Claude Lemieux
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Position | Right Wing |
Shot | Right |
Nickname | Pepe |
Height Weight |
6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 215 lb (98 kg) |
Pro Clubs | Montreal Canadiens New Jersey Devils Colorado Avalanche Phoenix Coyotes Dallas Stars |
Nationality | Canada |
Born | July 16, 1965, Buckingham, PQ, CAN |
NHL Draft | 26th overall, 1983 Montreal Canadiens |
Pro Career | 1983 – 2004 |
Claude Lemieux (born July 16, 1965 in Buckingham, Quebec, Canada) is a former professional ice hockey player active in the National Hockey League from 1983 to 2003. He is one of only four players in NHL history to win the Stanley Cup with three different teams. Lemieux is currently the president of the ECHL Phoenix Roadrunners.
Contents |
[edit] Playing career
Lemieux was drafted in the second round of the 1983 NHL Entry Draft by the Montreal Canadiens. He played with the Canadiens from 1983 to 1990, winning the Stanley Cup with the team in 1986.
In September 1990 Montreal traded Lemieux to the New Jersey Devils for Sylvain Turgeon. Lemieux won the Stanley Cup with New Jersey in 1995. He also won the Conn Smythe Trophy that year as the playoff MVP.
Shortly before the beginning of the 1995-96 NHL season, Lemieux was traded to the Colorado Avalanche in a three-team deal that also involved Wendel Clark and Steve Thomas. When the Avalanche won the Stanley Cup in 1996 Lemieux became only the fifth player in NHL history to win back-to-back Stanley Cups with different teams.
In November 1999 Lemieux was traded back to New Jersey in a deal which sent Brian Rolston to Colorado. He won his fourth and final Stanley Cup with the Devils in 2000. Later that year Lemieux signed as a free agent with the Phoenix Coyotes.
In January 2003 the Coyotes traded him to the Dallas Stars for Scott Pellerin and a conditional draft pick. Lemieux ended his NHL playing career with Dallas at the conclusion of the 2002-03 NHL season. Later in 2003 Lemieux briefly played for EV Zug in Switzerland.
Throughout his career Lemieux was noted for playing his best games during the postseason. On four occasions he scored more goals during the playoffs than he did during the regular season (1986 with Montreal, 1995 with New Jersey, 1997 with Colorado and 2000 with New Jersey). Lemieux retired with 80 career playoff goals, eighth all-time in the NHL.
Lemieux also had a reputation as one of the league's most aggressive players. This was solidified in a 1996 incident with the Avalanche when he violently checked Kris Draper of the Detroit Red Wings into the boards during a playoff series. This incident is generally believed to have sparked an often-bitter rivalry between the two teams that continues to this day.
Later, Lemieux was criticized after a 1997 fight against Darren McCarty in which he "turtled" (i.e. kneeled and covered his head while being punched).
Claude Lemieux has no familial relation to Mario Lemieux, who was his contemporary in the NHL. However, Claude Lemieux's younger brother, Jocelyn Lemieux, also enjoyed a lengthy career in the NHL.
[edit] Retirement
In 2005 Lemieux became president of the current incarnation of the Phoenix Roadrunners.
[edit] Awards
- Conn Smythe Trophy - Stanley Cup MVP (1995)
- Quebec Major Junior Hockey League Hall of Fame (2005)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Lemieux's statistics at hockeydb.com
- Lemieux Phoenix Roadrunners bio
Preceded by: Brian Leetch |
Conn Smythe Trophy Winner 1995 |
Followed by: Joe Sakic |
Categories: 1965 births | Living people | Canadian ice hockey players | Colorado Avalanche players | Conn Smythe Trophy winners | Dallas Stars players | French Quebecers | People from Gatineau | Montreal Canadiens players | Nationalliga A players | New Jersey Devils players | Nova Scotia Voyageurs players | Phoenix Coyotes players | Quebec sportspeople | Sherbrooke Canadiens players | Stanley Cup champions | Trois-Rivieres Draveurs alumni | Verdun Junior Canadiens alumni | Verdun Juniors alumni | 2000 New Jersey Devils Stanley Cup Championship Team