Peter Lee (ice hockey) explained

Peter Lee
Position:Right wing
Shoots:Right
Height Ft:5
Height In:9
Weight Lb:180
Played For:Pittsburgh Penguins
Düsseldorfer EG
Eisbären Berlin
Birth Date:1956 1, mf=yes
Birth Place:Ellesmere, England, U.K.
Draft:12th overall
Draft Year:1976
Draft Team:Montreal Canadiens
Wha Draft:21st overall
Wha Draft Year:1976
Wha Draft Team:Toronto Toros
Career Start:1976
Career End:1997

Peter John Lee (born January 2, 1956) is an English-born Canadian professional ice hockey manager and former professional ice hockey player. He played 431 National Hockey League games with the Pittsburgh Penguins. Lee has been serving as CEO of Eisbären Berlin of Germany's Deutsche Eishockey Liga since 2005.

Early life

Lee was born in Ellesmere, England, United Kingdom, and raised in Arvida, Quebec. As a youth, he learned to skate on the outdoor surface of Arvida's Powell Park, and later played for that town's Pee-Wee Orioles minor ice hockey. He played in the 1967, 1968 and 1969 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournaments with the Orioles.[1] The family moved to Ottawa in his mid-teen years.

Playing career

Lee was recruited along with his brother David by the Ottawa 67's of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL). He enjoyed a stellar junior career with the Ottawa 67's, where he became one of the few junior players to record more than 400 career points. He was awarded CHL Player of the Year in 1975–76. He set the OHL career scoring record with 213 career goals—a record that lasted for 33 years, until March 8, 2009, when John Tavares scored his 214th to surpass Lee.

After setting a new league record with 81 goals in 1975–76, Lee was chosen in the first round of the 1976 NHL Entry Draft (12th overall) by the Montreal Canadiens. Though he would spend two seasons with their farm team, the Nova Scotia Voyageurs, Lee never played for the Canadiens. On November 29, 1977, Montreal traded Lee, along with Peter Mahovlich, to the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for emerging star Pierre Larouche and the rights to forward Peter Marsh.

Lee was a fine offensive addition to the Pens and was a key playmaker on the powerplay. He reached the 30-goal mark twice and scored a personal best 64 points in 1980–81 playing on a line with Greg Malone and Rod Schutt. Unfortunately, the Penguins were not a successful team at that time, and Lee only played 19 playoff games during his five and a half years with the organization. He finished his NHL career with 245 points in 431 games.

Following the 1982–83 season, Lee left North America to play for Düsseldorfer EG of Germany. He scored 340 goals in 450 matches with the club before retiring in 1997.

Lee was inducted into the German Ice Hockey Hall of Fame in 2008.[2]

Coaching and managing career

Lee replaced legendary coach Brian Kilrea behind the Ottawa 67's bench in 1994–95, but a dismal performance by the team prompted Kilrea to return and replace him for the 1995–96 campaign. He would return to Germany the following season and briefly resurrected his playing career.

Lee served as head coach of Eisbären Berlin from December 1997 until January 2000. He then was the manager of the club and got promoted to CEO in 2005. In 2008 and 2010 he received "Eishockey News DEL Manager of the Year" honours. During the 2006 Olympic Games in Torino, Lee served as an assistant coach of the Swiss National Team.[3]

Family

He is the son of professional soccer player Eric Lee who competed for Great Britain at the 1948 Summer Olympics and a cousin of comedian Bob Mills

Career statistics

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1971–72Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.1210101825711
1972–73Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.632551761109481214
1973–74Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.693842804072130
1974–75Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.70685812682765116
1975–76Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.66818016159117111815
1976–77Nova Scotia VoyageursAHL7633276088125386
1977–78Nova Scotia VoyageursAHL238111925
1977–78Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL605131819
1978–79Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL803226582470330
1979–80Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL741629452040110
1980–81Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL803034648650444
1981–82Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL741816349830000
1982–83Baltimore SkipjacksAHL141161712
1982–83Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL6313132610
1983–84Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun462524495645167
1984–85Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun3329346355430327
1985–86Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun324034743897152220
1986–87Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun4340357577
1987–88Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun34313162241045918
1988–89Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun3631346546111171814
1989–90Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun201718351811881610
1990–91Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun372326492613105152
1991–92Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun4424204424946106
1992–93Düsseldorfer EG1.GBun44292655281146106
1995–96Eisbären BerlinDEL21761336
1995–96EHC WolfsburgDEU II1614112561
1996–97Eisbären BerlinDEL501413274280114
NHL totals431114131245257190884
1.GBun totals369289282571392825653109110

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pee-Wee players who have reached NHL or WHA. 2018. Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament. 2019-01-08.
  2. Web site: Hall of Fame Deutschland . Eishockeymuseum . 2016-02-01 . 2016-02-01.
  3. Web site: Steckbrief Peter John Lee . Eisbären Berlin . 2016-02-01 . 2016-02-01 .