Paul Adey Explained

Birth Date:28 August 1963
Birth Place:Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Height Ft:5
Height In:10
Weight Lb:190
Position:Right wing
Shoots:Right
Played For:Toledo Goaldiggers
Fort Wayne Komets
Peoria Rivermen
Briançon Alpes Provence
Nottingham Panthers
HC Milano
Sheffield Steelers
Ntl Team:GBR
Career Start:1983
Career End:2004

Paul Adey (born August 28, 1963) is a former ice hockey player and coach. Adey enjoyed a notable playing career in British ice hockey, playing 11 seasons for the Nottingham Panthers between 1988 and 1999 and 29 games for the Sheffield Steelers during the 2000–01 season. His number 22 jersey is retired by the Panthers and he is a member of the British Ice Hockey Hall of Fame.

Playing career

Born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Adey joined the Hull Olympiques in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League in 1981 at the age of 18, moving to the Shawinigan Cataractes in 1983. His professional career began in International Hockey League with the Toledo Goaldiggers before he moved to the Fort Wayne Komets. After three seasons he moved to the Peoria Rivermen before moving to Europe in 1988. He began the 1988–89 season with Ligue Magnus side Briançon but in October joined the Nottingham Panthers in the British Hockey League. He played for the club for the next 11 seasons, finishing as the top point scorer on five occasions and setting club records for goals, assists, and points, surpassing the records previously held by Chick Zamick. Adey helped the team to the Playoff Championship in his first season and won four Autumn Cup winners medals with the team.

Adey departed for Italy in 1999 having scored 828 goals, 781 assists and 1,609 points in 609 appearances for the Panthers. In 2000–01 Adey was a mid-season signing for Nottingham's archrivals, the Sheffield Steelers. He scored 11 goals and earned 12 assists in 29 games for the Steelers, helping the club to a Grand Slam of all four cups. He retired from playing at the end of the 2000–01 season. However, whilst coaching, he played as an injury cover twice in the 2001–02 season and once in the 2003–04 season.

Coaching career

Following his retirement as a player in 2001, Adey returned to Nottingham as a coach under director of hockey Alex Dampier. In 2002 he assumed the role of head coach after Dampier's dismissal. Adey presided over the Panthers for three seasons, leading the club the Challenge Cup in 2004, their first trophy since 1998. Following the 2004–05 season, Adey's contract was not renewed. In the summer of 2006 he became the head coach of Italian side Renon Ritten. He was retained for the 2007–08 season. He became coach of the Belfast Giants in the Elite Ice Hockey League for the 2013–2014 season, and helped bring them the League Cup and to the final of the Challenge Cup and the playoffs. He also won coach of the year that season. However, there was a lot of controversy when he was not retained to be coach in the following season. A statement released by Belfast Giants said 'that Adey and general manager Todd Kelman had failed to come to an agreement for next season and mutually decided to part ways'. Fans were shocked by this move by Kelman and the controversy continued when Kelman then left his general manager role at the Giants to buy the Cardiff Devils for the next season.

Awards

Records

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1981–82Hull OlympiquesQMJHL5417244101489179
1982–83Hull OlympiquesQMJHL7058104162147511160
1983–84Shawinigan CataractesQMJHL5637523978663913
1983–84Toledo GoaldiggersIHL20000
1983–84Fort Wayne KometsIHL30000
1984–85Fort Wayne KometsIHL8130316113513471123
1985–86Fort Wayne KometsIHL3913112444
1985–86Peoria RivermenIHL1487157114596
1986–87Peoria RivermenIHL7935286340
1987–88Briançon Alpes ProvenceFRA3132225449
1988–89Nottingham PanthersBHL348271153996612186
1989–90Nottingham PanthersBHL31544910350557122
1990–91Nottingham PanthersBHL36723510730676134
1991–92Nottingham PanthersBHL36555010512811112218
1992–93Nottingham PanthersBHL35665812450710152510
1993–94Nottingham PanthersBHL4580631435810002
1995–96Nottingham PanthersBHL5685691548181011139
1996–97Nottingham PanthersISL342826546786396
1997–98Nottingham PanthersISL441423371460556
1998–99Nottingham PanthersISL422135562030112
1999–00HC MilanoFRA2915173224
2000–01Sheffield SteelersISL29111223820000
2001–02Nottingham PanthersISL2000010000
2003–04Nottingham PanthersEIHL10000
IHL totals2158677163226248122029

International

YearTeamEvent GPGAPtsPIM
1996Great BritainWorld Championships Pool B744810
1997Great BritainWorld Championships Pool B75164
1999Great BritainWorld Championships Pool B73362
1999Great BritainWorld Championships Pool A Qualifiers30000
2000Great BritainWorld Championships Pool B725714
2001Great BritainWorld Championships Division 153254
Senior totals3617153234

Coaching career

SeasonTeamLeagueGWLTOTLPCT
2002–03Nottingham PanthersISL3215134--.469
2003–04Nottingham PanthersEIHL56341462.607
2004–05Nottingham PanthersEIHL50251456.500
2006–07Renon RittenItalian Serie A3214810--.438
2013–14Belfast GiantsEIHL5243603.827

References

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/ice-hockey/26981677

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Paul Adey . https://web.archive.org/web/20070927022930/http://www.ihjuk.co.uk/hall_of_fame/adey.htm . September 27, 2007. British Ice Hockey Hall of Fame.
  2. Web site: Nottingham Panthers All-Time Greatest Players . https://web.archive.org/web/20071002035616/http://www.panthers.co.uk/SEFS/ID.7/SEFE/ViewItem.asp . October 2, 2007.