Brad Leeb

Bradley Leeb (born August 27, 1979) is a retired Cree First Nations[1][2] Canadian ice hockey player. He played 5 games in the NHL for the Vancouver Canucks and Toronto Maple Leafs, and spent the bulk of his professional career in the minor American Hockey League, as well as several years playing in Germany and the United Kingdom, before retiring in 2013.

Brad Leeb
Born (1979-08-27) August 27, 1979
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight 194 lb (88 kg; 13 st 12 lb)
Position Right Wing
Shot Right
Played for Toronto Maple Leafs
Vancouver Canucks
NHL Draft Undrafted
Playing career 19992013

Career

Leeb started his career playing for the Red Deer Midget Chiefs in the Alberta Midget Hockey League. He played 3 games for his hometown Red Deer Rebels as a 15-year-old, then went on to play 4 full seasons with the Rebels. He also played in the 1998–1999 WHL All-Star game.

Leeb played for Team Canada at the 1999 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Canada won silver after losing to the Russians in triple overtime. Leeb finished tied for second in team scoring with Simon Gagne, Kyle Calder, and Brendan Morrow, all had 8 points in 7 games.

In 1999–2000, Leeb signed with the Vancouver Canucks as a free agent. He was with the Canucks organization for three seasons, appearing in 4 games with the Canucks while playing in the minor league system with the (Syracuse Crunch (AHL), Kansas City Blades) (IHL), and Manitoba Moose (AHL).

In 2002–03, Leeb was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs for Tomas Mojzis. Leeb played one game for the Maple Leafs, and mainly played in the Maple Leafs minor league system with the St. John's Maple Leafs (AHL) and the Toronto Marlies (AHL).

Leeb played the 2007–08 season in Germany for ERC Ingolstadt in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL).

In 2008–2009, he went to play for the Thomas Sabo Ice Tigers (DEL) in the city of Nuremberg, Germany.

Leeb played in Nuremberg on the same team as his older brother Greg Leeb for 4 seasons, from 2008–2012. It was the first time the brothers had ever played on the same team. Growing up they played against each other in the WHL, IHL, AHL, and the DEL leagues.

Leeb was the creator of the website , a website that allowed betting on hockey games.[3] He no longer owns the website.

On July 17, 2012, it was announced that Leeb had signed with the Coventry Blaze for the 2012–13 Elite League season, following his brother who signed earlier in the month.[4]

On April 8, 2013, Leeb announced his retirement.[5]

Leeb holds a master's degree in Sports Management from Coventry University.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GPGAPtsPIM GPGAPtsPIM
1993–94 Red Deer Rebels Bantam AAA AMBHL 3218274532
1994–95 Red Deer Vipers AMHL 3631144593
1994–95 Red Deer Rebels WHL 30004
1995–96 Red Deer Rebels WHL 3836930 1020211
1996–97 Red Deer Rebels WHL 7015203576 163366
1997–98 Red Deer Rebels WHL 6323234688 32022
1998–99 Red Deer Rebels WHL 6432477984 9591410
1999–00 Syracuse Crunch AHL 6119183750 40006
1999–00 Vancouver Canucks NHL 20002
2000–01 Kansas City Blades IHL 5318163453
2001–02 Manitoba Moose AHL 6017153245
2001–02 Vancouver Canucks NHL 20000
2002–03 St. John's Maple Leafs AHL 7935266178
2003–04 St. John's Maple Leafs AHL 77242549116
2003–04 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 10000
2004–05 St. John's Maple Leafs AHL 4816132943 32130
2005–06 Toronto Marlies AHL 7934245891 53036
2006–07 Toronto Marlies AHL 34961525
2007–08 ERC Ingolstadt DEL 5518213968 30002
2008–09 Sinupret Ice Tigers DEL 501682488 510110
2009–10 Thomas Sabo Ice Tigers DEL 5620214180 53252
2010–11 Thomas Sabo Ice Tigers DEL 5013193242 20002
2011–12 Thomas Sabo Ice Tigers DEL 4436940
2012–13 Coventry Blaze EIHL 57242650112
AHL totals 438154127281448 1251612
NHL totals 50002

International

Year Team Event GPGAPtsPIM
1999 Canada WJC 73582
Junior totals 73582
gollark: How did *that* happen?
gollark: Pythagoras disapproves.
gollark: Both already exist but are sort of meh, but the combination of more advanced versions might work.
gollark: One thing which might take off is some sort of portable phone dock with a monitor/keyboard/mouse and some sort of "cloud gaming" thing.
gollark: Plus since you'll get out your phone for 5 minutes during the day and probably not a few hours of serious gaming, that forces games to change too.

References

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