Brad Fast Explained

Played For:Carolina Hurricanes
SCL Tigers
ERC Ingolstadt
EC Red Bull Salzburg
Anyang Halla
Position:Defence
Shoots:Left
Height Ft:6
Height In:0
Weight Lb:195
Birth Date:February 21, 1980
Birth Place:Fort St. John, British Columbia, Canada
Draft:84th overall
Draft Year:1999
Draft Team:Carolina Hurricanes
Career Start:2003
Career End:2011

Bradley M. Fast (born February 21, 1980) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey defenceman. He spent his amateur career in the British Columbia Hockey League, and was selected in the third round of the 1999 NHL Entry Draft, 84th overall, by the Carolina Hurricanes. He played in 1 NHL game for the Hurricanes, scoring a goal, before embarking on a European career.

Playing career

Amateur

Fast played for his hometown Fort St. John Flyers as a 14-year-old before moving on to the Prince George Spruce Kings in the BCJHL. At the end of his third season in the BCJHL, Fast was drafted by the Hurricanes. After being drafted, Fast enrolled at Michigan State University, where he spent four seasons playing for the Michigan State Spartans. He was the captain for one season and was a collegiate standout at MSU, and was recognized as a star offensive defenceman. He was member of the team for famous outdoor event, The Cold War along with fellow defenseman John-Michael Liles. Near the end of the 2002–03 season, Fast signed a professional contract with the Hurricanes and joined their American Hockey League affiliate, the Lowell Lock Monsters.

Professional

Fast played seven games with the Lock Monsters to finish off the 2002–03 season, and started with that team full-time for the 2003–04 season. He was called up and played one game with the parent Hurricanes, becoming one of only four players to score a goal in his only NHL game.[1] Fast scored his first career goal in his first career NHL game, tallying the team's sixth goal with 2:26 remaining to send the game into overtime tied at six. Former Spartan Rod Brind'Amour (1988–89) set up Fast's game-tying goal. Fast became the 16th Hurricane player to score a goal in his NHL debut. His goal was also the last ever scored that resulted in a tie game in the NHL, as the league moved to a shoot-out the following season.[2]

The 2004–05 lockout season was mostly spent with the Lock Monsters, but Fast was demoted to the ECHL and spent the end of the season (and the playoffs) with the Florida Everblades.Fast was signed by the Los Angeles Kings and played the 2005–06 season with their AHL club, the Manchester Monarchs. Fast signed with the Swiss club Langnau for the 2006–07 season. In the following year, he also played for Red Bull Salzburg EC in the Austrian League.

In May 2008, Fast signed with Anyang Halla for a one-year deal. On September 2, Fast was named assistant captain for Halla. He became the first import player ever to be named assistant captain in franchise history. In February 2009, Fast re-signed for two more years.

After his final year with Anyang Halla, Fast retired.

Career statistics

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1999–00Michigan State UniversityNCAA42591420
2000–01Michigan State UniversityNCAA424242816
2001–02Michigan State UniversityNCAA4110162626
2002–03Michigan State UniversityNCAA3911354628
2002–03Lowell Lock MonstersAHL701012
2003–04Carolina HurricanesNHL11010
2003–04Lowell Lock MonstersAHL7910253535
2004–05Lowell Lock MonstersAHL3215623
2004–05Florida EverbladesECHL142570181346
2005–06Manchester MonarchsAHL62513183870228
2006–07SCL TigersNLA30381122
2007–08ERC IngolstadtDEL15134230110
2007–08EC Red Bull SalzburgEBEL2625715
2008–09Anyang HallaAL33727343270336
2009–10Anyang HallaAL187162316
2010–11Anyang HallaAL223101316
NHL totals11010

Awards and achievements

AwardYear
BCHL Best Defenseman1998-99
BCHL Most Sportsmanlike Player1998-99
CCHA Champion2000, 2001
CCHA All-Tournament Team2002[3]
All-CCHA First Team2002–03[4]
CCHA Best Defensive Defenseman2002–03
AHCA West Second-Team All-American2002–03
ALH Champion2009–2010
2010–2011

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hurricanes, Panthers played final tie 13 years ago. NHL.com. John Kreiser. 2017-04-04. 2017-04-04.
  2. Web site: Weekes, Fast look back on the NHL's last tie. Adam Kimelman. 4 April 2011. 10 June 2011. FoxNews.
  3. News: 2012-13 CCHA Media Guide. ISSUU.com. 2014-04-23.
  4. News: All-CCHA Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. 2013-07-27.