User:Bsroiaadn/Sandbox
Appearance
This is a list of ice hockey players who died during their playing careers.
List
[edit]Age | Player | Nationality | Date of Death | Cause of Death | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
24 | Allan Davidson | Canada | 16 June 1915 | World War I casualty | Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame. |
29 | George Richardson | Canada | 9 February 1916 | World War I casualty | Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame |
32 | Hamby Shore | Canada | 13 October 1918 | influenza | Played nine seasons for the Ottawa Senators, including 18 in the National Hockey League in 1917-18 |
26 | Hobey Baker | United States | 21 December 1918 | World War I casualty | Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame; the Hobey Baker Memorial Award is awarded annually to the top American college hockey player |
36 | Joe Hall | United Kingdom | 5 April 1919 | influenza | Played two seasons and 38 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens in 1917-18 and 1918-19; Led the NHL in penalty minutes both seasons; Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame |
25 | George Horne | Canada | 31 July 1929 | drowning | Played three seasons in the NHL From 1925 to 1929 with the Montreal Maroons and Toronto Maple Leafs |
26 | Bobby Connors | United Kingdom | 27 July 1931 | broken neck | Played three seasons and 78 games in the NHL from 1926 to 1929-30 for the New York Americans and Detroit Cougars |
29 | Charlie Gardiner | Canada | 13 June 1934 | brain hemorrhage | Played goaltender for the Chicago Black Hawks for seven seasons from 1926-27 until 1933-34, the year they won the Stanley Cup; Gardiner was a multiple award winner, won the Vezina Trophy twice, and is a member of the Hockey Hall of Fame |
33 | Jack Darragh | Canada | 24 June 1924 | peritonitis | Played six seasons and 121 games in the National Hockey League for the Ottawa Senators from 1917-18 to 1923-24 and for seven seasons before that in the National Hockey Association, winning four Stanley Cups; Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame |
24 | Jack Leswick | Canada | 7 August 1934 | suicide or murder | Played 37 games for the Chicago Black Hawks in 1933-34 |
30 | Earl Miller | Canada | 20 June 1936 | unknown | Played five seasons and 109 games for the Chicago Black Hawks and Toronto Maple Leafs from 1927-28 to 1931-32 |
34 | Howie Morenz | Canada | 8 March 1937 | complications from leg surgery | Played fourteen seasons and 550 games in the National Hockey League, most notably with the Montreal Canadiens, from 1923-24 to 1936-37; Generally regarded the best player of his era, he won two scoring championships, three Hart Trophies and three Stanley Cups; The Canadiens retired his number seven; Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame |
30 | Don Deacon | Canada | 25 December 1943 | fall from balcony | Played three seasons and 30 games for the Detroit Red Wings from 1936 to 1940 |
20 | Red Garrett | Canada | 25 November 1944 | World War II casualty | Played 23 games for the New York Rangers in 1942-43, Dudley "Red" Garrett Memorial Award awarded annually by AHL to top rookie |
25 | Joe Turner | Canada | 12 January 1945 | World War II casualty | Played one game in the NHL for the Detroit Red Wings as a goaltender, a 3-3 tie, the now-defunct IHL awarded the Turner Cup in his memory annually to the league champion |
24 | Bill Barilko | Canada | 26 August 1951 | aviation accident | Played five seasons and won 4 Stanley Cups with the Toronto Maple Leafs from 1947 to 1951, and scored the legendary Cup-winning goal in overtime of game 5 in the 1951 Finals; the Leafs retired his number five |
26 | Ross Lowe | Canada | 8 August 1955 | drowning | Played three seasons and 77 games in the NHL from 1949 to 1952 for the Boston Bruins and Montreal Canadiens, Les Cunningham Award recipient as AHL MVP for his performance during 1954-55, his last season |
39 | Georges Vezina | Canada | 27 March 1926 | tuberculosis | Played sixteen seasons with the Montreal Canadiens from 1910-11 to 1925-26 winning two Stanley Cups; The National Hockey League has awarded the Vezina Trophy annually since his death; member of the Hockey Hall of Fame |
29 | Murray Balfour | Canada | 30 May 1965 | lung cancer | Played eight seasons and 306 games in the National Hockey League from 1956-57 to 1964-65 winning a Stanley Cup with the Chicago Black Hawks in 1961; he also played for the Montreal Canadiens and Boston Bruins |
22 | Jarmo Wasama | Finland | 2 February 1966 | car accident | Five-time all-star defenseman in SM-sarja. In 1995, the trophy of top rookie of SM-liiga was renamed Jarmo Wasama memorial trophy. |
22 | Butch Paul | Canada | 25 March 1966 | car accident | Played three games for the Detroit Red Wings in 1964-65. |
29 | Bill Masterton | Canada | 15 January 1968 | on-ice head injury | Played 30 games in the 1967-68 NHL season with the Minnesota North Stars and is the only player in NHL history to be killed as a direct result of an on-ice incident; the NHL annually awards the Bill Masterton Trophy in his honour, and the North Stars retired his number nineteen |
40 | Terry Sawchuk | Canada | 31 May 1970 | injuries suffered in off-ice shoving match | Played 21 seasons and 972 games in the National Hockey League from 1949-50 to 1969-70; Fourteen of those seasons played with the Detroit Red Wings who retired his number one; Set numerous NHL goalie records and won numerous NHL awards; Considered by many to be one of the greatest goalies of all-time; Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame |
21 | Michel Briere | Canada | 13 April 1971 | coma caused by car accident | Pittsburgh Penguins rookie played 76 games in 1969-70; the Penguins retired his number twenty-one; The Michel Briere Memorial Trophy is awarded annually by the QMJHL to the league MVP. |
28 | Lennart Svedberg | Sweden | 29 July 1972[1] | car accident | Represented Sweden in the 1968 Winter Olympics and six IIHF World Championships; in the 1970 World Championships he was named top defenceman |
44 | Tim Horton | Canada | 21 February 1974 | car accident | Played 24 seasons in the National Hockey League from 1949-50 to 1973-74, playing twenty of them for the Toronto Maple Leafs; Named to the NHL First & Second All-Star Teams three times each; Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame. Also founder of the Tim Hortons restaurant chain. |
29 | Wayne Maki | Canada | 12 May 1974 | brain cancer | Played six seasons and 246 games in the National Hockey League, for the Chicago Black Hawks, St. Louis Blues and Vancouver Canucks |
24 | Bob Gassoff | Canada | 27 May 1977 | motorcycle accident | Played four seasons and 245 games for the St. Louis Blues from 1973 to 1977; the Blues retired his number three |
27 | Scott Garland | Canada | 9 June 1979 | car accident | Played three seasons and 91 games in the National Hockey League from 1975 to 1979 |
26 | Don Ashby | Canada | 30 May 1981 | car accident | Played six seasons in the NHL for the Toronto Maple Leafs, Colorado Rockies, and Edmonton Oilers from 1975 to 1981 |
33 | Valeri Kharlamov | Soviet Union | 27 August 1981 | car accident | Played in three Olympics, eleven IIHF World Championships and the 1972 Summit Series in which he was infamously slashed on the ankle by Team Canada's Bobby Clarke; Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame |
26 | Pelle Lindbergh | Sweden | 11 November 1985 | car accident | Philadelphia Flyers goalie for five seasons from 1981 until his death in 1985; Vezina Trophy recipient for 1984-85 NHL season; the Flyers created the Pelle Lindbergh Memorial and award it annually to the team's most improved player |
23 | Duncan MacPherson | Canada | August 1989 | Supposedly froze to death after getting lost in Austrian Alps | Drafted 20th overall in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft by the New York Islanders |
30 | Roger Hägglund | Sweden | 6 June 1992 | car accident | Played three games for the Quebec Nordiques in 1984-85 |
27 | John Kordic | Canada | 8 August 1992 | drug overdose | Played 7 seasons and 244 games in the NHL from 1985 to 1992, most notably with the Montreal Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs |
25 | Mike Colman | United States | 5 April 1994 | car accident | Played fifteen games for the San Jose Sharks in 1991-92 |
29 | Peter Karlsson | Sweden | 11 March 1995 | stabbed to death | Played in the Elitserien for Västerås IK |
38 | Nikolai Drozdetsky | Russia | 24 November 1995 | Diabetes | Soviet player played internationally for the Soviet Union in 1981 Canada Cup, three IIHF World Championships and the 1984 Winter Olympics |
25 | Jeff Batters | Canada | 23 August 1996 | car accident | Played two seasons and sixteen games for the St. Louis Blues from 1993 to 1995 |
24 | Yanick Dupre | Canada | 16 August 1997 | leukemia | Played three seasons and 35 games for the Philadelphia Flyers from 1991 to 1996, the Yanick Dupre Memorial is awarded annually by the Flyers organization |
29 | Stephane Morin | Canada | 6 October 1998 | heart attack | Played five seasons and 90 games in the National Hockey League for the Quebec Nordiques and Vancouver Canucks; he was awarded the Leo P. Lamoureux Memorial Trophy as the IHL's leading scorer in 1995 |
32 | Steve Chiasson | Canada | 3 May 1999 | car accident | Played thirteen seasons and 751 games in the National Hockey League for the Detroit Red Wings, Calgary Flames, Hartford Whalers and Carolina Hurricanes from 1986-87 to 1998-99 |
22 | Dmitri Tertyshny | Russia | 23 July 1999 | slashed jugular vein in boat accident | Played 62 games for the Philadelphia Flyers in 1998-99 |
26 | Alexei Yegorov | Russia | 2 March 2002 | suicide | Played twelve games for the San Jose Sharks over two seasons between 1995 and 1997; finished his career in 2001 with the Schwenningen Wild Wings |
24 | Roman Lyashenko | Russia | 5 July 2003 | suicide by hanging | Played four seasons in the NHL for the Dallas Stars and New York Rangers from 1999 to 2003 |
25 | Dan Snyder | Canada | 5 October 2003 | car accident | Played three seasons and 49 games for the Atlanta Thrashers from 2000 to 2003; The OHL renamed its Humanitarian of the Year award to the Dan Snyder Memorial Trophy in Snyder's honour |
31 | Sergei Zholtok | Latvia | 3 November 2004 | heart failure | Played ten seasons and 588 games in the National Hockey League for six teams from 1992-93 to 2003-04 |
30 | Martin Čech | Czech Republic | 6 September 2007 | car accident | Played in the Czech Extraliga |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Diamond, Dan (2003). Total Hockey: Second Edition. Toronto: Total Sports Publishing. p. 640. ISBN 1-894963-16-4.
{{cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help)
External links
[edit][[Category:Lists of people by age]]