Steve Smith (ice hockey, born April 30, 1963) explained

Steve Smith
Birth Date:30 April 1963
Birth Place:Glasgow, Scotland, U.K.
Height Ft:6
Height In:3
Weight Lb:210
Position:Defence
Shoots:Left
Played For:Edmonton Oilers
Chicago Blackhawks
Calgary Flames
Ntl Team:CAN
Draft:111th overall
Draft Year:1981
Draft Team:Edmonton Oilers
Career Start:1984
Career End:2000

James Stephen Smith[1] (born April 30, 1963) is a Scottish-born Canadian former professional ice hockey defenceman and former assistant coach of the Buffalo Sabres, Carolina Hurricanes and Edmonton Oilers. He played in the National Hockey League (NHL) from 1984–85 to 2000–01 and coached from 2010–11 to 2020–21. Currently, Smith is the interim head coach with the Hartford Wolfpack of the American Hockey League (AHL). Smith played in the 1991 All-Star game in Chicago and was part of the 1991 Canadian Team that won the Canada Cup in Toronto.

Playing career

Smith played for the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League from 1980–81 to 1982–83 before being drafted by the Edmonton Oilers in the 1981 NHL Entry Draft in the 6th round, 111th overall. He spent his first 2 years of professional hockey (1983–84 to 1984–85) playing for the Oilers minor league affiliate teams (Moncton and Halifax). He played with the Oilers starting in the 1984–85 season. He went on to play 804 career games scoring 375 points (72-303-375) along with 2,139 penalty minutes. Smith also played in 134 Stanley Cup Playoff games, scoring 52 points (11-41-52).

Smith played for the Oilers until the end of the 1990–91 season, winning three Stanley Cups with the team. Smith remains the Oilers' single-season leader in penalty minutes with 286, which he set during the 1987–88 season. He then played for the Chicago Blackhawks until 1997. He announced his retirement due to injury following the 1996–97 season but made a comeback in 1998–99 playing parts of three seasons with the Flames, retiring for good in December 2000.

The "own goal"

Although Smith scored 83 goals in his NHL career (including 11 in the playoffs), he may be best known for a shot that went into his own net.[2] On April 30, 1986, Smith's 23rd birthday, in the seventh game of the Smythe Division Final against the Calgary Flames, Calgary's Perry Berezan dumped the puck into the Edmonton zone before leaving the ice on a line change. Smith recovered the puck behind his net and intended to send it down the ice, only to accidentally bounce it off goaltender Grant Fuhr's skate and into his own net, [3] giving the Flames a 3–2 lead. (Although he was already off the ice, Berezan was the last Flame to touch the puck and was thus credited with the goal: a rare instance of a hockey player "scoring" a goal while sitting on the bench.) The top-seeded Oilers could not get the equalizer, and thus lost the game and were eliminated from the playoffs.[4] Many fans blamed Smith for the loss, but in his autobiography Wayne Gretzky called that opinion "a total cop-out", asserting that the Oilers should've clinched the series well before Game Seven. (As of 2023, Calgary and Edmonton have met in the Stanley Cup playoffs six times, and the 1986 tilt remains the Flames' only victory.) When the Oilers recaptured the Stanley Cup in, Smith was the first player to be handed the cup from Gretzky after receiving it from NHL President John Ziegler.

Coaching career

Smith was an assistant coach with the Flames in 1997–98. He worked as a scout with the Chicago Blackhawks before spending four seasons on the Oilers coaching staff from 2010 to 2014. He was hired as an assistant coach of the Hurricanes in June 2014, and then as the assistant coach of the Sabres in July 2018.[5] Smith, along with head coach Ralph Krueger were relieved of their duties by the Sabres on March 17, 2021. He was then hired by the New York Rangers minor league affiliate team the Hartford Wolf Pack as an assistant coach and was named their interim head coach when Kris Knoblauch was hired to be the Edmonton Oilers' head coach.[6]

Personal life

Smith was born in Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom, but grew up in Cobourg, Ontario and has two brothers, David and Ian.

He is married and has five children. [7] His son, Barron Smith (born April 2, 1991), was selected by the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 7th round of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.[8]

Awards

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Team League GP GP G A Pts PIM
1980–81London KnightsOHL6241216141
1981–82London KnightsOHL58103646207412313
1982–83London KnightsOHL5063541133310110
1982–83Moncton AlpinesAHL20000
1983–84Moncton AlpinesAHL64189176
1984–85Edmonton OilersNHL20002
1984–85Nova Scotia OilersAHL6822830161503340
1985–86Nova Scotia OilersAHL402211
1985–86Edmonton OilersNHL5542024166601114
1986–87Edmonton OilersNHL62715221651513445
1987–88Edmonton OilersNHL79124355286191111255
1988–89Edmonton OilersNHL353192297722420
1989–90Edmonton OilersNHL7573441171225101537
1990–91Edmonton OilersNHL771341541931812345
1991–92Chicago BlackhawksNHL7692130304181111216
1992–93Chicago BlackhawksNHL78104757214400010
1993–94Chicago BlackhawksNHL5752227174
1994–95Chicago BlackhawksNHL48112131281601126
1995–96Chicago BlackhawksNHL3709971600016
1996–97Chicago BlackhawksNHL210002930004
1998–99Calgary FlamesNHL691141580
1999–2000Calgary FlamesNHL2004442
2000–01Calgary FlamesNHL1302217
NHL totals804723033752,139134114152288

International

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NHL – Steve Smith – Calgary Flames Player Card . ESPN.com . 2007-04-11 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20050507132848/http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/players/profile?statsId=461 . May 7, 2005 .
  2. Web site: 1986: Own goal, oh no! . . 2014-09-02.
  3. News: Johnston . David . Death of a dynasty: Flames singe Oilers . Montreal Gazette . 1986-05-01 . 2014-09-02 . F1.
  4. Book: Mummery, Bob . Countdown to the Stanley Cup: An Illustrated History of the Calgary Flames . 1989 . Polestar Book Publishers . 0-919591-48-5 . 73.
  5. Web site: Matheson. Jim. Steve Smith on Carolina Hurricanes bench now. edmontonjournal.com. Postmedia. 22 April 2017.
  6. Web site: Hockey Operations Staff. Hartford Wolf Pack. 2024-02-12.
  7. http://oilers.nhl.com/club/page.htm?id=63398 "Steve Smith"
  8. Web site: Barron Smith - Elite Prospects.