliations
with at least 20 teams in the NHL.
There have been 355
former ECHL players who have gone on to play in the NHL after playing in
the ECHL, including 99 in the last three seasons. There have been 210
former ECHL players who have played their first game in the NHL in the past
seven seasons.
There are 15 coaches in the NHL who have ECHL experience including former
Wheeling coach Peter Laviolette, who is head coach of the Carolina
Hurricanes, and former Mississippi coach Bruce
Boudreau, who is head coach of the Washington Capitals.
The ECHL is represented for the seventh consecutive year on the National
Hockey League championship team in 2007 with Anaheim assistant coach Dave
Farrish, players Francois Beauchemin and George Parros and broadcasters
John Ahlers and Steve Carroll.
The ECHL has affiliations with 26 of the 29 teams in the American Hockey
League in 2007-08 and for the past 18 years there has been an ECHL player
on the Calder Cup champion.
In each of the last two seasons there have been more than 225 players who
have played in both the ECHL and the AHL and there were over 800 call-ups
involving more than 500 players. In the last five seasons the ECHL has had
more call-ups to the AHL than all other professional leagues combined with
over 2,000 call-ups involving more than 1,000 players since 2002-03.
Further information on the ECHL is available from its website at ECHL.com.
• Discuss this story on the ECHL message board...
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