Pat Brisson

Pat Brisson (born January 22, 1965 in Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec) is a Canadian National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) agent and co-head of the Hockey Division of Creative Artists Agency with partner J.P. Barry (CAA Hockey). In 2017, Brisson was named the 9th most powerful agent in all of sports by Forbes, in 2016, he was ranked #7, in 2015, he was ranked #10. Additionally, he is consistently ranked as one of the 100 most powerful people in the National Hockey League (NHL) by The Hockey News. He has negotiated hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts during his career for the players he represents. The Hollywood Reporter did a piece on Brisson, A Day in the Life of CAA's Very own Jerry MacGuire (Hollywood Reporter).

Pat Brisson
Born (1965-01-22) January 22, 1965
Alma materUniversity of Ottawa
OccupationSports Agent

Brisson has a high-profile client roster, including former Hart Memorial Trophy and Art Ross Trophy winner Sidney Crosby, Patrick Kane, Anže Kopitar and Jonathan Toews. During the 2014 off-season, he negotiated matching eight-year, $84 million contracts—the highest average annual value of any contract since the introduction of the NHL's salary cap in 2005—for Chicago Blackhawks teammates Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews. During the 2017–18 NHL season, Brisson engineered the high-profile 3-team trade between the Colorado Avalanche, Nashville Predators, and Ottawa Senators that ended with client Matt Duchene being moved from the Avalanche to the Senators.

Since 2005, Brisson has represented six first overall selections in the NHL Entry Draft, including three consecutive (Sidney Crosby in 2005, Erik Johnson in 2006, Patrick Kane in 2007). Brisson is the agent for John Tavares, who went first in the 2009 Draft and for Nathan MacKinnon, who went first in 2013. Additional clients Brisson represents include Jonathan Bernier, Claude Giroux, Carl Hagelin, Seth Jones, Kyle Okposo, Andrew Shaw, and Mathew Barzal among others.

Over the course of his career, he has represented Hockey Hall of Fame inductees Luc Robitaille and Chris Chelios.

Brisson moved to Los Angeles in 1987. In the early 1990s, Brisson founded "Skate with the Pros" and "California Dreamin"—youth hockey schools that feature NHL stars and coaches as instructors. He was an important figure in the growth of hockey in Southern California with his involvement with Iceoplex, a chain of ice rinks.[1]

Brisson enjoyed a successful junior hockey career in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), averaging over a point per game with the Verdun Juniors, Drummondville Voltigeurs and Hull Olympiques, where he played for future NHL coach Pat Burns and played with NHL great Luc Robitaille.[2]

Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1982–83 Verdun Juniors QMJHL 616243035 70005
1983–84 Drummondville Voltigeurs QMJHL 6124446870 1053817
1984–85 Drummondville Voltigeurs QMJHL 6445418676 916714
1985–86 Hull Olympiques QMJHL 5937468373 1514183237
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References

  1. "Iceoplex". Iceoplex. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
  2. "Pat Brisson: Still in the game". Hockeyplayer.com. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
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