
Las Vegas' Gulutzan Receives John Brophy Award
Published on April 9, 2006 under ECHL (ECHL) News Release
PRINCETON, N.J. - The ECHL announced on Sunday that Glen Gulutzan of
the Las Vegas Wranglers is the 2005-06 recipient of the John Brophy Award.
The annual award is presented to the ECHL coach adjudged to have
contributed the most to his team's success as selected in a vote of league
coaches. The trophy is named for John Brophy, who won a record three ECHL
titles with Hampton Roads in 1991, 1992 and 1998.
The only coach in Wranglers history, Gulutzan led his team to a 53-13-6
record and a second place finish overall with 112 points. The Wranglers
tied the 1999-2000 Florida Everblades and the 2005-06 Alaska Aces for the
second-most wins in ECHL history and finished with the third-highest point
total in league history. The Wranglers tied the ECHL record for longest
road winning streak with 10 consecutive wins from Nov. 22-Dec. 31 and tied
the third-longest winning streak in league history with 12 wins in a row
from Dec. 3-30. Las Vegas set team records with 53 wins, 28 home wins and
25 road wins.
In their inaugural season in 2004-05, the Wranglers finished second in the
division at 43-22-7 and lost in five games to eventual champion Idaho in
the Kelly Cup Playoffs. Gulutzan is 127-68-21 in three seasons behind the
bench for Las Vegas. Before becoming the head coach for Las Vegas, Gulutzan
was a player-assistant coach for Fresno of the West Coast Hockey League for
four seasons, earning All-WCHL honors in 1999 and 2000 and helping the
Falcons capture the championship in 2002 and reach Game 7 of the finals in
2003.
Jeff Pyle of Gwinnett finished second in the voting followed by
Davis Payne of Alaska. Gwinnett was 50-15-7 and finished first in
the American Conference and third overall with 107 points. The Gladiators
tied the 2004-05 Pensacola Ice Pilots for the sixth-highest point total in
ECHL history and became only the ninth team in league history to win 50
games. Gwinnett set team records for wins (50), home wins (29) and road
wins (21). Alaska was 53-12-7 and won the Brabham Cup as the regular season
point champion with 113 points. The Aces finished with the second-highest
point total in ECHL history and tied the 1999-2000 Florida Everblades and
the 2005-06 Las Vegas Wranglers for the second-most wins in league history.
The John Brophy Award is named in honor of John Brophy. Brophy coached more
seasons than any other coach in ECHL history with Hampton Roads from
1989-2000 and Wheeling from 2001-03, compiling a career record of
480-323-79 in the regular season and 55-39 in the postseason. Hampton Roads
reached the postseason in each of his 11 seasons behind the bench, winning
back-to-back titles in 1991 and 1992 and an ECHL record third title in
1998. His three ECHL titles are the most in league history and he is also
the all-time leader among ECHL coaches in regular season games (878) and
regular season wins (480) and postseason games (94) and wins (55). Brophy
ranks second all-time in professional hockey to only the legendary Scotty
Bowman. After a 20-year playing career with several different minor league
teams, Brophy began his coaching career with the Long Island Cougars (NAHL)
in 1973-74. The following season he moved to Hampton Roads to coach the
Hampton Gulls (SHL). He guided the Gulls from 1974-77 and in 1977-78 he was
behind the bench when the Gulls moved to the American Hockey League. When
the Gulls ceased operations, Brophy moved to the Birmingham Bulls where he
garnered WHA Coach of the Year honors. Brophy led the Montreal Canadiens
affiliate, the Nova Scotia Voyageurs from 1981-84. Brophy served as an
assistant coach with the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1984-85 and was named head
coach of the Maple Leafs minor league club, the St. Catherines Saints the
next season. The next year, Brophy took over as head coach of the Maple
Leafs until 1988-89.
ECHL John Brophy Award Winners
2005-06 Glen Gulutzan, Las Vegas Wranglers
2004-05 Nick Vitucci, Toledo Storm
2003-04 Pat Bingham, Wheeling Nailers
2002-03 Claude Noel, Toledo Storm
2001-02 Dave Farrish, Louisiana IceGators
2000-01 Troy Ward, Trenton Titans
1999-00 Bob Ferguson, Florida Everblades
1998-99 Bob Ferguson, Florida Everblades
1997-98 Chris Nilan, Chesapeake IceBreakers
1996-97 Brian McCutcheon, Columbus Chill
1995-96 Roy Sommer, Richmond Renegades
1994-95 Jim Playfair, Dayton Bombers
1993-94 Barry Smith, Knoxville Cherokees
1992-93 Kurt Kleinendorst, Raleigh IceCaps
1991-92 Doug Sauter, Winston-Salem Thunderbirds
1990-91 Don Jackson, Knoxville Cherokees
1989-90 Dave Allison, Virginia Lancers
1988-89 Ron Hansis, Erie Panthers
ECHL Stories from April 9, 2006
- ECHL Transactions - ECHL
- Playoffs Begin At Home On Monday - South Carolina Stingrays
- Royals Announce First Round Playoff Schedule - Reading Royals
- Wranglers Gulutzan named Coach of the Year - Las Vegas Wranglers
- Grizzlies Play First Post-Season Games Since 2003 - Utah Grizzlies
- Grrrowl down Lynx with power play goal - Augusta Lynx
- South Carolina's Fitzsimmons Fined - ECHL
- Las Vegas' Gulutzan Receives John Brophy Award - ECHL
- Checkers end regular season with 3-2 loss - Charlotte Checkers
- ECHL Today - ECHL
- Condors Earn Home Ice in Round One of Kelly Cup Playoffs - Bakersfield Condors
- Powerful finish for the Salmon Kings - Victoria Salmon Kings
- Thunder topples San Diego in 4-2 win, clinches ECHL attendance crown - Stockton Thunder
- Falcons Enter Playoffs on a Winning Note - Fresno Falcons
- Stockton Thunders Past San Diego, 4-2 - San Diego Gulls
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