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The Complete Anthology of Penguins Goaltenders, PART TWO: 2005-Present

#31 Sebastien Caron

2002-2006
The Stats: 90 games played, 24-47-12 record with PIT. 4 shutouts, .892 SV%
The Mask: Not bad I guess
The Good: One of the craziest saves you’ll ever see against Philly during Sid’s rookie year
The Bad: Will always be equated with some very dark and awful Pens teams.
The Exit: Pens bought out his contract with the emergence of Fleury and after signing Jocelyn Thibault. Appeared in 5 NHL games after that with Anaheim, Chicago, and Tampa Bay before going to Europe.
Nowadays: No idea. Appears to be back in Canada but his Twitter is pretty barebones

#41 Jocelyn Thibault

2005-2007
The Stats: 38 games played, 8-17-5 record with PIT. 1 shutout, .894 SV%
The Mask: Nothing special
The Good: Even straight guys would have to admit: This is one good looking dude
The Bad: Even for a backup, he was pretty meh
The Exit: Signed with Buffalo in July 2007 during free agency.
Nowadays: Owner and GM of the Sherbrooke Phoenix of the QMJHL

#35 Ty Conklin

2007-2008
The Stats: 33 games played, 18-8-5 record with PIT. 2 shutouts, .923 SV%
The Mask: I’d say it’s one of the better ones of the last 15 years
The Good: WHEW we’re starting to get into some real beauties here. The journeyman was brought up to the NHL in December 2007 when Fleury went down with a high ankle sprain, leaving Conklin and Dany Sabourin in charge of the crease and putting the Pens season on life support. But, he won his first nine starts for Pittsburgh and helped the Pens turn their season around en route to an appearance in the Stanley Cup Final. Also started for Pittsburgh for the inaugural Winter Classic against Buffalo in 2008. He actually is still #1 in franchise SV% of all goalies with at least 30 games played.
The Bad: After losing to the Wings in the 2008 finals, him and Judas Marian Hossa went and signed with them that offseason
The Exit: See above.
Nowadays: Assistant and Goaltending Development Coach for his Alma Mater University of New Hampshire.

#30 Dany Sabourin

2005-2006, 2007-2009
The Stats: 44 games played, 16-18-3 record with PIT. 2 shutouts, .899 SV%
The Mask: Look at this monstrosity. Is that his crying baby on the side?
The Good: He and Conklin guided the Penguins through the aforementioned injury to Fleury.
The Bad: Couldn’t cut it as a backup the following year, posting a pedestrian .898 SV% in the 08-09 season before Shero shipped him off in a trade in January 2009.
The Exit: See above. Traded to Edmonton in a deal for Mathieu Garon
Nowadays: Continued his hockey career in France all the way up until 2017. Is now the goalie coach for the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies of the QMJHL

#32 Mathieu Garon

2009
The Stats: 4 games played, 2-1 record with PIT. .894 SV%
The Mask: Not really a fan of the Blue showing through
The Good: Just now realizing there’s been a ton of Québécois goaltenders for the Penguins (THE BEST YET TO COME OF COURSE). Garon has his name on the Stanley Cup thanks to a mop-up appearance in game 5 of the 2009 Finals in relief of Flower who had given up 5 goals. It was his only appearance in the playoffs that year.
The Bad: Not much to find. His first appearance as a Penguin was a 5-4 loss to Toronto on Jan 31 where he surrendered 5 goals on 26 shots and put the Pens one game above .500 in the standings. Still pretty incredible that that Cup-winning team was out of the playoffs in mid-February until they canned Therrien.
The Exit: Signed with Columbus as a UFA the following off-season.
Nowadays: Assistant Hockey Director of Community Hockey with the Tampa Bay Lightning

#1/#36 John Curry

2008-2010
The Stats: 4 games played, 2-2 record with PIT. .867 SV%
The Mask: About the fifth version already of a cartoon penguins busting through a brick wall
The Good: Appeared in 3 games in the 08-09 season when Flower went out with minor injuries and performed pretty well, getting 2 wins and boasting a .913 SV%
The Bad: His one appearance the following season was a complete disaster and led to the debut of the next guy on our list. After injuries to Fleury and Brent Johnson, Curry got the start against Vancouver in January 2010 and surrendered 5 goals on 14 shots before being yanked in the 2nd period.
The Exit: Never played another game for the NHL Pens. Signed with Hamburg of the DEL in Germany the following offseason, but he did eventually come back to North America and appeared in a handful of NHL games for Minnesota.
Nowadays: No clue. But he shares a name with a British figure skater so that’s annoying.

#40 Alexander Pechurski

2010
The Stats: 1 game played with PIT. 36 Minutes, 13 shots-12 saves
The Mask: Plain white with what looks like some Penguins stickers on it? I’m not even mad, that’s amazing
The Good: The closest thing the Penguins have to EBUGs Scott Foster and David Ayres is Alexander Pechurski. Pechurski was actually drafted 150th overall by Pittsburgh in 2008 and was 19 years old playing for Tri-City of the WHL when he had to dress for the big boy squad on an emergency call-up basis after injuries to Fleury and Brent Johnson. Pechurski backed up the aforementioned Curry for a game in Vancouver in January 2010, and went into the game in the 2nd period after Curry shit the bed. Pechurski performed admirably, stopping 12 of 13 shots and earning third star of the game. He’s also the only Russian goaltender to ever appear in net for the Pens.
The Bad: We had a golden opportunity to see a repeat of Johan Hedberg and have him wear a totally non-matching mask, but alas instead of donning his juniors mask, he wore a plain white generic one.
The Exit: Pechurski never sniffed the NHL ever again. At the end of that season, he left the WHL due to his age and played one season with the Mississippi Riverkings of the CHL. He signed a PTO with the baby Pens in 2011 but didn’t make any appearances and was released by the team later that year. He eventually headed back to Russia, where he spent 5 years in the KHL, mostly in a backup role.
Nowadays: Is still listed on the roster for Metallurg of the Supreme Hockey League, Russias Tier II professional league. He’s appeared in 11 games this year with an .892 SV%

#39 Brad Thiessen

2012
The Stats: 5 games played, 3-1 record with PIT. .858 SV%
The Mask: I don’t get it…”Ice Pond”?
The Good: In his first career start in February 2012 he beat the Blue Jackets on national television.
The Bad: In his 4th ever appearance, he gave up 8 goals on 28 shots in a game against Ottawa
The Exit: Spent the entire following season in WBS. Played in Finland in 13-14 and then back to North America where he’s been bouncing around the AHL and ECHL ever since
Nowadays: Currently still on the roster for the Cleveland Monsters of the AHL. He’s appeared in 8 games this year and has a 3-4 record with an .881 SV%

#1 Brent Johnson

2010-2012
The Stats: 62 games played, 29-18-6 record with PIT. 1 shutout, .907 SV%. Appeared in 3 playoff games but all in mop-up roles and the stats were still ugly.
The Mask: BJ was a big Led Zeppelin fan and always paid tribute to them on his masks
The Good: Capable backup to Flower during the inter-Cup period. Also KOd Rick “Glass Jaw” Dipeitro and answered the bell later than year against career goon and idiot Micheal Haley.
The Bad: Alluded to this earlier, but appeared in 3 playoff games for the Pens, playing a combined 85 minutes and surrendering 7 goals on 24 shots.
The Exit: Pens signed Tomas Vokoun in the 2012 offseason and BJ became a UFA. Unable to find any suitors, he called it a career at the age of 34.
Nowadays: Who knows. His last tweet was congratulating Ovechkin on 700 goals. But to be fair, he did play in Washington with Ovi for a couple years.

#92 Tomas Vokoun

2012-2013
The Stats: 20 games played, 13-4 record with PIT. 3 shutouts, .919 SV%. Appeared in 11 playoff games, 6-5 record with a .933 SV% and 1 shutout.
The Mask: Nothing special
The Good: Unfortunately, Vokoun is barely remembered in PIT, but he put together a really strong season as backup, and then an incredible playoff run. When Fleury fell apart in the playoffs for the 2nd straight season, Bylsma stuck Vokoun in for game 5 of the tied first round series against NYI. Vokoun steadied the ship and pitched a 31 save shutout in game 5, and the Pens won game 6 in OT. He helped defeat Ottawa in 5 games in the 2nd round, and still had a respectable .915 SV% even in the 4-game sweep by Boston in the ECF.
The Bad: This shitty goal allowed against Washington off a nightmare bounce.
The Exit: Extremely unfortunate. Vokoun was signed for another year, but had emergency surgery during the 2013 pre-season when doctors found a blood clot in his pelvis. He never played in the NHL again and announced his retirement in December 2014
Nowadays: Lives in Florida and helps run the Southern Florida Hockey Academy with ex-teammate Olli Jokinen

#1 Thomas Greiss

2014-2015
The Stats: 20 games played, 9-6-3 record with PIT. .908 SV%
The Mask: Actually more impressive than I remembered
The Good: His Pens career is forgettable, mostly because he played on an awful Mike Johnston-led team, but I guess he put up decent enough numbers in a backup role. Also the only ever German goalie to appear for the Pens.
The Bad: When playing with the Islanders the next season, he claimed that PPG Paints Arena was “Pretty dead” and that playing in New York was a much better atmosphere
The Exit: Left after one season and signed with the Islanders.
Nowadays: Still played for the Islanders. Currently has a 16-9-4 record this year with a .913 SV%

#37 Jeff Zatkoff

2013-2016
The Stats: 35 games played, 16-14-3 record with PIT. 1 shutout and .915 SV%. 2 career playoff games played, 1-1 record with a .908 SV%
The Mask: Simple, yet solid
The Good: MISTER GAME ONE! Jeffy boy started the first two games of the 2016 playoffs after injuries to Fleury and Murray. He won game 1, lost game 2, and then Murray took the reins. He never played in a Pens uniform again, although had this epic celebration in the locker room after the cup win.
The Bad: Nothing bad to find about his time in PIT, although he definitely partied way too hard over the summer because his season as backup in LA the following year was abysmal.
The Exit: Signed as a UFA with LA, went 2-7 with an .879 SV%
Nowadays: Plays for the Straubing Tigers in the DEL in Germany. This past year he appeared in 30 games with a .912 SV%

#1 Mike Condon

2016
The Stats: 1 game played with PIT. 20 minutes played, stopped all 7 shots.
The Mask: Somehow he actually had a Penguins custom mask for his two week stint with the team. Maybe it was one of Murray’s
The Good: Stopped all 7 shots he faced in his one appearance with the Pens. Will forever be the all-time leader in SV% in franchise history (without minimums of course)
The Bad: Name immediately looks like “Condom” at first glance.
The Exit: 2 weeks after being claimed off waivers, he was traded to Ottawa on November 2, 2016 for a 5th round pick.
Nowadays: Has been all over the place this season. I’ll just copy and paste directly from Wikipedia: Assigned to AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch, he appeared in his first game in over a year on December 14, 2019. After 6 games with the Crunch, Condon was re-assigned to the ECHL for the first time in six years, loaned to the Orlando Solar Bears on February 5, 2020. Condon made 4 appearances with the Solar Bears before he returned to the AHL, assigned on loan by the Lightning to the Charlotte Checkers, the affiliate to the Carolina Hurricanes on February 26, 2020. Condon made a lone appearance with the Checkers, allowing 4 goals in a 5-3 defeat to the Lehigh Valley Phantoms on February 23, before he was recalled from his loan by the Lightning and returned to the Crunch

#29 Marc-Andre Fleury

2004-2017
The Stats: 691 games played, 375-216-68 career record with PIT. 44 shutouts, .912 SV%. 115 career playoff games played, 62-51 record. 10 shutouts, .908 SV%. Franchise leader in Games Played, Wins, Losses, Saves, Shutouts, and Stanley Cup rings as a goaltender.
The Mask: He had a million different ones in his Pittsburgh career, but my favorite has to be his Stadium series one with all his teammates on it
The Good: What can you even say? The franchise leader in pretty much every statistical category except maybe assists, he was the first overall pick in the 2003 NHL draft and made his debut admittedly way too early at the age of 19. Statistically, his best playoffs far and away was actually the 2008 Stanley Cup run when the Pens lost in 6 games to Detroit in the Finals, as he had 3 shutouts and posted an incredible .933 SV% in 20 games. Although not as good statistically speaking, he still played great in the 2009 playoffs to lead the Penguins to the Stanley Cup, including the incredible save at the conclusion of Game 7 that no Penguins fan will ever forget. After a few rocky years in the postseason, the most unsung heroics of his Pens career might be the 2015-16 season. He played probably the best hockey of his career during the regular season, keeping the Pens afloat despite a brutal system in place by head coach Mike Johnston, and posted 5 shutouts and a .921 SV%. After Johnston was fired and Sullivan took the reins, Flower kept up his great play but was sidelined with a concussion on March 31. Matt Murray took over the starting job into the playoffs, and the rest was history. Flower appeared in just 2 playoff games that year – in relief of Murray in game 4 of the ECF where he stopped 7 shots in 18 minutes of play, and then started game 5, where the Pens lost in OT and he surrendered 4 goals on 25 shots. Sullivan went back to Murray for good after that. In the ensuing party after winning the Cup in San Jose later that year, most of the talk was (rightly so) surrounding the Pens rookie phenom goalie Matt Murray, but unfortunately not as much was said about Flower, even though he kept their heads above water during the regular season. The 2016-17 season was a bittersweet farewell tour for Fleury. He split time with Murray and unexpectedly started the playoffs after Murray tweaked an injury before Game 1 of the opening round. Fleury played lights-out in his 15 games of duty that playoffs: going 9-6 with 2 shutouts and a .924 SV%, including many games against CBJ and WSH when the Pens were handily outshot. Murray took back the starters crease once again in the ECF against Ottawa after a tough Game 3, and never looked back. Flower’s last ever appearance in a Pens uniform was unfortunately a sour one: Giving up 4 goals on 9 shots in 12 minutes of play, but he was still a key piece of the 2017 Cup. Off the ice, he was a class act in every sense of the word, which made his playoff struggles during parts of his career especially tough to stomach. Still the gold standard of goaltending in Pittsburgh and key part of 3 Stanley Cups, there’s little doubt his #29 will one day be raised to the rafters in Pittsburgh
The Bad: In all fairness, you can’t discuss the great moments of Flower without also mentioning the negatives, and there definitely were some negatives. Following the 2009 Cup win, Fleury had 4 straight playoffs with a sub - .900 SV%, including an absolutely horrifying series against Philly in 2012 and another tough first round against the Isles the following year where he was yanked after 4 games in favor of Vokoun. The demons were excised a little bit in the 2014 playoffs, except for a brutal performance in game 4 against CBJ where a mishandle of the puck in the final minute led to the Jackets tying the game, and then Nick Foligno scored from 3 states away in OT. But he bounced back, and while the Pens lost in the 2nd round to the Rangers in 7 games, Flower definitely wasn’t to blame that year, or the following year when a Mike Johnston-led squad bowed out of the playoffs in 5 games.
The Exit: In the 2017 offseason, Fleury agreed to waive his no-movement clause and be exposed in the Vegas expansion draft, where the Knights picked him up to be the centerpiece of their franchise.
Nowadays: Still playing for Vegas obviously.

#31 Antti Niemi

2017
The Stats: 3 games played, 0-3 record with PIT. .797 SV%.
The Mask: I actually like it
The Good: uhhhhhhh…..crickets chirping……..hmmmm……no one died? Also the only ever Finnish goalie to play for the Pens
The Bad: Everything. Allowed 16 goals on 79 shots in 3 games played. His .797 SV%, while yes a small sample size, is still the worst in franchise history of any penguin goaltender who has faced at least 30 shots.
The Exit: Put on waivers not even a month into the 17-18 season and claimed by the Panthers. Then Florida waived him 2 weeks later and he was picked up by Montreal.
Nowadays: Played this past season for Jokerit of the KHL. Appeared in 19 games with an .883 SV%

#1 Casey DeSmith

2017-2019
The Stats: 50 games played, 21-15-6 record with PIT. 4 Shutouts, .917 SV%
The Mask: Nothing to really write home about, but he does have an homage to disc golf on it
The Good: A real bright spot on the Pens last season, performing extremely solid in backup duties.
The Bad: Was left off the opening day roster to begin this season, and was understandably frustrated. Hasn’t had an overly impressive year with the Baby Pens this season.
Nowadays: Appeared in 41 games this year with WBS, going 18-18-2 with 3 shutouts and a .905 SV%

#35 Tristan Jarry

2016-present
The Stats: 62 games played, 34-20-4 record with PIT. 5 Shutouts, .914 SV%
The Mask: The nod to Tom & Jerry is fun
The Good: Jarry’s had an interesting career trajectory thus far. After an impressive season with Edmonton of the OHL, he was drafted 44th overall by PIT in 2013 and was largely seen as the heir apparent to Marc-Andre Fleury, before well…Matt Murray happened. He had another good year in juniors in 13-14, but his 14-15 junior year was a bit of a disappointment. After bouncing around a bit for a few seasons, he’s come on this season with a solid campaign and even appeared in the NHL all-star game.
The Bad: As alluded to before, the emergence of Matt Murray probably set expectations for Jarry a little too high right off the bat, and he just needed a little more development. He struggled his first year in WBS in 15-16 and struggled again in 17-18 bouncing between the AHL and NHL before putting together a better season in WBS last year.
Nowadays: Having a great year for the Pens so far in 19-20, with a 20-12-1 record and a .921 SV%

#30 Matt Murray

2016-present
The Stats: 199 games played, 117-53-19 record with PIT. 11 Shutouts, .914 SV%. 48 career playoff games played, 28-19 record. 6 shutouts, .921 SV%
The Mask: Murray’s never had extremely complex masks, and has mostly kept it simple
The Good: Matt Murray could never win another game in his NHL career, and his name would still be in the NHL history books. He is the epitome of a player who came out of nowhere: He was drafted 83rd in the 2012 draft and was never a really highly-regarded prospect until a switch flipped for him in 2013. He had great year in 13-14 with the Soo Greyhounds of the OHL, then his 14-15 season with the Baby Pens was historic: posting 12 shutouts and 25 wins and an insane .941 SV% in 40 games played. He won the Baz Bastien Award that year for best goalie in the AHL (interestingly enough, FOUR other goalies previously mentioned on this list also won it: Wendell Young, Martin Brochu, Dany Sabourin, and Brad Thiessen….so let’s just say that it wasn’t exactly a guarantee of success in the NHL). He bounced between WBS and the NHL in 15-16 until getting the starting gig in the playoffs with an injury to Fleury. He put on an historic run as a 21 year old those playoffs: going 15-6 with a shutout and .923 SV%, en route to a Stanley Cup. Because he had only appeared in 13 games in the 15-16 season, he was still considered a “rookie” by NHL standards the next year, and split time in the regular season with Fleury, but got injured in warmups before their game 1 playoff game, so Fleury took over. The injury was minor and Murray was back serving as backup not long after, until a tough game 3 of the ECF against Ottawa when he was put back into the starting role and never gave it up. His numbers during the 2017 run were incredible as well: 10 GP, 7-3 record, 3 shutouts, .937 SV% and 1.70 GAA. He became the only goalie in NHL history to win 2 Stanley Cups as a rookie, which we may never see again.
The Bad: Fleury left the team after the 2017 season and Murray was regarded as the bona fide #1. He hasn’t put up awful numbers since then, but his stats, especially in the playoffs, have been nowhere near the levels of this first two seasons.
Nowadays: With the Pens so far in 19-20: 38 Games Played, 20-11-5 record. One shutout, .899 SV%
submitted by HandsLikeLuke to penguins [link] [comments]

Signature Target : Mikko Lethonen

Hi Habs fellas,
In the last couple weeks/months, I tried to look at a maximum of KHL/SweHL/SM-Liiga games to try to find a good LHD. You're gonna tell me it is useless and I wasted my time and you're probably right but I still wanted to share the best candidate I found to potentially sign : Mikko Lethonen.
First, he is 25 y/o, 5"11 and 196 pounds. He currently has 23 points (9 goals) in 35 KHL games. (4th amongst Dmans in the KHL) (+11 so far, 14 PIM) (On pace for 40 points (16 goals)). Last year he had 24 points in the SweHL. I see a really nice progression in him and I think he might be a late bloomer and becomes a pretty good D-man. I don't think he could be our first pairing LHD but why not give him a shot, I think his talent would translate pretty well in the NHL. He's not great (but he's good at pretty much everything) in any particular part of his game except his skating. He's goddamn fast. I see a lot of Mete's game in him but more grown up and polished (Not a blaster, but also not a muffin shot). Lethonen is very responsible and the only thing I don't find in his game is physicality, but just like Mete, that's not really what you expect from him. He is very complete
Anyway, if you are able to watch 2/3 games of Jokerit, pay attention to his play and give me your opinions, I really think he's worth a shot into the NHL. I've seen him playing against good KHL Dmans (olders and youngers) like Voynov, Emelin, Pokka, Dietz, etc. and he's outplaying them all.
http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php?pid=147094&encode=TRUE
submitted by flepine44 to Habs [link] [comments]

Our Goalie options for next season, and beyond.

So with Crow out we've had our own three headed goalie monster(Forsberg, Glass, Berube), and they've been..hot garbage to say the least. Forsberg and Berube are signed until next season, but are not making much(less than 1 Million for both), while Glass goes UFA at the end of the current season.
Here are our options for UFA Goalies that have a save% above 0.91:
Obviously the goalie market for UFAs is incredibly terrible, minus Raanta who I'm doubtful would want the backup gig. Our best option would be to go after the following RFAs:
In my opinion these are some of the better RFA goalies, being as most will get re-signed, these would be our best possible bets. In my opinion, if we could go for Pickard we would have a decent backup, he has experience in that role, although granted he saw very limited(if any?) starts with Vegas, due to them deciding they wanted Malcolm Subban.

Our Goalie issue

So we've had issue with all 3 goalies this season, but here's some stats and shit.
The man, the myth, the crappy goaltender we have now. Won a calder cup, with the Lake Erie Monsters(AHL. Duh), and played some games for CBJ. Needless to say he didn't look great in his limited starts for them, I won't bore you with the stats for his 10 games played, but he only won one game.
For Chicago he has posted a 76GA, 803 SA(this has more to do with our lackluster defense than him), 3.04GAA, and a .905 SV%. Now I personally would rather we send him to Indy to rot, but obviously he's been thrown head first into the fire this year. Maybe he'll turn into something decent, it's hard to say.
Part of the Islanders three headed goalie monster, and never saw much action(probably fucked over his development). Before injury he played for the IceHogs. He's seemed at times competent at least.
Stats wise, he's posted: 9GP, 27GA, 271SA, .900SV% and 3.55 GAA. Despite the fact we've lost a majority of games with him in(better than a cardboard cutout of Crow. Just barely), he's
The 32 year old Rookie himself. He looked decent in his first few starts, but quickly showed why he was still a rookie. Needless to say, if he's re-signed he should be sent down to Indy, instead of Delia.
He's posted a 42GA, 413SA.898 SV%, and played in 14 Games total. He was possibly the worst of the bunch, but was called up because Berube was still injured.

The Future:

In terms of goalie we got:
He currently posts 2.59 GAA and a .927 SV% in 6 games played.
Peters is incredibly young(19), so he has a long way to develop before he's ready to be in our system. Look for him to play for Rockford or Indy in a few years. I don't know if he'll be anything special, but time will tell.
Currently starting for the Icehogs, has 12 wins in 22GP, 59GA, and .901SV%, with 1 Shutout. He started the season with the Indy Fuel(ECHL), posting 1 win in 10 GP, 4.12 GAA, and 0.887 SV%. Needless to say he looked bad, but getting the call up to Rockford seems to have given him some confidence.
From what I've read on the subreddit, he seems to coming into the role as the Hogs' starting goaltender, in a year where they've been without Glass or Berube. Even got player of the week honors, so that happened!
I don't foresee him backing up Crawford anytime soon, but look for him in the pre season when he'll get probably get a few starts. He will however most likely stay in the AHL next season, with either Glass or Berube(if either re-signs), backing him up or in the ECHL instead.
While I do hope we draft a good goalie this year, that's always difficult, and they won't play for a long time.

References:

(Ignore bad punctuation please, I'm terrible at this stuff)
submitted by KikiFlowers to hawks [link] [comments]

jokerit hockeydb video

The roster, scoring and goaltender statistics for the 2020-21 Jokerit Helsinki playing in the KHL 2020-21 Jokerit Helsinki roster and statistics. League Search Page-> KHL-> 2020-21-> Jokerit Helsinki-> Roster & Statistics. Click to view Player Register. Click to view Printable Player Register (PDF) Click to view Printable Team Scoring (PDF) # Name Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/-Birthdate Age Birthplace Rocco Grimaldi | Most recently in the AHL with Bridgeport Sound Tigers. Eeli Tolvanen| KHL| Loan| Snapshots| Vancouver Canucks, Hamonic makes the Canucks D look REALLY good. Auf internationaler Ebene vertrat Tolvanen sein Heimatland erstmals beim Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament 2015 und erreichte dort mit dem Team den vierten Platz. The prospect with so much hype that Nashville Predators The roster, scoring and goaltender statistics for the 2019-20 Jokerit Helsinki playing in the KHL. 2019-20 Jokerit Helsinki roster and statistics. League Search Page-> KHL-> 2019-20-> Jokerit Helsinki-> Roster & Statistics. Click to view Player Register. Game-by-game results. Head Coach: Lauri Marjamaki (38-16-0-8) View photo gallery [19 photos of 30 players] Regular Season Playoffs Vitals Jokerit. Jokerit Hockey Club Oy Areenankuja 1, FIN-00240 Helsinki Tel. +358 (0)204 1990 Fax. +358 (0)204 1992 [email protected] Eliteprospects.com hockey player profile of Joni Jurmo, 2002-04-19 Espoo, FIN Finland. Most recently in the Liiga with JYP. Complete player biography and stats. Eliteprospects.com hockey player profile of Brian O'Neill, 1988-06-01 Yardley, PA, USA USA. Most recently in the KHL with Jokerit. Complete player biography and stats. Jokerit. Jokerit Hockey Club Oy Areenankuja 1, FIN-00240 Helsinki Tel. +358 (0)204 1990 Fax. +358 (0)204 1992 [email protected]. Palaute. [email protected]. FIN . FIN; ENG; RUS; Tästä ostoksille. Miesten keltainen huppari Siirry kauppaan. Yksi piste ei tyydyttänyt – ”Voimme parantaa paljon” Otteluraportti 09.02.2021 21:47. Severstal Tsherepovets haki kaksi pistettä Helsingistä 2 Here about 30 popular A-nuorille tappio, A-nuorten finaalit tasatilanteessa, HIFK-sarjan VIP-pakettien myynti, Hardt fiilisteli sites such as jokerit.com (Jokerit.com - Uutiset). The best 3 similar sites: europeantrophy.com, futisforum2.org, pallo... The Jokerit Helsinki were a European Elite hockey team based in Helsinki, Finland playing in the Finland SM-liiga from 1975 to 2014. Team Information. Jokerit Helsinki (Helsinki,Finland) Finland SM-liiga [European Elite] 1975-2014 [click to view all-time roster] [view yearly attendance] Record. 37 Seasons (GP-W-L-T-OTL-SOL) 1779-903-688-119-25-44 . 0.560. Logos. 1993-1994. Similar Teams. HIFK Traktor vs. Jokerit the KHL for goals and over 1 PPG. (eliteprospects. com). Jul 1, 2013 2010-2011, Jokerit U18 ·. Jr. B SM-sarja, 14, 0, 1, 1, 24. Jokerit U20 ·. Jr. A SMliiga, 3, 0 Player statistics powered by www. eliteprospects. com. Feb 24, 2015 1997-1998, Jokerit U16 ·. Jr. C SM-sarja, 12, 3, 3, 6, 6. 1998-1999, Jokerit U16 ·. Jr C

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