Duane Derksen Explained

Duane Derksen
Birth Date:7 July 1968
Birth Place:Saint Boniface, Manitoba, Canada
Height Ft:6
Height In:1
Weight Lb:188
Position:Goaltender
Catches:Left
Played For:Wisconsin
Baltimore Skipjacks
Hampton Roads Admirals
Milwaukee Admirals
Rochester Americans
Adirondack Red Wings
Minnesota Moose
Richmond Renegades
Madison Monsters
Oulun Kärpät
Tappara
Peoria Rivermen
Iserlohn Roosters
EC Bad Tölz
Missouri River Otters
Career Start:1988
Career End:2004
Draft:57th
Draft Year:1988
Draft Team:Washington Capitals

Duane Edward Derksen is a Canadian ice hockey coach and former goaltender who was an All-American for Wisconsin and led the Peoria Rivermen to a Kelly Cup championship in 2000.

Career

Derksen was a highly rated prospect in his junior career. In spite of poor statistics with the Winkler Flyers, Derksen was twice named as the best goaltender in the MJHL. He was selected in the 3rd round of the NHL Draft and began attending the University of Wisconsin–Madison that fall. In his freshman season, Derksen served as a backup to future NHL All-Star Curtis Joseph, playing in only a quarter of Wisconsin's games. After Joseph turned pro after 1989, the team turned to Derksen as the starter and he came through in a big way. He improved his stats significantly and won a program record 31 games that season (still a Wisconsin record as of 2021).[1] Derksen was instrumental in helping the Badgers finish first in the WCHA and was the top goaltender as Wisconsin won their conference tournament. Wisconsin received the second western seed and began the NCAA Tournament in the quarterfinals. Derksen was key in the Badgers winning two close games, particularly the national semifinal against Boston College, and made the championship game. Derksen wasn't as sharp in the final game but he didn't have to be. Wisconsin's offense overpowered the star-struck Colgate Raiders and the Badgers easily won the game 7–3.

Derksen continued to improve in his junior season, finishing in the top 10 in the nation in goals against average with 3 shutouts to his credit. The Badgers weren't as good with several departures from the roster but the team did manage to receive another NCAA tournament bid. Derksen was named an alternate captain for his senior year and was the leader for the team. He helped Wisconsin to a second place finish in the WCHA and was named the conference Player of the Year. While the Badgers were upset in the WCHA Tournament, they still managed to earn the final western seed for the NCAA Tournament. Derksen played a pivotal role in getting the Badgers to win three games as an underdog and reach the championship game. The last match turned out to be a controversial affair, with both Wisconsin and Lake Superior State receiving double-digit penalties in the game. The Badgers got out to a 2–0 lead after the first but a series of questionable calls allowed the Lakers to take a lead early in the third. Wisconsin was so incensed by the performance of the referee that assistant coach Bill Zito accosted the official after the game with two other players, an incident for which all three were suspended by the NCAA.[2] In the end, however, the result didn't matter for the Badgers as the team had committed several recruiting violations and their entire appearance in the 1992 tournament was later vacated.[3] Neither Derksen nor anyone from the 1990 team had been a part of the violations so his championship was safe.

After graduating with a bachelor's in history, Derksen began his professional career in the Washington Capitals' farm system. He spent three fairly unspectacular seasons bouncing between minor leagues, producing decent numbers but not playing well enough to get a shot at the NHL level. Once his rookie contract expired he was not resigned and then spent two years with the Madison Monsters before heading to Europe. Derksen had much more success with Oulun Kärpät and was able to sell his success to the Peoria Rivermen. He served as the team's starter for the 2000 season and led them to a league championship that season. Despite the success he had no takers at the next level of the minor leagues and returned to Europe. Derksen was back with the Rivermen two years later and, though his numbers were even better, he wasn't able to replicate the success he had had the first time around. After one more season of professional hockey he hung up his pads and called it a career.

With his playing days behind him, Derksen transitioned into Sales and marketing working in the field for two years before returning to college to earn a business degree.[4] He continues as an account manager, most recently with Ingersoll Rand (as of 2021), but did eventually return to ice hockey as an assistant coach in the summer of 2020.

Statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Playoffs
Team LeagueGP W L T MIN GA SV%GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1986–87Winkler FlyersMJHL48 4.80
1987–88Winkler FlyersMJHL38 5.20
1988–89WisconsinWCHA11 4 5 0 561 37 1 3.96 .877
1989–90WisconsinWCHA41 31 8 1 2345 133 2 3.40 .889
1990–91WisconsinWCHA42 24 15 3 2474 133 3 3.23 .880
1991–92WisconsinWCHA35 21 12 2 2064 110 0 3.20 .878
1992–93Hampton Roads AdmiralsECHL13 7 5 0 747 48 0 3.86 .884
1992–93Baltimore SkipjacksAHL26 6 13 3 1247 86 0 4.14 .8754
1993–94Milwaukee AdmiralsIHL9 4 2 2 490 28 0 3.42 .890
1993–94Rochester AmericansAHL6 2 1 1 235 14 0 3.57 .891
1993–94Adirondack Red WingsAHL11 4 6 0 599 37 0 3.70 .873
1994–95Minnesota MooseIHL7 1 3 3 250 21 0 5.02 .837
1994–95Richmond RenegadesECHL27 15 8 2 1558 83 0 3.20 .8854
1995–96Madison MonstersCoHL40 19 15 3 2209 128 1 3.48 .8906
1995–96Fort Wayne KometsIHL1 0 0 0 22 3 0 8.01 .750
1996–97Milwaukee AdmiralsIHL1 0 0 0 34 1 0 1.79 .909
1996–97Madison MonstersCoHL59 36 17 5 3364 190 0 3.39 .8995
1996–97Milwaukee AdmiralsIHL1 0 0 1 60 2 0 2.00 .951
1997–98Oulun KärpätI-Divisioona35 2.25 .9205
1998–99Oulun KärpätI-Divisioona26 1.72 .9253 2.36 .913
1998–99TapparaSM-liiga5 2 3 0 260 17 0 3.93 .861
1999–00Peoria RivermenECHL43 30 9 3 2487 122 1 2.94 .89116
2000–01Iserlohn RoostersDEL40 2.94 .894
2001–02EC Bad Tölz2nd Bundesliga41 24 17 0 2423 109 7 2.70 3
2002–03Peoria RivermenECHL29 14 9 3 1629 74 3 2.72 .9092
2003–04Missouri River OttersUHL20 4 14 1 1183 88 0 4.46 .880
MJHL totals86
NCAA totals129 80 40 6 7444 413 6 3.33 .886
AHL totals43 12 20 4 2081 137 0 3.95 .8774
IHL totals19 5 5 6 856 55 1 3.86 .877
ECHL totals112 66 31 8 6421 327 4 3.06 .89422
IHL totals19 5 5 6 856 55 1 3.86 .877
CoHL/UHL totals119 59 46 9 6756 406 1 3.61 .89211
I-Divisioona totals61 17

Awards and honors

AwardYear
MJHL First-Team All-Star1986–87
MJHL Top Goaltender1986–87
MJHL First-Team All-Star1987–88
MJHL Top Goaltender1987–88
All-WCHA Second Team1989–90[5]
WCHA All-Tournament Team1990[6]
All-NCAA All-Tournament Team1990[7]
All-WCHA Second Team1990–91
All-WCHA First Team1991–92
AHCA West Second-Team All-American1991–92[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wisconsin Badgers . Wisconsin Badgers Men's Hockey 2018-19 Media Guide . December 17, 2019 . March 5, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190305062128/https://s3.amazonaws.com/sidearm.sites/uwbadgers.com/documents/2018/10/8/201819_HKY_FactBook.pdf . dead .
  2. News: HOCKEY; Amid Fury, Lake Superior St. Prevails . The New York Times . April 6, 1992 . November 14, 2019.
  3. News: NCAA PENALTIES HIT WISCONSIN . The Chicago Tribune . April 23, 1992 . November 14, 2019.
  4. News: Duane Derksen . Linked In . July 19, 2021.
  5. News: WCHA All-Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 19, 2013.
  6. News: WCHA Tourney History. WCHA. 2014-06-26. 2014-07-02. https://web.archive.org/web/20140702170427/http://www.wcha.com/men/tourney/history.php. dead.
  7. News: NCAA Frozen Four Records. NCAA.org. 2013-06-19.
  8. News: Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners. NCAA.org. June 11, 2013.