Jamie Hislop

James Donald Hislop (born January 20, 1954) is a Canadian retired ice hockey forward and current pro scout for the Minnesota Wild.

Jamie Hislop
Born (1954-01-20) January 20, 1954
Sarnia, Ontario, Canada
Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Weight 180 lb (82 kg; 12 st 12 lb)
Position Forward
Played for Cincinnati Stingers
Quebec Nordiques
Calgary Flames
NHL Draft 140th overall, 1974
Montreal Canadiens
WHA Draft 49th overall, 1974
Cleveland Crusaders
Playing career 19761983

Playing career

Born in Sarnia, Ontario, Hislop played junior hockey in Tier II Ontario Hockey Association play.

Hislop attended the University of New Hampshire under legendary coach Charlie Holt. In Hislop's sophomore year with the Wildcats in 1974, he led the ECAC in assists with 35 en route to the conference title, leading to him being drafted by the Montreal Canadiens in the 8th round of the 1974 NHL amateur draft. He followed that performance up with two 66-point seasons, winning conference First All-Star honours in 1975 and 1976 and being named to the NCAA First Team All-American squad in 1976. He finished his collegiate career with 77 goals and 132 assists for 209 points, the leading scorer in Wildcat history to that time, and is currently 4th all-time.

After spending half a season in the minor leagues with the Hampton Gulls, Hislop was signed by the Cincinnati Stingers of the World Hockey Association in 1977. He played three seasons with the Stingers, his best year coming in 1979, when he scored 30 goals and 40 assists for 70 points, chipping in six points in three playoff games.

When the Stingers folded in the WHA-NHL merger, in 1979, Hislop's rights were acquired by the Quebec Nordiques. He was traded midway through the 1980–81 season to the Calgary Flames in exchange for Dan Bouchard; it proved to be his best year in the NHL with a combined 25 goals and 31 assists for 56 points. He played the remainder of his career with the Flames, serving two full seasons before an eye injury sustained in a game against the New York Islanders on December 1, 1983 forced his retirement.

Hislop finished his NHL career with 75 goals and 103 assists for 178 points in 345 games, adding 61 goals and 102 assists for 163 points in the WHA.

Post-playing career

He joined the Flames front office immediately upon his retirement, as an assistant coach, but left hockey for four years until becoming the head coach for the Salt Lake Golden Eagles of the International Hockey League for two seasons starting in 1989. After that, Hislop returned to the Flames, working as a scout and spending three more seasons as an assistant coach until his final retirement in 2004.

Awards and honors

Award Year
All-ECAC Hockey First Team 1974–75 [1]
All-ECAC Hockey First Team 1975–76 [1]
AHCA East All-American 1975–76 [2]
gollark: Yes. I can, happily, mostly just run them in my browser.
gollark: I use Void Linux for purposes, I find it much nicer than Raspbian. Also more lightweight.
gollark: Perhaps it has some sort of connection tracking limit.
gollark: Not unsafe in the sense that it'll do undefined behaviour probably, just that you can't statically be sure it only contains the type you want.
gollark: It's a wildly unsafe and slow "generic", and you can write fast code with generics. More so than if you have to unsafely typecast any time you want a data structure other than the 3 built-in ones.

References

  1. "ECAC All-Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
  2. "Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved June 11, 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.