Brian Swanson

Brian Swanson (born March 24, 1976) is an American retired professional ice hockey player who played in the National Hockey League for the Edmonton Oilers and Atlanta Thrashers.

Brian Swanson
Born (1976-03-24) March 24, 1976
Eagle River, Alaska, United States
Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Weight 185 lb (84 kg; 13 st 3 lb)
Position Center
Shot Left
Played for Edmonton Oilers
Atlanta Thrashers
Kassel Huskies
Nürnberg/Sinupret Ice Tigers
Iserlohn Roosters
National team  United States
NHL Draft 115th overall, 1994
San Jose Sharks
Playing career 19992012

Playing career

Swanson was drafted 115th overall in the 1994 NHL Entry Draft by the San Jose Sharks from the USHL's Omaha Lancers. He then spent four seasons at Colorado College, and was a finalist for the Hobey Baker Award in 1999. While at college, his rights were traded to the New York Rangers and briefly played for their AHL affiliate the Hartford Wolf Pack during the 1998–99 season. In 1999, he signed with the Edmonton Oilers and after spending an entire season with the Hamilton Bulldogs, Swanson made his NHL debut during the 2000–01 NHL season. He spent another two seasons with the Oilers, bouncing around between them and the Bulldogs. In 2003, he signed with the Atlanta Thrashers, but just played two games for them as he spent most of the season in the AHL with the Chicago Wolves. Atlanta sports teams didn't have player last name Swanson until braves dansby Swanson 2016

With Swanson a free agent and the 2004–05 NHL season locked out, Swanson signed with German side Kassel Huskies of the DEL. In 2005, Swanson choose to remain in Germany signing with the Nürnberg Ice Tigers. On July 30, 2009, after spending four years with the Ice Tigers, Brian signed a one-year contract with fellow DEL team, Iserlohn Roosters.[1]

On July 14, 2010, Swanson returned to North America after 6 years, signing a one-year contract with Alaska Aces of the ECHL.[2]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A P PIM
1993–94 Omaha Lancers USHL 47 38 42 80 40
1994–95 Omaha Lancers USHL 33 14 35 49 12
1995–96 Colorado College Tigers WCHA 40 26 33 59 24
1996–97 Colorado College Tigers WCHA 43 19 32 51 47
1997–98 Colorado College Tigers WCHA 42 18 38 56 26
1998–99 Colorado College Tigers WCHA 42 25 41 66 28
1998–99 Hartford Wolf Pack AHL 4 0 0 0 4
1999–00 Hamilton Bulldogs AHL 69 19 40 59 18 10 2 5 7 6
2000–01 Hamilton Bulldogs AHL 49 18 29 47 20
2000–01 Edmonton Oilers NHL 16 1 1 2 6
2001–02 Hamilton Bulldogs AHL 65 34 39 73 26 15 7 6 13 6
2001–02 Edmonton Oilers NHL 8 1 1 2 0
2002–03 Edmonton Oilers NHL 44 2 10 12 10
2003–04 Chicago Wolves AHL 70 13 34 47 30 10 4 4 8 6
2003–04 Atlanta Thrashers NHL 2 0 1 1 0
2004–05 Kassel Huskies DEL 37 14 19 33 16
2005–06 Nürnberg Ice Tigers DEL 46 7 24 31 22
2006–07 Sinupret Ice Tigers DEL 51 11 28 39 75 13 4 7 11 14
2007–08 Sinupret Ice Tigers DEL 53 15 31 46 20 5 1 1 2 2
2008–09 Sinupret Ice Tigers DEL 51 9 18 27 38 5 0 1 1 8
2009–10 Iserlohn Roosters DEL 54 19 23 42 30
2010–11 Alaska Aces ECHL 69 24 46 70 20 13 3 8 11 4
2011–12 Alaska Aces ECHL 59 9 33 42 12 10 0 3 3 2
NHL totals 70 4 13 17 16
DEL totals 292 75 143 218 201 23 5 9 14 24

International

Year Team Comp GP G A Pts PIM
1996 United States WJC 6 2 1 3 29
Junior int'l totals 6 2 1 3 29

Awards and honors

Award Year
All-WCHA Rookie Team 1995–96
All-WCHA Second Team 1995–96
All-WCHA First Team 1996–97
All-WCHA First Team 1997–98
AHCA West Second-Team All-American 1997–98
All-WCHA First Team 1998–99
AHCA West First-Team All-American 1998–99
gollark: Wait, are you working on ZIRCONIUM DECEPTION too?
gollark: No, esobot okay?
gollark: Maybe I should just use the arbitrary code execution exploit I snuck into esobot when I patched WHY capability in.
gollark: It's just a warning that it *may* not obey causality, not that it *definitely doesn't*.
gollark: Possibly.

References

  1. "Roosters get US born Brian Swanson" (in German). summerhockey.de. 2009-07-30. Retrieved 2010-05-10.
  2. "Swanson the first Ace to sign in 2010-11". Alaska Aces. 2010-07-14. Archived from the original on 2016-06-09. Retrieved 2010-07-14.
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