Ice Hockey Wiki
Ice Hockey Wiki
Advertisement
Adam Deadmarsh
Position Right Wing
Shoots Right
Height
Weight
6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
205 lb (93 kg)
Teams Quebec Nordiques
Colorado Avalanche
Los Angeles Kings
Nationality Flag of the United States & Flag of Canada
Born (1975-05-10)May 10, 1975,
Trail, British Columbia, CAN
NHL Draft 14th overall, 1993
Quebec Nordiques
Pro Career 1994 – 2003

Adam Deadmarsh (born May 10, 1975 in Trail, British Columbia) is a former professional ice hockey player who played in the NHL with the Quebec Nordiques, Colorado Avalanche and the Los Angeles Kings. He is currently the Video and Development Coach for the Avalanche.

Playing career[]

Deadmarsh was drafted by the Quebec Nordiques in the 1993 NHL Entry Draft, first round, fourteenth overall. He played for the 1996 Avalanche Stanley Cup winning team in 1996. His name was initially misspelled Deadmarch on the cup, but was later corrected; it was the first time a misspelling on the Stanley Cup had ever been corrected. He was traded to the Los Angeles Kings on February 21, 2001 along with Aaron Miller, a player to be named later (Jared Aulin), and Colorado's first round pick in the 2001 NHL Entry Draft for Rob Blake and Steve Reinprecht.

Among his final accomplishments in the NHL, he is known as a playoff hero for vaulting the Kings past the heavily favoured Detroit Red Wings in round one of the 2001 Stanley Cup Playoffs, after trailing late in Game 4 by three goals while his team was already down two games to one. The Kings went on to lose in the conference semifinals to his former Colorado Avalanche, the eventual 2001 Stanley Cup champions, in seven games.

A naturalized American citizen by virtue of having an American mother, he played for Team USA in the 1998 Olympics and the 2002 Olympics, winning a silver medal in Salt Lake City (2002).

After missing most of the 2002–03 NHL season and the entire 2003–04 NHL season due to two concussions (and the next season due to the NHL lockout), he (unofficially) announced his retirement on September 22, 2005 citing the previous concussion as an inability to play further. He was honored on March 20, 2006 before a game between the Avalanche and Kings at Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, California for his dedication to both teams.

He had previously played junior hockey for the Portland Winter Hawks in the Western Hockey League and was a 3 time member of the U.S. National Junior Team, where he shares the all-time U.S. record of 21 games played at the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. He resides in Idaho with his wife and twin daughters.

Adam is a second cousin of former NHL player Butch Deadmarsh.

Awards and achievements[]

Career statistics[]

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1991–92 Portland Winter Hawks WHL 68 30 30 60 111 6 3 3 6 13
1992–93 Portland Winter Hawks WHL 58 33 36 69 126 16 7 8 15 29
1993–94 Portland Winter Hawks WHL 65 43 56 99 212 10 9 8 17 33
1994–95 Portland Winter Hawks WHL 29 28 20 48 129 -- -- -- -- --
1994–95 Quebec Nordiques NHL 48 9 8 17 56 6 0 1 1 0
1995–96 Colorado Avalanche NHL 78 21 27 48 142 22 5 12 17 25
1996–97 Colorado Avalanche NHL 78 33 27 60 136 17 3 6 9 24
1997–98 Colorado Avalanche NHL 73 22 21 43 125 7 2 0 2 4
1998–99 Colorado Avalanche NHL 66 22 27 49 99 19 8 4 12 20
1999–00 Colorado Avalanche NHL 71 18 27 45 106 17 4 11 15 21
2000–01 Colorado Avalanche NHL 39 13 13 26 59 -- -- -- -- --
2000–01 Los Angeles Kings NHL 18 4 2 6 4 13 3 3 6 4
2001–02 Los Angeles Kings NHL 76 29 33 62 71 4 1 3 4 2
2002–03 Los Angeles Kings NHL 20 13 4 17 21 -- -- -- -- --
NHL totals 567 184 189 373 819 105 26 40 66 100

International Play[]

Played for United States in:

International statistics[]

Year Team Comp GP G A Pts PIM
1993 United States WJC 7 0 0 0 10
1994 United States WJC 7 0 0 0 8
1995 United States WJC 7 6 4 10 10
1996 United States WCH 7 2 2 4 8
1998 United States OG 4 1 0 1 2
2002 United States OG 6 1 1 2 2
Junior int'l totals 21 6 4 10 28
Senior int'l totals 17 4 3 7 12

External links[]

Preceded by
Jocelyn Thibault
Quebec Nordiques first round draft pick
1993
Succeeded by
Wade Belak
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Adam Deadmarsh. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


Advertisement