Jay McNeill explained

Jay McNeill
Birth Date:28 August 1972
Birth Place:Powell River, British Columbia, Canada
Height Ft:6
Height In:0
Weight Lb:182
Position:Right Wing
Shoots:Left
Played For:Richmond Renegades
Columbus Chill
Adendorfer EC
Gelsenkirchener EC
Tilburg Trappers
Höchstadter EC
Eintracht Frankfurt
Career Start:1992
Career End:2009

Jay McNeill is a Canadian retired ice hockey right wing who was an All-American for Colorado College

Career

McNeill was a high-scoring forward during his junior career, averaging more than a goal per game over two seasons for the Powell River Paper Kings. He finished tied for third in league scoring in 1992 and began attending Colorado College in the fall. He continued offensive pace as a freshman, clicking at over a point per game in his first year with the Tigers. McNeill was named to the conference All-Rookie team despite CC finishing last in the WCHA. The team changed coaches during the offseason and new bench boss Don Lucia brought about a immediate change to the program's fortunes. McNeill led the team in scoring as the Tigers finished atop league standings for the first time in 37 years.[1]

As a junior, McNeill was the third highest goal-scorer in the nation and was named an All-American. He helped CC reach the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 17 years. For his final season, McNeill's point production increased for the fourth straight season, helping Colorado College win their third consecutive conference championship. McNeill's team won its first tournament games in 39 years and returned to the championship game for the first time since winning the title in 1957. Their appearance came with a bit of controversy, however, as McNeill's assist on the winning marker appeared to have been a hand pass.[2] Because the NCAA didn't allow the use of replay at the time, the goal was allowed to stand. In the final game, McNeill was held off the scoresheet and the Tigers lost in overtime to Michigan, coincidentally, the same team CC had defeated back in '57.

After graduating, McNeill began his professional career in the ECHL. While he continued to produce points, he didn't receive much interest from AAA teams and headed to Europe in 1998. He spent most of the next decade playing in the lower German leagues, scoring at an incredible pace. In the early '00s, he spent most of three years playing with the Tilburg Trappers and helped the team win the Dutch league championship in 2001. McNeill retired in 2009.

Statistics

Regular season and playoffs

  Regular Season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1990–91Powell River Paper KingsBCJHL60594810777
1991–92Powell River Paper KingsBCJHL606366129122
1992–93Colorado CollegeWCHA3618213980
1993–94Colorado CollegeWCHA3725194430
1994–95Colorado CollegeWCHA4333185170
1995–96Colorado CollegeWCHA4224315553
1996–97Richmond RenegadesECHL682529544284372
1997–98Richmond RenegadesECHL15671310
1997–98Columbus ChillECHL4412223431
1998–99Adendorfer ECOberliga34202646301815112610
1999–00Gelsenkirchener ECOberliga59544498109
2000–01Gelsenkirchener ECOberliga64154
2000–01Tilburg TrappersEredivisie2415355020966128
2001–02Tilburg TrappersEredivisie241613293640228
2002–03Tilburg TrappersEredivisie241614302451454
2003–04Höchstadter ECOberliga40110
2003–04Eintracht FrankfurtRegionalliga614102412
2004–05Eintracht FrankfurtRegionalliga18665111724
2005–06Eintracht FrankfurtRegionalliga174029698
2006–07Eintracht FrankfurtRegionalliga
2007–08Eintracht FrankfurtRegionalliga
2008–09Eintracht FrankfurtRegionalliga395140
BCJHL totals120 122 114 236 199
NCAA totals158 100 89 189 233
ECHL totals127 43 58 101 83 8 4 3 7 2
Oberliga totals103 78 72 150 143 18 15 11 26 10
Eredivisie totals72 47 62 109 80 18 7 12 19 20

Awards and honors

AwardYear
All-WCHA Rookie Team1992–93[3]
All-WCHA First Team1993–94[4]
All-WCHA First Team1994–95[5]
AHCA West Second-Team All-American1994–95[6]
All-WCHA Third Team1995–96[7]

Notes and References

  1. News: Colorado College men's Hockey 2017-18 Media Guide . Colorado College Tigers . 2018-10-06.
  2. News: COLORADO COLLEGE HAS A CHILLING EFFECT, 4-3 . Washington Post . March 29, 1996 . October 27, 2021.
  3. News: WCHA All-Rookie Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 19, 2013.
  4. News: WCHA All-Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 19, 2013.
  5. News: WCHA All-Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 19, 2013.
  6. News: Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners. NCAA.org. June 11, 2013.
  7. News: WCHA All-Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 19, 2013.