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Ray Whitney (ice hockey)

Canadian ice hockey player (born 1972)


Summary

Canadian ice hockey player (born 1972)

FieldValue
nameRay Whitney
imageRay Whitney.jpg
captionWhitney with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006
image_size230px
positionLeft Wing
shootsRight
height_ft5
height_in10
weight_lb180
played_forSan Jose Sharks
Edmonton Oilers
Florida Panthers
Columbus Blue Jackets
Detroit Red Wings
Carolina Hurricanes
Phoenix Coyotes
Dallas Stars
ntl_teamCAN
birth_date
birth_placeFort Saskatchewan, Alberta, Canada
career_start1991
career_end2014
draft23rd overall
draft_year1991
draft_teamSan Jose Sharks

Edmonton Oilers Florida Panthers Columbus Blue Jackets Detroit Red Wings Carolina Hurricanes Phoenix Coyotes Dallas Stars Raymond D. Whitney (born May 8, 1972) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player in the National Hockey League (NHL). He was given the nickname "The Wizard" for his passing and playmaking skills.

Whitney is considered to have been one of the most underrated players in the NHL, as his name has rarely been mentioned amongst hockey fans and writers despite his consistently high point-production throughout his entire 22-year career, making him one of the top 65 point producers in the history of the NHL. On January 29, 2016, Whitney became the first Spokane Chiefs player to have their number retired (#14). He won the Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006.

Playing career

Long before Whitney played in the NHL, he and his brother Dean were stick boys for the NHL's Wayne Gretzky era Edmonton Oilers. The third stick boy with the Whitney brothers was another future NHL player, Ryan Smyth.

During his junior career, Whitney spent three years with the Spokane Chiefs of the Western Hockey League (WHL), leading the entire league with 185 points during the 1990-91 season. Whitney and the Chiefs won the 1991 Memorial Cup as champions of the Canadian Hockey League.

Whitney was the second player ever drafted by the San Jose Sharks, picked in the second round (23rd overall) in the 1991 NHL Entry Draft. Pat Falloon, his teammate with the WHL's Spokane Chiefs, was the Sharks' first pick. The Sharks had thought the pair would be a natural scoring combination, but that didn't pan out. Whitney started his professional career in the 1991-92 season, playing with teams in the German Deutsche Eishockey Liga and the International Hockey League, as well as two games with the San Jose Sharks. He developed into a regular with San Jose over the next two seasons.

Whitney has played for several different NHL teams during his 24-year career, including the San Jose Sharks (1991–92 to 1996–97), Edmonton Oilers (1997–98), Florida Panthers (1997–98 to 2000–01), Columbus Blue Jackets (2000–01 to 2002–03), Detroit Red Wings (2003–04), Carolina Hurricanes, Phoenix Coyotes, and Dallas Stars (details below).

On August 6, 2005, Whitney signed a two-year contract with the Carolina Hurricanes paying him $1.5 million per year. In his first season with the Hurricanes in 2005–06, Whitney helped Carolina win their first Stanley Cup with fellow Fort Saskatchewan native Mike Commodore.

On February 8, 2007, Whitney scored a natural hat trick in just 1 minute and 40 seconds.

On April 13, 2007, Whitney re-signed with the Hurricanes, agreeing to a three-year contract that pays him $3.5 million per year.

On July 1, 2010, Whitney signed a 2-year deal with the Phoenix Coyotes for $3 million per year.

Whitney is known for his comedic tendencies for doing such things as making sure he's visible in pre-game on-screen interviews behind the interviewee, leading to the Hurricanes fans' favorite game of "Where's Whitney"? His commonly used nickname is "Wizard," which was originally given to him by former Florida Panthers play-by-play commentator Jeff Rimer.

Whitney was the last remaining member of the San Jose Sharks inaugural team (1991–92) active in the NHL until his retirement on January 21, 2015. He was also the last remaining active player to get his start in the NHL as a member of the expansion San Jose Sharks.

On March 31, 2012, Whitney became only the 79th player in the history of the NHL to score 1,000 regular-season points, when he registered an assist in a game against the Anaheim Ducks. As of the end of the 2013-14 season, he is number 62 all time for regular-season points in the NHL.

On July 1, 2012, Whitney signed a 2-year, $9 million contract with the Dallas Stars.

On January 21, 2015, he announced his retirement as an NHL player, ending a career after producing 1,064 points (385-679) in 1,330 regular-season games. He was the last active member of his draft class when he retired, meaning that Whitney is the leader in points, assists and games played for the entire 1991 NHL draft class.

Personal life

Ray and wife Brijet married in 2000 and have three children; two daughters and a son. He is known by his nickname "The Wizard".

International play

Whitney has been a member of Team Canada at four different Ice Hockey World Championships. He made his debut at the 1998 World Championship, recording six points in seven games while Canada finished out of the medals. Whitney notched seven points in 10 games at the 1999 World Championship, again missing a medal when Canada lost in the semifinals to the Czech Republic. He joined Team Canada at the 2002 World Championship with Canada again failing to medal. At the 2010 World Championship, Whitney replaced Ryan Smyth as Canada's captain, when Smyth broke his foot early in the tournament. Canada did not win a medal in that year's world championship.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffsSeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIMNHL totals1,3303856791,06446510821325348
1987–88Fort Saskatchewan Pop Shop SelectsAMBHL7180155235119
1988–89Spokane ChiefsWHL7117335016
1989–90Spokane ChiefsWHL7157561135063476
1990–91Spokane ChiefsWHL7267118185361513183112
1991–92Kölner Haie1.GBun103694
1991–92San Diego GullsIHL633654901240000
1991–92San Jose SharksNHL20330
1992–93Kansas City BladesIHL46203353141257122
1992–93San Jose SharksNHL2646104
1993–94San Jose SharksNHL6114264014140448
1994–95San Jose SharksNHL3913122514114482
1995–96San Jose SharksNHL6017244116
1996–97San Jose SharksNHL120224
1997–98Edmonton OilersNHL91340
1997–98Florida PanthersNHL6832296128
1998–99Florida PanthersNHL8126386418
1999–00Florida PanthersNHL812942713541014
2000–01Florida PanthersNHL4310213128
2000–01Columbus Blue JacketsNHL30332
2001–02Columbus Blue JacketsNHL6721406112
2002–03Columbus Blue JacketsNHL8124527622
2003–04Detroit Red WingsNHL6714294322121344
2005–06Carolina HurricanesNHL631738554224961514
2006–07Carolina HurricanesNHL8132518346
2007–08Carolina HurricanesNHL6625366130
2008–09Carolina HurricanesNHL82245377321838114
2009–10Carolina HurricanesNHL8021375826
2010–11Phoenix CoyotesNHL751740572441232
2011–12Phoenix CoyotesNHL82245377281625710
2012–13Dallas StarsNHL321118294
2013–14Dallas StarsNHL69923321450000

International

YearTeamEventResultGPGAPtsPIMSenior totals308172528
1998CanadaWC6th64264
1999CanadaWC4th1016722
2002CanadaWC6th71342
2010CanadaWC7th72680

Awards and honours

AwardYear
WHL
West first All-Star team1991
Bob Clarke Trophy1991
Four Broncos Memorial Trophy1991
WHL Champion1991
Memorial Cup All-Star team1991
Memorial Cup Most Sportsmanlike Player1991
Memorial Cup Champion1991
NHL
All-Star Games2000, 2003
Stanley Cup champion2006
Second All-Star team2012

References

References

  1. (2012-07-01). "Numbers Game: Stars Sign Veteran Scorer Ray Whitney". [[The Sports Network.
  2. (2009-07-27). "Overlooked and Underrated: Ray Whitney". The Hockey Writers.
  3. "Spokane Chiefs Officially Retire Ray Whitney's number 14".
  4. Cam Cole. (2006-06-05). "Cup Dreams Collide". [[Canwest.
  5. (7 October 2020). "Trip down Memorial Lane: 'Scouts were high' on 1990-91 Spokane Chiefs team loaded with talent {{!}} The Spokesman-Review".
  6. "Curious Case of Ray Whitney". gretzky.com.
  7. (2006-05-16). "'The Wizard' enjoying magical run with 'Canes". [[Associated Press]].
  8. Morgan, Craig. (23 January 2015). "Ray Whitney's legacy: leadership, humor, underappreciated skill".
  9. (2007-04-13). "Hurricanes re-sign Whitney".
  10. "Vet Whitney signs 2-year deal with Coyotes".
  11. (2009-07-07). "San Jose Sharks 1991–92 roster".
  12. (21 January 2015). "Ray Whitney retires after 22 NHL seasons".
  13. (January 2, 2013). "Carolina Hurricanes 2009-10 Media Guide".
  14. (January 2, 2013). "Carolina Hurricanes 2008-09 Media Guide".
  15. (2010-05-12). "Ray Whitney to Replace Ryan Smyth as Canada's Captain at 2010 IIHF World Championship in Germany; Beauchemin, Perry and Stamkos to Continue as Alternate Captains". [[Hockey Canada]].
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