Jamie Hislop Explained

Birth Date:January 20, 1954
Birth Place:Sarnia, Ontario, Canada
Height Ft:5
Height In:10
Weight Lb:180
Position:Forward
Shoots:Right
Played For:Cincinnati Stingers
Quebec Nordiques
Calgary Flames
Draft:140th overall
Draft Year:1974
Draft Team:Montreal Canadiens
Wha Draft:49th overall
Wha Draft Year:1974
Wha Draft Team:Cleveland Crusaders
Career Start:1976
Career End:1983

James Donald Hislop (born January 20, 1954) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey forward who played for the Cincinnati Stingers in the World Hockey Association from 1976 to 1979 and then the Quebec Nordiques and Calgary Flames of the National Hockey League (NHL) between 1979 and 1984. He helped the Flames reach the NHL playoff semifinals for the first time in club history in 1981. After his playing career he worked as an assistant coach with the Flames and then as a scout with the Minnesota Wild.

Playing career

Born in Sarnia, Ontario, Hislop played junior hockey in Tier II Ontario Hockey Association play.

Hislop attended the University of New Hampshire under legendary coach Charlie Holt. In Hislop's sophomore year with the Wildcats in 1974, he led the ECAC in assists with 35 en route to the conference title, leading to him being drafted by the Montreal Canadiens in the 8th round of the 1974 NHL amateur draft. He followed that performance up with two 66-point seasons, winning conference First All-Star honours in 1975 and 1976 and being named to the NCAA First Team All-American squad in 1976. He finished his collegiate career with 77 goals and 132 assists for 209 points, the leading scorer in Wildcat history to that time, and is currently 4th all-time.

After spending half a season in the minor leagues with the Hampton Gulls, Hislop was signed by the Cincinnati Stingers of the World Hockey Association in 1977. He played three seasons with the Stingers, his best year coming in 1979, when he scored 30 goals and 40 assists for 70 points, chipping in six points in three playoff games.

When the Stingers folded in the WHA-NHL merger, in 1979, Hislop's rights were acquired by the Winnipeg Jets, who traded him a few days later to the Quebec Nordiques for defenseman Barry Melrose. He was the only player to play in all 80 games for the Nordiques during their inaugural season in the NHL, scoring 19 goals. In 1980, he had the good fortune of being inserted as the right winger on a line with brothers Peter Stastny and Anton Stastny, and after a short period of adaptation, the three clicked beautifully together as Hislop scored 41 points in 50 games. With Réal Cloutier, another right-winger, back from an injury and the Nordiques weak in goal, he was traded midway through the season to the Calgary Flames in exchange for Dan Bouchard; it proved to be his best year in the NHL with a combined 25 goals and 31 assists for 56 points. He played the remainder of his career with the Flames, settling into being a solid two-way player who almost never missed a game and serving two full seasons before an eye injury sustained in a game against the New York Islanders on December 1, 1983 forced his retirement.

Hislop finished his NHL career with 75 goals and 103 assists for 178 points in 345 games, adding 61 goals and 102 assists for 163 points in the WHA.

Post-playing career

He joined the Flames front office immediately upon his retirement, as an assistant coach, but left hockey for four years until becoming the head coach for the Salt Lake Golden Eagles of the International Hockey League for two seasons starting in 1989. After that, Hislop returned to the Flames, working as a scout and spending three more seasons as an assistant coach until his final retirement in 2004.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGP PIMGP G A Pts PIM
1971–72Stratford CullitonsOHA-B38 26 30 56
1972–73University of New HampshireECAC26 5 16 21 12
1973–74University of New HampshireECAC31 21 35 56 30
1974–75University of New HampshireECAC31 28 38 66 12
1975–76University of New HampshireECAC31 23 43 66 20
1976–77Cincinnati StingersWHA46 7 19 26 64 0 1 1 4
1976–77Hampton GullsSHL37 16 17 33 11
1977–78Cincinnati StingersWHA80 24 43 67 17
1978–79Cincinnati StingersWHA80 30 40 70 453 2 4 6 0
1979–80Quebec NordiquesNHL80 19 20 39 6
1980–81Quebec NordiquesNHL50 19 22 41 15
1980–81Calgary FlamesNHL29 6 9 15 1116 3 0 3 5
1981–82Calgary FlamesNHL80 16 25 41 353 0 0 0 0
1982–83Calgary FlamesNHL79 14 19 33 179 0 2 2 6
1983–84Calgary FlamesNHL27 1 8 9 2
WHA totals206 61 102 163 687 2 5 7 4
NHL totals345 75 103 178 8628 3 2 5 11

Awards and honors

AwardYear
All-ECAC Hockey First Team1974–75[1]
All-ECAC Hockey First Team1975–76
AHCA East All-American1975–76[2]

Notes and References

  1. News: ECAC All-Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 19, 2013.
  2. News: Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners. NCAA.org. June 11, 2013.