Duane Harmer

Duane Harmer (born June 3, 1974) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey defenceman.

Duane Harmer
Born (1974-06-03) June 3, 1974
Fullarton, Ontario, Canada
Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 190 lb (86 kg; 13 st 8 lb)
Position Defence
Shot Right
Played for Rosenborg IHK(1DIV)
Tappara(SM-liiga)
Södertälje (SEL)
Skellefteå (SEL)
Trondheim Black Panthers (GET)
Roanoke Express (ECHL)
Providence Bruins (AHL)
Lowell Lock Monsters (AHL)
NHL Draft Undrafted
Playing career 19952010

Juniors

Born in Fullarton, Ontario, Harmer grew up playing his minor hockey for Mitchell Minor Hockey teams in the WOAA before spending a year with the St. Marys Lincolns Jr.B. club of the OHA. He was also a competitive fastball player for several clubs in the western Ontario area over the years.

After playing the 1990-91 season with the Lincolns, Harmer was selected in the 15th round (229th overall) by the OHL's Guelph Storm in May 1991.

Harmer began his career in the Ontario Hockey League, playing for the Guelph Storm and the Detroit Jr. Red Wings. As a member of the junior Red Wings, Harmer often was paired with future NHL All-Star Bryan Berard[1][2]

Professional

He turned pro in 1995 and spent four seasons with the Roanoke Express in the East Coast Hockey League with his best season coming in 1997–98 where he scored 10 goals and 40 assists for 50 points, leading the team in assists. He moved to the American Hockey League but had uneventful spells with the Lowell Lock Monsters and the Providence Bruins and would spend the next three years moving between AHL and ECHL teams. Harmer played in the ECHL All-Star Game during the 1998-99 ECHL season and was voted to the ECHL's 2nd All-Star Team in 1999-2000[3]

In 2003, Harmer moved to Europe and joined the Trondheim Black Panthers in Norway. After two seasons with Trondheim, he moved to Germany to play for EC Bad Tölz in the 2. Eishockey-Bundesliga. He then went back to Norway and returned to Trondheim before moving to Sweden's Elitserien for Skellefteå AIK and now plays for Södertälje SK.

On 18 October 2008, he signed with Tappara Tampere of the SM-liiga, where he scored six points in 42 games. Harmer returned to Norway to play for Rosenborg IHK, who had played in Norway's 1st Division during the 2009-10 season and officially signed a contract with the team on January 25, 2010.[4] Harmer also scored 8 pts in 6 games during the postseason.

On March 12, 2010, Harmer announced his retirement.[3]

Career statistics

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1991–92 Guelph Storm OHL 5527972
1992–93 Guelph Storm OHL 624252967 50000
1993–94 Guelph Storm OHL 417162329
1993–94 Plymouth Whalers OHL 2016716 1717821
1994–95 Plymouth Whalers OHL 64103343104 21491312
1995–96 Roanoke Express ECHL 6951318120 30004
1996–97 Roanoke Express ECHL 7042832122 40442
1997–98 Roanoke Express ECHL 6610405094 912316
1998–99 Roanoke Express ECHL 416182456 122570
1998–99 Lowell Lock Monsters AHL 1402216
1998–99 Providence Bruins AHL 90444
1999–00 Roanoke Express ECHL 4710374759 411224
1999–00 Portland Pirates AHL 71342
1999–00 Providence Bruins AHL 1613410 101454
2000–01 Greensboro Generals ECHL 393212464
2000–01 Lowell Lock Monsters AHL 1411210
2000–01 Providence Bruins AHL 61452
2000–01 Hershey Bears AHL 1522414 10000
2001–02 Florida Everblades ECHL 448162434 60002
2001–02 Lowell Lock Monsters AHL 2315615
2002–03 Florida Everblades ECHL 396131940 10000
2003–04 Trondheim Black Panthers Norway 4216163274 43034
2004–05 Trondheim Black Panthers Norway 4210162642 111458
2005–06 Tölzer Löwen Germany2 424222646
2006–07 Trondheim Black Panthers Norway 3611243563
2006–07 Skellefteå AIK SHL 1116710 101784
2007–08 Södertälje SK SHL 555172238
2008–09 Tappara Liiga 4215630
2009–10 Rosenborg IHK Norway2 82354
AHL totals 104 7 24 31 73 11 1 4 5 4
ECHL totals 415 52 186 238 589 39 4 12 16 48
gollark: So I checked further, and it seems that most of them use non-SIMD instruction sets but also run threads in groups so it's effectively SIMD anyway.I'm probably missing something but I don't see why you would do that.
gollark: As far as I know recent designs have moved away from that, and probably just magically schedule threads really well.
gollark: I don't know many of the underlying implementation details.
gollark: They do have lots of memory bandwidth.
gollark: And are optimized for simple number-crunching workloads and not complex branchy things like CPUs.

References

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