Stéphane Morin Explained

Played For:Quebec Nordiques
Vancouver Canucks
Position:Centre
Shoots:Left
Height Ft:6
Height In:0
Weight Lb:174
Birth Date:27 March 1969
Birth Place:Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Death Place:Oberhausen, Germany
Draft:43rd overall
Draft Year:1989
Draft Team:Quebec Nordiques
Career Start:1989
Career End:1998

Joseph Normand Stéphane Morin (March 27, 1969 – October 6, 1998) was a Canadian ice hockey player who played in the National Hockey League between 1989 and 1994 with the Quebec Nordiques and the Vancouver Canucks.

Early life

Morin was born in Montreal, Quebec. As a youth, he played in the 1981 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a minor ice hockey team from Saint-Leonard, Quebec.[1]

Playing career

Morin played his junior hockey for the Chicoutimi Saguenéens. He was passed over in the 1988 draft, but following a monster season in 1988–89 in which he led the QMJHL in scoring with 186 points and won the Michel Brière Memorial Trophy for Most Valuable Player in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, he was selected 43rd overall in the 1989 NHL Entry Draft.

Morin turned pro for the 1989–90 season and spent most of the season with the Halifax Citadels, where he performed well, earning a six-game call-up to Quebec in which he picked up two assists. In 1990–91, he was called up mid-season and performed exceptionally well, notching 40 points in 48 games on a weak Quebec club to finish 4th in team scoring. However, this would represent the high-water mark of Morin's career, as he slid down the depth chart the following year registered just 10 points in 30 games for the Nordiques and found himself back in the minors for much of the season.

Released by Quebec, Morin signed with the Vancouver Canucks in 1992. He spent two seasons in Vancouver's system during which he dominated the American Hockey League with the Hamilton Canucks, but appeared in only 6 games for the NHL Canucks over that span, recording three points.

After leaving the Vancouver organization, Morin signed on with the Minnesota Moose of the International Hockey League. While Morin's skating ability was considered questionable and cited as the reason he failed to stick in the NHL, he was a gifted minor-league scorer with tremendous offensive skills, and he led the IHL in scoring with 114 points in 1994–95. He would spend four seasons in the IHL with the Moose and later the Long Beach Ice Dogs.

For the 1998–99 season, Morin signed in Germany with the Berlin Capitals.

Death

On October 6, 1998, in his 7th game with his new team, he was complaining of feeling unwell during the first period. Early in the second period, he collapsed on the bench as a result of heart failure, and medical staff were unable to revive him. He was pronounced dead at a hospital, leaving a wife and newborn son, Frederick.[2] An autopsy was performed and it was discovered that Morin had undiagnosed chronic bronchitis and an enlarged heart. It also revealed he had suffered an undetected heart attack in the past several years.[3]

During his career, Morin appeared in 90 NHL games,[3] recording 16 goals and 39 assists for 55 points, along with 52 penalty minutes.

Career statistics

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1984–85Montréal-BourassaQMAAA4116223812105131810
1985–86Montréal-BourassaQMAAA42263763
1986–87Shawinigan CataractesQMJHL6591423281413427
1987–88Shawinigan CataractesQMJHL341615316
1987–88Chicoutimi SaguenéensQMJHL3422305212638112
1988–89Chicoutimi SaguenéensQMJHL707710918671
1989–90Quebec NordiquesNHL60222
1989–90Halifax CitadelsAHL652832606063476
1990–91Quebec NordiquesNHL4813274030
1990–91Halifax CitadelsAHL178142218
1991–92Quebec NordiquesNHL30281014
1991–92Halifax CitadelsAHL3017133029
1992–93Vancouver CanucksNHL10110
1992–93Hamilton CanucksAHL7031548549
1993–94Vancouver CanucksNHL51126
1993–94Hamilton CanucksAHL6938711094843254
1994–95Minnesota MooseIHL8133811145320110
1995–96Minnesota MooseIHL8027517875
1996–97Manitoba MooseIHL123694
1996–97Long Beach Ice DogsIHL6525578273186131914
1997–98Long Beach Ice DogsIHL2710172730131101118
1998–99Sorel DinosauresQSPHL20000
1998–99Berlin CapitalsDEL72686
NHL totals9016395552
AHL totals25112218430620410661210
IHL totals26598212310235337243132

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pee-Wee players who have reached NHL or WHA. 2018. Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament. January 17, 2019.
  2. News: Spencer. Donna. Too young: The sudden death of former Hamilton Canuck Stephane Morin stuns friends, colleagues. The Spectator. October 9, 1998.
  3. News: White. Lonnie. Tragedy on Ice. June 30, 2013. Los Angeles Times. November 23, 1998.