Ice Hockey Wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 42: Line 42:
   
 
==Achievements==
 
==Achievements==
 
 
* NHL Second Team All-Star on defense in 1942.
 
* NHL Second Team All-Star on defense in 1942.
 
* Named to play in the [[NHL All-Star Game]] in 1949.
 
* Named to play in the [[NHL All-Star Game]] in 1949.
Line 49: Line 48:
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==
 
<gallery captionalign="center">
 
<gallery captionalign="center">
1946-Egan-Clare_Martin-Crawford-Pratt-Henderson-Guidolin.jpg|Egan, Clare Martin, Crawford, Pratt, Henderson and Guidolin in 1946.
+
1946-Egan-Clare_Martin-Crawford-Pratt-Henderson-Guidolin.jpg|Egan, [[Clare Martin]], Crawford, Pratt, Henderson and Guidolin in 1946.
  +
1947-48-Bruins_D-Brimsek.jpg|1947-48 Bruins defense - Flaman, Martin, Crawford, Brimsek, Henderson, Egan.
  +
1948-Bruins_D.jpg|1948-49 Bruins defense - [[Jack Crawford]], Pat Egan, [[Frank Brimsek]], [[Ed Kryzanowski]], [[Fern Flaman]], [[Murray Henderson]].
  +
1949-Brimsek-Crawford-Peters-Thompson_vs_Leafs.jpg|[[Jack Crawford]] clears the puck away from Leafs #4 [[Harry Watson (b. 1923)|Harry Watson]] while goalie [[Frank Brimsek]], #9 [[Jimmy Peters]] and Pat Egan watch during the 1949 Semi-finals.
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   

Revision as of 21:44, 4 February 2020

Pat Egan
Pategan
Position Defence
Shoots Right
Height
Weight
5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
190 lb (86 kg)
Teams New York Americans
Brooklyn Americans
Detroit Red Wings
Boston Bruins
New York Rangers
Nationality Flag of Canada Canadian
Born April 25, 1918(1918-04-25),
Blackie, AB, CAN
Died June 3, 2008(2008-06-03) (aged 90),
Pro Career 1938 – 1966


Martin "Pat" Egan (April 26, 1918 – June 3, 2008) was a Canadian defenceman, most notably for the Boston Bruins and New York Americans of the National Hockey League. He went on to coach the Springfield Indians of the American Hockey League to three straight Calder Cup championships, the only time that has ever been done.

Playing Career

Born in Blackie, Alberta, Canada, Egan started his professional career with the Seattle Seahawks of the Pacific Coast Hockey League in 1938, recording 185 penalty minutes in only 44 games. The next season he played mostly for Springfield, but was recalled to make his NHL debut for the New York Americans, playing in ten games that season. He played two more seasons with the Americans' franchise before serving in the military in 1942–43.

Egan was back in pro hockey in the 1944 season, but as the Americans' franchise had folded, his rights were acquired by the Detroit Red Wings. After only half a season with Detroit, the hardrock defenseman was traded to the Boston Bruins for star offensive defenseman Flash Hollett. Egan would anchor the Bruins' defense corps for six seasons in all, before being traded to the New York Rangers in 1949, for whom he would play two seasons.

By 1951, Egan was slowing down, and was sent down to the minor leagues for good. He played nine more years in the minors, principally for the Providence Reds of the AHL, his final action coming in 1959 when he played a few games for the Victoria Cougars of the Western Hockey League. His later minor league career was marred by an incident in November 1952 when he was suspended by the AHL for life for assaulting a linesman; the suspension was lifted a week later.

Egan finished his NHL career with 77 goals and 153 assists for 230 points in 554 games, adding 776 penalty minutes.

Coaching Career and Retirement

Egan was tabbed as a coach even while still playing, serving as player-coach of the Reds in 1954 and 1955, and as player-coach of the Nelson Maple Leafs of the senior Western International Hockey League in 1957.

Immediately following his retirement as a player, Egan was hired by Springfield Indians team owner Eddie Shore to coach the club, and the powerful Indians went on to win three straight first place finishes and three straight Calder Cup championships under his aegis. His tenure under the turbulent Shore lasted three more seasons, but the Indians failed to make the playoffs in any of them, moving on to coach the Jacksonville Rockets of the Eastern Hockey League in 1966. With the team beset by injuries, Egan laced up the skates one final time, playing 19 games with the Rockets at age 47, after which he hung them up for good.

After a final season coaching for the Knoxville Knights of the EHL in 1968, Egan went on to work in Operations for Northeastern University for 22 years until his retirement. Save for the three Calder Cup championship seasons in Springfield, Egan had no other playoff teams in his eleven year coaching career.

Achievements

  • NHL Second Team All-Star on defense in 1942.
  • Named to play in the NHL All-Star Game in 1949.
  • Elected to the Springfield Hockey Hall of Fame.

Gallery

External Links

This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Pat Egan. 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).