
Former Bomber Boguniecki Wins AHL Award
Published on March 14, 2007 under ECHL (ECHL) News Release
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. - The American Hockey League announced that Bridgeport
center Eric Boguniecki, who played for the Dayton Bombers as a rookie, has
been named the CCM Vector/AHL Player of the Week for the period
ending Mar. 11.
Boguniecki assisted on the game-tying goal in the third period and
converted his shootout attempt in a 3-2 shootout loss to Wilkes-Barre
Scranton on Mar. 9 and then he scored a goal and had three assists in the
third period of a 5-4 win against Philadelphia on Mar. 10. He finished the
weekend by scoring his first hat trick in more than five years and adding
an assist in a 5-4 win against Hershey.
In his first professional season in 1997-98, Boguniecki scored 37 points
(19g-18a) in 26 games with Dayton before being called up to Fort Wayne of
the International Hockey League where he had 12 points (4g-8a) in 35
regular season games and three points (1g-2a) in four postseason games. In
2001-02, Boguniecki became the third ECHL player to be named Most Valuable
Player of the American Hockey League. Former Charlotte goaltender Jason
LaBarbera received the award in 2003-04 to become the fourth ECHL player to
earn the honor joining Martin Brochu in 1999-2000 and Brad Smyth in
1995-96.
Acquired by the New York Islanders from Columbus on Oct. 25, 2006,
Boguniecki leads the Sound Tigers with nine power-play goals and five
game-winning goals and is second on the team with 21 goals and 49 points in
44 games.
Other nominees for the CCM Vector/AHL Player of the Week award
included former Florida and current Albany center Keith Aucoin, former
Toledo and current Grand Rapids right wing Jamie Tardif, former Louisville
and current Houston goaltender Dieter Kochan, former Trenton and current
Milwaukee right wing Pat Leahy and former Pee Dee and current Peoria right
wing Mike Glumac.
Boguniecki is the second former ECHL player in a row and the 10th this
season to win the AHL award. He joins joining former Roanoke and Wheeling
and current Manitoba left wing
Jason Jaffray (Oct. 30), former Wheeling and Idaho and current Portland
center
Zenon Konopka (Nov. 13), Former Alaska and Las Vegas and current Peoria
left wing
Charles Linglet (Dec. 4), former Jackson and current Chicago center
Cory Larose (Dec. 18), former Jackson and current Hershey left wing
Quintin Laing (Dec. 26) and former Charlotte and current Hartford
goaltender Al
Montoya (Jan. 2) and
Dan LaCosta (Feb. 5) and former Toledo and current Grand Rapids center
Matt Ellis (Feb. 19) and former Alaska and current San Antonio center
Alex Leavitt (Mar. 5).
The ECHL has affiliations with 24 of the 27 teams in the American Hockey
League and there are 86 players under contract to AHL teams who have played
in the ECHL this season. For the past 17 years there has been an ECHL
player on the Calder Cup champion and the ECHL has had more players called
up to the AHL than all other professional leagues combined each of the past
four seasons with 1,646 call ups involving almost 1,000 players.
Former ECHL goaltenders have been named as the Rbk X-Pulse/AHL
Goaltender of the Month each of the last four months.
Al Montoya, who played for Charlotte and now plays for Hartford, won
the award for February while another former Checker
Jason LaBarbera, who now plays for Manchester, won the award for
January.
Jonathan Boutin, who was an ECHL All-Star with Johnstown and now plays
for Springfield, won in December, while
Jaroslav Halak, who played for Long Beach and now plays for Montreal in
the NHL, won for November when he was playing for Hamilton.
ECHL
The league officially changed its name to ECHL on May 19, 2003.
The Premier 'AA' Hockey League, the ECHL has affiliations with 25 of the 30
teams in the National Hockey League in 2006-07, marking 10th consecutive
season that the league has had affiliations with at least 20 teams in the
NHL.
There have been 24 former ECHL players who have played their first NHL game
this season, including 14 since January.
There have been
327 former ECHL players who have gone on to play in the NHL after
playing in the ECHL, including a record 47 in 2005-06.
There have been 182 former ECHL players who have played their first game in
the NHL in the past five seasons and 103 former ECHL players have skated in
the NHL this season.
More than 100 players under contract to NHL teams have played in the ECHL
this season.
The ECHL was represented for the sixth consecutive year on the National
Hockey League championship team, including Carolina Hurricanes head coach
Peter Laviolette, who is the first ECHL coach to win the Stanley Cup.
There have been 24 ECHL players who have played their first NHL game this
season: former Greenville and Richmond right wing
Krys Barch (Dallas on Jan. 15), former Mississippi defenseman
Sheldon Brookbank (Nashville on Feb. 6), former Reading goaltender
Barry Brust (Los Angeles on Nov. 30), former Wheeling left wing
Daniel Carcillo (Phoenix on Mar. 3), former Toledo center Matt Ellis
(Detroit on Dec. 18), former Wheeling defenseman
Drew Fata (New York Islanders on Feb. 4), former Reading defenseman
Jeff Finger (Colorado on Feb. 20), former Bakersfield and Reading
goaltender
Yutaka Fukufuji (Los Angeles on Jan. 13), former Charlotte defenseman
Daniel Girardi (New York Rangers on Jan. 27), former Long Beach
goaltender
Jaroslav Halak (Montreal on Feb. 18), former Trenton goaltender
Martin Houle (Philadelphia on Dec. 13), former Alaska left wing D.J.
King (St. Louis on Oct. 5), former Wheeling defenseman
David Koci (Chicago on Mar. 10), former Florida center
Drew Larman (Florida on Nov. 13), former Florida defenseman
Martin Lojek (Florida on Feb. 3), former Toledo goaltender
Joey MacDonald (Detroit on Oct. 19), former Pensacola center
Kris Newbury (Toronto on Dec. 23), former South Carolina and Reading
center
Rich Peverley (Nashville on Mar. 4), former Augusta right wing
Pierre Parenteau (Chicago on Feb. 7), former Columbia right wing Jesse
Schultz (Vancouver on Nov. 28), former ECHL All-Star goaltender
Mike Smith (Dallas on Oct. 21), former Reading left wing
Shay Stephenson (Los Angeles on Mar. 1), former Augusta goaltender Mike
Wall (Anaheim on Nov. 26) and former Stockton defenseman
Bryan Young (Edmonton on Mar. 9).
In 2005-06 the ECHL and its member teams contributed more than $2.3 million
for charity and relief funds, including those benefiting victims of
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, while also making thousands of appearances by
players, coaches, team personnel and mascots at schools, hospitals,
libraries and charity functions.
Further information on the ECHL is available from its website at ECHL.com.
ECHL Stories from March 14, 2007
- Royals Pull Out Overtime Win In Cincinnati, 4-3 - Reading Royals
- 'Blades end home stand with 5-2 loss to South Carolina - Florida Everblades
- Reading Takes 4-3 OT Win From Cyclones - Cincinnati Cyclones
- Stingrays Sink Everblades 5-2 - South Carolina Stingrays
- UAA stand-out Bourne signs with Aces - Alaska Aces
- ECHL Transactions - ECHL
- Condors All-Star Forward Griffith Out, Sidelined Four-To-Six Weeks - Bakersfield Condors
- Crombeen Joins Steelheads - Idaho Steelheads
- ECHL.com Has Record Highs In January, February - ECHL
- Westlund to Charlotte, Holt to Hartford - Charlotte Checkers
- U.S. Olympian Honored at Bombers Game - Dayton Bombers
- Winnik Returns To San Antonio - Phoenix RoadRunners
- Ice Pilots gain one, lose one with Sound Tigers - Pensacola Ice Pilots
- Everblades see changes to roster - Florida Everblades
- Miles Loaned to Hershey - Columbia Inferno
- NHL Network Game Of The Week Is Pensacola At Florida - ECHL
- Former Bomber Boguniecki Wins AHL Award - ECHL
- ECHL Today - ECHL
- Falcons announce Fire and Ice Night - Fresno Falcons
- Hodson Records Second Straight Shutout As Condors Rout RoadRunners, 6-0 - Bakersfield Condors
- Wranglers clip Falcons in shootout, 5-4 - Las Vegas Wranglers
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