Roman Turek Explained

Position:Goaltender
Catches:Right
Height Ft:6
Height In:4
Weight Lb:220
Played For:HC České Budějovice
Nürnberg Ice Tigers
Dallas Stars
St. Louis Blues
Calgary Flames
League:Czech Extraliga
Ntl Team:Czechoslovakia
Ntl Team 2:Czech Republic
Birth Date:May 21, 1970
Birth Place:Strakonice, Czechoslovakia
Career Start:1988
Career End:2010
Draft:113th overall
Draft Year:1990
Draft Team:Minnesota North Stars

Roman Turek (born May 21, 1970) is a Czech former professional ice hockey goaltender who played for the Dallas Stars, St. Louis Blues and Calgary Flames in a nine-year National Hockey League (NHL) career. He last played in the Czech Extraliga for HC České Budějovice.

Playing career

Dallas Stars

Drafted 113th overall by the Minnesota North Stars in the 1990 NHL Entry Draft, Turek moved with the franchise to Dallas, where he initially played as the third-string goaltender behind Andy Moog and Artūrs Irbe before serving as the backup to Ed Belfour. He won a Stanley Cup in this role in 1999. Despite his backup role, he achieved international glory with the Czech Republic national team, backstopping them to a gold medal at the 1996 World Championships. In this year, he also played in Germany for the Nürnberg Ice Tigers.

St. Louis Blues

The Stars, fearing they would lose Turek to the Atlanta Thrashers in the upcoming expansion draft, traded him to the St. Louis Blues in the 1999 off-season, and Turek finally got his chance to shine as he topped the league with seven shutouts and won the William M. Jennings Trophy in his first season. He helped the Blues to the Presidents' Trophy that year and the Blues entered the playoffs with high expectations. However, St. Louis was eliminated in seven games by the eighth-seeded San Jose Sharks, with some aggravated Blues fans pinning responsibility on Turek because of some soft goals he allowed, including one in game 7 that was fired from centre ice by Sharks captain Owen Nolan.[1] [2] However, he played a second season with the Blues while being challenged for the starting position by backup Brent Johnson. He put up good numbers again, this time helping the Blues reach the playoffs as the fourth seed, where they again faced the Sharks in the first round. This time, Turek helped the Blues eliminate the Sharks in six games and then helped them sweep the Dallas Stars, his former team, in the second round. However, in the third round against the Colorado Avalanche, soft goals plagued him again (including one scored after an attempt to scoop the puck into his glove with his stick) and again in some fan circles bore the brunt of the blame for the Blues' third round 4–1 ouster.

Calgary Flames

In the off-season, Turek was traded to the Calgary Flames.

In the 2003–04 season, Turek's status as the Flames' starting goaltender was altered drastically when, following an injury to Turek, Darryl Sutter traded a conditional draft pick to the San Jose Sharks for Miikka Kiprusoff. Though he struggled in San Jose, Kiprusoff's stellar performances in Calgary relegated Turek to the bench. However, Turek was a dependable backup, as Kiprusoff led the Flames to the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals against the Tampa Bay Lightning.

In 2004, Turek restructured his contract to substantially drop his salary from $5 million plus bonuses for the 2004–05 and 2005–06 seasons. The restructuring brought his salary to between $1 million and $2 million, with potential earnings relying heavily on performance bonuses. The restructuring saved the Calgary Flames organization between $3 million and $4 million in the 2004–05 season.[3]

Turek announced his retirement from the NHL on August 9, 2005.

Mask design

International play

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGP W L T OTL MIN GA SV%GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1987–88TJ Motor České BudějoviceCSSR-JR
1988–89VTJ PísekCSSR-2
1989–90VTJ PísekCSSR-2
1990–91TJ Motor České BudějoviceCSSR26 1244 98 0 4.73 .880
1991–92TJ Motor České BudějoviceCSSR-2
1992–93HC České BudějoviceCSSR43 2555 121 2.84 .923
1993–94HC České Budějovice CZE44 23 15 6 2532 109 3 2.58 .9273 0 3 180 11 0 3.67 .866
1994–95HC České Budějovice CZE44 20 18 6 2586 118 2 2.74 .9209 5 4 501 26 0 3.11 .915
1995–96Nürnberg Ice TigersDEL48 2787 154 3.32 5 338 14 2.48
1996–97Dallas StarsNHL6 3 1 0 263 9 0 2.06 .930
1996–97Michigan K-WingsIHL29 8 13 4 1555 77 0 2.97 .905
1997–98Dallas StarsNHL23 11 10 1 1324 49 1 2.22 .901
1997–98Michigan K-WingsIHL2 1 1 0 119 5 0 2.52 .928
1998–99Dallas StarsNHL26 16 3 3 1382 48 1 2.08 .915
1999–00St. Louis BluesNHL67 42 15 9 3960 129 7 1.95 .9127 3 4 415 19 0 2.75 .882
2000–01St. Louis BluesNHL54 24 18 10 3232 123 6 2.28 .90114 9 5 908 31 0 2.05 .919
2001–02Calgary FlamesNHL69 30 28 11 4081 172 5 2.53 .906
2002–03Calgary FlamesNHL65 27 29 9 3822 164 4 2.57 .902
2003–04Calgary FlamesNHL18 6 11 0 1031 40 3 2.33 .9141 0 0 19 0 0 0.00 1.000
2004–05HC České Budějovice CZE-215 13 2 0 859 23 3 1.61 .9246 6 0 360 3 4 0.50 .979
2005–06HC České Budějovice CZE31 15 11 5 1832 69 1 2.26 .92410 5 5 618 19 1 1.84 .941
2006–07HC MountfieldCZE35 19 16 0 1995 88 2 2.65 .91111 5 6 609 29 1 2.86 .914
2007–08HC MountfieldCZE42 29 13 0 2494 89 6 2.14 .92911 7 4 641 17 3 1.59 .945
2008–09HC MountfieldCZE44 20 24 0 2463 104 4 2.53 .921
2009–10HC MountfieldCZE38 14 24 0 2286 109 4 2.86 .9065 2 3 298 22 0 4.43 .872
CZE totals278 140 121 17 0 16,188 686 22 2.54 .92049 24 25 2,847 124 5 2.61 .919
NHL totals328 159 115 43 19,094 734 27 2.31 .90722 12 9 1,343 50 0 2.23 .908

International

YearTeamEventGP W L T MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1988CzechoslovakiaEJC5 273 9 1.98
1989CzechoslovakiaWJC7 4 1 1 390 16 0 2.46
1990Czechoslovakia WJC6 4 2 0 326 14 0 2.58 .906
1994Czech RepublicOLY2 2 0 0 120 3 0 1.50 .931
1994Czech RepublicWC2 120 4 0 2.00 .892
1995Czech RepublicWC6 3 3 0 359 9 2 1.50 .939
1996Czech RepublicWC8 7 0 1 480 15 1 1.88 .952
1996Czech RepublicWCH3 0 3 0 82 10 0 7.32 .833
Junior totals18 989 39 2.37
Senior totals21 1161 41 3 2.12

Awards and honours

AwardYear
NHL
William M. Jennings Trophy1999 (shared with Ed Belfour), 2000
Stanley Cup champion1999
All-Star Game2000
Second All-Star team2000
International
Best Goaltender1996
All-Star team1995, 1996

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Owen Nolans Red Line Goal on Turek - YouTube . . 2016-11-26 . 2016-04-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160411031735/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-c10i6bw48 . dead .
  2. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S10PdOL3A1Y Owen Nolan’s Center Ice Goal – Shark City Hockey on YouTube
  3. News: Report: Turek re-works deal with Flames . 2004-07-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040822162853/http://tsn.ca/nhl/news_story.asp?id=89653 . 2004-08-22.