
Former ECHL Goaltender Quick Named NHL First Star
Published on February 15, 2009 under ECHL (ECHL) News Release
NEW YORK - The National Hockey League announced that former Reading Royals
and current Los Angeles Kings goaltender Jonathan
Quick, Detroit Red Wings right wing Marian Hossa and Washington
Capitals defenseman Mike Green were named the NHL's 'Three Stars' for the
week ending Feb. 8.
Quick stopped 95 of 100 shots while posting three road wins in a row to
improve to 10-6-0 with a goals-against average of 2.38 and a save
percentage of .920. He registered his third shutout of the season with 29
saves in a 1-0 win at Ottawa on Feb. 3 while turning aside 41 shots in a
5-4 win at Washington on Feb. 5 and making 25 stops in a 3-1 victory at New
Jersey on Feb. 7.
Selected in the third round (72nd overall) by Los Angeles in the 2005
National Hockey League Entry Draft and under NHL contract to the Kings,
Quick began the 2007-08 season in Reading and was 7-5-1 with a
goals-against average of 2.46 and a save percentage of .907 in 13 games
when he was reassigned by the Kings to Manchester of the American Hockey
League on Nov. 18, 2007. He was 1-2-0 with a goals-against average of 2.67
and a save percentage of .909 in three games for the Monarchs before being
recalled to Los Angeles on Dec. 2, 2007. He made his NHL debut on Dec. 6,
2007 making 15 saves in an 8-2 win against the Buffalo Sabres.
Quick
joined ECHL All-Star and current Tampa Bay Lightning goaltender
Mike Smith in the ECHL record book on Oct. 25 when he recorded his
first win, his first shutout and scored his first goal in the same game, a
3-0 win at Pensacola on Oct. 24. The goal was scored at 19:25 of the third
period when the puck rolled the length of the ice and into the Pensacola
net which was empty because goaltender Mike
Brodeur had been pulled for an extra attacker. Quick was the last
player to touch the puck, so he was credited with the unassisted goal.
Quick is the ninth goaltender in league history to score a goal and the
first since Trevor Koenig of Atlantic City at Wheeling on Mar. 2, 2005.
Corwin Saurdiff of Hampton Roads was the first ECHL goaltender to score a
goal on Mar. 18, 1995 against Charlotte. Charlotte's Nick Vitucci, Erie's
Olie Sundstrom and South Carolina's Sean Gauthier all accomplished the feat
during the 1995-96 season and Toledo's Mark Bernard scored a goal on Mar.
27, 2001 against Johnstown.
The Premier 'AA' Hockey League, the ECHL has affiliations with 24 of the 30
teams in the NHL, marking the 12th consecutive season that the league has
had affiliations with at least 20 teams. The South Carolina Stingrays are
the ECHL affiliate of Washington and the Idaho Steelheads are the ECHL
affiliate of Dallas.
There have been 41former ECHL players who have made their debut this season
and 140 have played their first NHL game in the last four seasons,
including a record 47 who made their debut in 2005-06. Seventy-two former
ECHL players were on NHL opening-day rosters this season and 333 ECHL
players attended NHL training camps, including 139 who played in the league
last season.
Former ECHL coaches working as head coaches in the NHL are Scott
Gordon of the New York Islanders and Bruce
Boudreau of the Washington Capitals. Boudreau, who coached Mississippi
for three seasons winning the Kelly Cup championship in 1999, was named NHL
Coach of the Year in 2007-08 becoming the first former ECHL coach to
receive the award. Peter Laviolette, who began his coaching career with the
Wheeling Nailers, led Carolina Hurricanes to the Stanley Cup in 2006. There
are 18 assistant coaches in the NHL who were players or coaches in the
ECHL.
The ECHL is represented for the eighth consecutive year on the National
Hockey League championship team in 2008 by
Aaron Downey of the Detroit Red Wings.
Forty-one ECHL players have made their NHL debut this season: former Idaho
Steelheads right wing Jay
Beagle (Washington on Feb. 11), former Wheeling Nailers and ECHL
All-Star defenseman Paul
Bissonnette (Pittsburgh on Oct. 4), former Stockton Thunder and ECHL
All-Star right wing Troy
Bodie (Anaheim on Jan. 16), former Bakersfield Condors center Alexandre
Bolduc (Vancouver on Nov. 27), former Florida Everblades defenseman Brett
Carson (Carolina on Dec. 7), former South Carolina Stingrays defenseman
Sean
Collins (Washington on Dec. 6), former Las Vegas Wranglers and Wheeling
Nailers goaltender John
Curry (Pittsburgh on Nov. 26), former Greenville Grrrowl goaltender
Jeff Drouin-Deslauriers (Edmonton on Oct. 17), former Johnstown Chiefs
center Andre
Deveaux (Toronto on Nov. 27), former Dayton Bombers center Philippe
Dupuis (Colorado on Dec. 12), former Gwinnett Gladiators left wing Chris
Durno (Colorado on Jan. 18), former Gwinnett Gladiators right wing Pat
Dwyer, former Columbus Cottonmouths and Tallahassee Tiger Sharks left
wing Mitch
Fritz (New York Islanders on Oct. 30), former South Carolina Stingrays
right wing Andrew
Gordon (Washington on Dec. 23), former Augusta Lynx and Mississippi Sea
Wolves goaltender Riku
Helenius (Tampa Bay on Jan. 30), former Charlotte Checkers center Dwight
Helminen (Carolina on Oct. 28), former Las Vegas Wranglers goaltender
Brent
Krahn (Dallas on Feb. 14), former Trenton Devils right wing Pierre-Luc
Letourneau-Leblond (New Jersey on Oct. 22), former Gwinnett Gladiators
defenseman Scott
Lehman (Atlanta on Dec. 18), former Charlotte Checkers defenseman Steve
MacIntyre (Edmonton on Oct. 15), former Florida Everblades left wing Kenndal
McArdle (Florida on Dec. 2), two-time All-Star and former Las Vegas
Wranglers goaltender Mike
McKenna (Tampa Bay on Feb. 3), former All-Star and Wheeling Nailers
center Kurtis
McLean (New York Islanders on Jan. 19), former South Carolina Stingrays
and ECHL All-Star goaltender Michal
Neuvirth (Washingtons on Feb. 14), former Phoenix RoadRunners and
Wheeling Nailers center Cam
Paddock (St. Louis on Nov. 14), former Las Vegas Wranglers defenseman
Adam
Pardy (Calgary on Oct. 9), former Idaho Steelheads left wing Warren
Peters (Calgary on Dec. 7), former Charlotte Checkers center Jakub
Petruzalek (Carolina on Feb. 5), former Charlotte Checkers defenseman
Corey
Potter (New York Rangers on Dec. 7), former Augusta Lynx defenseman Kevin
Quick (Tampa Bay on Jan. 13), former Charlotte Checkers, Columbia
Inferno and Elmira Jackals defenseman Bryan
Rodney (Carolina on Dec. 11), former Gwinnett Gladiators center Jared
Ross (Philadelphia on Oct. 11), former Alaska Aces goaltender Marek
Schwarz (St. Louis on Oct. 25), former Greenville Grrrowl and Stockton
Thunder center Tim
Sestito (Edmonton on Nov. 26), former Dayton Bombers and Las Vegas
Wranglers defenseman Tyler
Sloan (Washington on Oct. 21), former Utah Grizzlies and ECHL All-Star
center Trevor
Smith (New York Islanders on Dec. 31), former Johnstown Chiefs and
Mississippi Sea Wolves forward Radek
Smolenak (Tampa Bay on Dec. 2), former Augusta Lynx defenseman Brett
Skinner (New York Islanders on Oct. 27), former Las Vegas Wranglers and
ECHL All-Star defenseman Tyson
Strachan (St. Louis on Dec. 18), former Wheeling Nailers right wing Tim
Wallace (Pittsburgh on Dec. 10) and former Idaho Steelheads center Tom
Wandell (Dallas on Dec. 10).
There are 18 former ECHL officials scheduled to work as part of the NHL
officiating team in 2008-09 with referees David
Banfield, Chris
Ciamaga, Ghislain
Hebert, Marc Joannette, Mike Leggo, Wes McCauley, Dean Morton, Dan
O'Rourke, Brian Pochmara, Kevin Pollock, Kyle Rehman, Chris Rooney, Justin
St. Pierre and Ian Walsh and linesmen Steve Barton, Brian Mach, Tim
Nowak and Jay Sharrers. Barton, Joannette, Leggo, McCauley, Nowak, Pollock,
Rooney and Sharrers all worked the 2008 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Premier 'AA' Hockey League Fast Facts
- Watch Games Live on B2 Networks, the "Official
Broadband Broadcast Provider" of the ECHL.
- Watch ECHL Games Around The Clock On ECHL
TV on B2CableTV.com.
- The ECHL celebrated its 20th Anniversary in 2007-08 and is 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 22 teams playing in 16 states and British
Columbia in 2008-09.
- The league officially changed its name from East Coast Hockey League to
ECHL on May
19, 2003.
- ECHL has affiliations with 23 of the 29 teams in the American Hockey
League and for the past 19 years there has been an ECHL player on the
Calder Cup Champion.
- In the last six 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.
ECHL Stories from February 15, 2009
- Ontario sends Thunder to third loss in four games - Stockton Thunder
- Royals Knocked Out By Trenton Power Play, 5-3 - Reading Royals
- Reign rally over Thunder, 3-2 - Ontario Reign
- Gladiators Weekly Update for February 16th - Atlanta Gladiators
- ECHL Transactions - ECHL
- Stingrays Sink Sea Wolves in Overtime 3-2 - South Carolina Stingrays
- Big Third Period Lifts Utah Over Las Vegas 4-1 - Utah Grizzlies
- Power Play Helps Devils to 5-3 Win - Trenton Devils
- Wranglers Fall to Grizzlies 4-1 - Las Vegas Hosts Phoenix This Monday at 2:05 PM - Las Vegas Wranglers
- Chiefs slam Nailers, take first place - Johnstown Chiefs
- Sea Wolves come from behind, take Stingrays to OT, fall 3-2 - Mississippi Sea Wolves
- Gladiators Beat Checkers 2-1 in OT - Atlanta Gladiators
- Charlotte downed in OT by Gladiators - Charlotte Checkers
- Nailers drop weekend finale at Johnstown 5-2 - Wheeling Nailers
- Tonight's Game: Stockton Thunder Vs. Ontario Reign - Stockton Thunder
- Game Preview: Ontario Reign at Stockton Thunder - Ontario Reign
- Nailers Look To End Weekend With Win In Johnstown - Wheeling Nailers
- Turner Reassigned to Gwinnett - Atlanta Gladiators
- Rays Host Mississippi Today at 5 p.m. for Kids Day - South Carolina Stingrays
- Former ECHL Goaltender Quick Named NHL First Star - ECHL
- Krahn, Neuvirth Increase ECHL Players In NHL To 396 - ECHL
- ECHL Today - ECHL
- Royals Complete Road Trip With Win In Elmira, 4-1 - Reading Royals
- Alaska Outlasts Victoria in Shootout - Alaska Aces
- Salmon Kings Slip In Shootout - Victoria Salmon Kings
- Thunder get four points from Urquhart on bobblehead night in front of 7,522 - Stockton Thunder
- Condors quiet Thunder with 5-4 comeback win - Bakersfield Condors
The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff.

