Kansas City Scouts Players - Bart Crashley, Bill McKenzie, Bill Oleschuk, Brent Hughes (Ice Hockey B. 1943), Bryan Lefley, Buster Harvey, Butch Dea (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 22. Chapters: Bart Crashley, Bill McKenzie, Bill Oleschuk, Brent Hughes (ice hockey b. 1943), Bryan Lefley, Buster Harvey, Butch Deadmarsh, Chris Evans (ice hockey), Chuck Arnason, Claude Houde, Craig Patrick, Dave Hudson, Denis Dupere, Denis Herron, Dennis Patterson (ice hockey), Don Cairns, Doug Buhr, Doug Horbul, Ed Gilbert (ice hockey), Gary Bergman, Gary Coalter, Gary Croteau, Germain Gagnon, Glen Burdon, Guy Charron, Henry Boucha, Hugh Harvey, Jean-Guy Lagace, Jim McElmury, John Wright (ice hockey), Ken Murray (ice hockey), Larry Giroux, Larry Johnston, List of Kansas City Scouts players, Lynn Powis, Michel Plasse, Mike Baumgartner, Mike Boland (ice hockey b. 1954), Norm Dube, Peter McDuffe, Phil Roberto, Randy Rota, Richard Lemieux, Robin Burns, Roger Lemelin (ice hockey), Simon Nolet, Steve Durbano, Ted Snell, Terry McDonald (ice hockey), Wilf Paiement. Excerpt: Guy Joseph Jean Charron (born January 24, 1949 in Verdun, Quebec) is a former professional ice hockey centre. He played in the NHL from 1969-1981. He is currently head coach of the WHL Kamloops Blazers, after being hired for that position in November 2009. Originally a product of the Montreal Canadiens' system, Charron played twenty games with the Canadiens before he was traded during the middle of the 1970-71 NHL season to the Detroit Red Wings in the monster deal that sent Frank Mahovlich to Montreal. He played with the Red Wings until he was traded to the expansion Kansas City Scouts in 1974. Prior to the 1976-77 NHL season, Charron signed as a free agent with the Washington Capitals, where he played until he retired following the 1980-81 NHL season. Despite playing in 734 NHL regular season games, he never appeared in a single playoff game, which is an NHL record. This record was broken at one point by Olli Jokinen, who went 827 games without a playoff appearance before finally appearing in a playoff game with the Calgary Flames. Midseason replacement Craig Patrick (born May 20, 1946 in Detroit, Michigan) is a former American hockey player, coach and general manager, the son of Lynn Patrick and the grandson of Lester Patrick. During the 1980 Winter Olympics, Patrick was the Assistant General Manager and Assistant Coach under Herb Brooks for the United States men's national ice hockey team, which won the gold medal and defeated the Soviet Union in the "Miracle on Ice." From 1989 to 2006, Patrick was the General Manager of the Pittsburgh Penguins where he oversaw back-to-back Stanley Cup championships in 1991 and 1992, as well as the drafting and signing of some players that would later win a Stanley Cup title for the Penguins in 2009. After spending most of his childhood in Wellesley, Massachusetts, he was sent at age fourteen to Quebec to play junior hockey in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League for the Lachine Maroons and later the Montreal Junior Canadians.

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 22. Chapters: Bart Crashley, Bill McKenzie, Bill Oleschuk, Brent Hughes (ice hockey b. 1943), Bryan Lefley, Buster Harvey, Butch Deadmarsh, Chris Evans (ice hockey), Chuck Arnason, Claude Houde, Craig Patrick, Dave Hudson, Denis Dupere, Denis Herron, Dennis Patterson (ice hockey), Don Cairns, Doug Buhr, Doug Horbul, Ed Gilbert (ice hockey), Gary Bergman, Gary Coalter, Gary Croteau, Germain Gagnon, Glen Burdon, Guy Charron, Henry Boucha, Hugh Harvey, Jean-Guy Lagace, Jim McElmury, John Wright (ice hockey), Ken Murray (ice hockey), Larry Giroux, Larry Johnston, List of Kansas City Scouts players, Lynn Powis, Michel Plasse, Mike Baumgartner, Mike Boland (ice hockey b. 1954), Norm Dube, Peter McDuffe, Phil Roberto, Randy Rota, Richard Lemieux, Robin Burns, Roger Lemelin (ice hockey), Simon Nolet, Steve Durbano, Ted Snell, Terry McDonald (ice hockey), Wilf Paiement. Excerpt: Guy Joseph Jean Charron (born January 24, 1949 in Verdun, Quebec) is a former professional ice hockey centre. He played in the NHL from 1969-1981. He is currently head coach of the WHL Kamloops Blazers, after being hired for that position in November 2009. Originally a product of the Montreal Canadiens' system, Charron played twenty games with the Canadiens before he was traded during the middle of the 1970-71 NHL season to the Detroit Red Wings in the monster deal that sent Frank Mahovlich to Montreal. He played with the Red Wings until he was traded to the expansion Kansas City Scouts in 1974. Prior to the 1976-77 NHL season, Charron signed as a free agent with the Washington Capitals, where he played until he retired following the 1980-81 NHL season. Despite playing in 734 NHL regular season games, he never appeared in a single playoff game, which is an NHL record. This record was broken at one point by Olli Jokinen, who went 827 games without a playoff appearance before finally appearing in a playoff game with the Calgary Flames. Midseason replacement Craig Patrick (born May 20, 1946 in Detroit, Michigan) is a former American hockey player, coach and general manager, the son of Lynn Patrick and the grandson of Lester Patrick. During the 1980 Winter Olympics, Patrick was the Assistant General Manager and Assistant Coach under Herb Brooks for the United States men's national ice hockey team, which won the gold medal and defeated the Soviet Union in the "Miracle on Ice." From 1989 to 2006, Patrick was the General Manager of the Pittsburgh Penguins where he oversaw back-to-back Stanley Cup championships in 1991 and 1992, as well as the drafting and signing of some players that would later win a Stanley Cup title for the Penguins in 2009. After spending most of his childhood in Wellesley, Massachusetts, he was sent at age fourteen to Quebec to play junior hockey in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League for the Lachine Maroons and later the Montreal Junior Canadians.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Books LLC, Wiki Series

Country of origin

United States

Release date

November 2012

Availability

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First published

November 2012

Authors

Creators

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 1mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

130

ISBN-13

978-1-155-53524-1

Barcode

9781155535241

Categories

LSN

1-155-53524-3



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