Yanic Perreault

Yanic Jacques Perreault (born April 4, 1971) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who played thirteen seasons in the National Hockey League.

Yanic Perreault
Perreault as a member of the Los Angeles Kings
Born (1971-04-04) April 4, 1971
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight 185 lb (84 kg; 13 st 3 lb)
Position Centre
Shot Left
Played for Toronto Maple Leafs
Los Angeles Kings
Montreal Canadiens
Nashville Predators
Phoenix Coyotes
Chicago Blackhawks
National team  Canada
NHL Draft 47th overall, 1991
Toronto Maple Leafs
Playing career 19912008

Playing career

As a youth, he played in the 1983 and 1984 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournaments with a minor ice hockey team from Sherbrooke, Quebec.[1]

Perreault started his hockey career for the Trois-Rivières Draveurs where he was one of the best offensive players in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, racking up a total of 185 points in his most productive season. He was drafted in the third round, 47th overall by the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1991 NHL Entry Draft.

Carrying a reputation as too slow a skater to succeed in the NHL, Perreault played three years for the St. John's Maple Leafs, Toronto's American Hockey League affiliate. Perreault led the St. John's Maple Leafs to a seventh game in the Calder Cup finals in the 1992 season and to first-place finishes the following two seasons; his 132 goals and 276 points became in that span, and remain, career records for the Leafs' American Hockey League franchise.

Perreault made his NHL debut in that third season with the Leafs, showing some flash in spot duty, before being traded to the Los Angeles Kings for a fourth round pick in 1994. He spent most of that season with the Kings' minor league affiliate, the Phoenix Roadrunners, scoring 51 goals to lead the team.

The following year was his breakout season, making the NHL for good with the Kings, where he became the team's lead centre after Wayne Gretzky was traded late in the year amidst a full-scale reorganization of the team; Perreault scored 25 goals to finish second on the squad. He played three more seasons in Los Angeles before being sent back to Toronto in 1999, for Jason Podollan and a third round selection. In 2001, Perreault signed with the Montreal Canadiens as a free agent, remaining three seasons before sitting out the lockout year of 2005, after which he signed with the Nashville Predators, with whom he scored 57 points, his NHL career high.

He signed after that single season with the Phoenix Coyotes and was selected to play in the 2007 NHL All-Star Game. On February 27, 2007, Perreault, packaged with a fifth round draft pick, was traded from the Coyotes to Toronto for defencemen Brendan Bell and a second round draft pick, marking his third round of duty with the Maple Leafs.

Perreault signed with the Chicago Blackhawks as a free agent on July 1, 2007. However, with his scoring skills diminishing, he retired at the end of the 2007-08 season.

Perreault is often considered one of the best faceoff men in NHL history.[2]

Coaching career

On October 4, 2013 − one day ahead of the second game of the season - the Blackhawks announced they had hired Perreault to help the team improve its face-off success rate.[3] Perreault is also head coach for the Chicago Mission 2005 youth team.

Honors and awards

  • 1989 QMJHL - Michel Bergeron Trophy (Offensive Rookie of the Year)
  • 1989 Canadian Major Junior - Rookie of the Year
  • 1991 QMJHL - First All-Star Team
  • 1991 QMJHL - Frank J. Selke Memorial Trophy (Most Gentlemanly Player)
  • 1991 QMJHL - Jean Beliveau Trophy (Leading scorer)
  • 1991 QMJHL - Michel Briere Trophy (Most Valuable Player)
  • 2007 NHL - Played in NHL All-Star Game

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GPGAPtsPIM GPGAPtsPIM
1987–88 Cantons de L'Est Cantonniers QMAAA 42705712714 81210226
1988–89 Trois-Rivières Draveurs QMJHL 70535510848 40007
1989–90 Trois-Rivières Draveurs QMJHL 63516311475 7651119
1990–91 Trois-Rivières Draveurs QMJHL 678798185103 647116
1991–92 St. John's Maple Leafs AHL 6238387619 1678154
1992–93 St. John's Maple Leafs AHL 7949469556 94592
1993–94 St. John's Maple Leafs AHL 62456010538 111261814
1993–94 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 133360
1994–95 Phoenix Roadrunners IHL 6851489952
1994–95 Los Angeles Kings NHL 2625720
1995–96 Los Angeles Kings NHL 7825244916
1996–97 Los Angeles Kings NHL 4111142520
1997–98 Los Angeles Kings NHL 7928204832 41236
1998–99 Los Angeles Kings NHL 6410172730
1998–99 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 12781512 173696
1999–00 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 5818274522 10110
2000–01 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 7624285252 112354
2001–02 Montreal Canadiens NHL 8227295640 113580
2002–03 Montreal Canadiens NHL 7324224630
2003–04 Montreal Canadiens NHL 6916153140 92240
2005–06 Nashville Predators NHL 6922355730 10002
2006–07 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 4919143330
2006–07 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 172354
2007–08 Chicago Blackhawks NHL 53951424
NHL totals 859247269516402 5411193018

International

Year Team Event   GP G A Pts PIM
1996 Canada WC 8 6 3 9 0
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gollark: Uncompressed images?
gollark: I have... several gigabytes of crawled webpages somewhere. I think.
gollark: It is to be compared against all things ever however.
gollark: There's a compression benchmark thing online somewhere using 1GB of English wikipedia.

References

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