Richard Gordon Wilson (born August 10, 1950 Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, Canada) is a retired professional ice hockey defenceman and head coach. He is currently an assistant coach with the Minnesota Wild.
Playing career[]
Wilson was drafted by the Montreal Canadiens in the 1970 NHL Amateur Draft, sixty-sixth overall. He played for the AHL Nova Scotia Voyageurs, Montreal Canadiens, St. Louis Blues, Detroit Red Wings and AHL Philadelphia Firebirds.
He was an assistant coach for the University of North Dakota hockey team, Prince Albert Raiders, New York Islanders, Los Angeles Kings and Dallas Stars. He was also an acting head coach between January 25, 2002 and May 2002 for the Dallas Stars. He won the Memorial Cup in 1985. He won the Stanley Cup in 1999.
Career statistics[]
--- Regular Season --- ---- Playoffs ---- Season Team Lge GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1969-70 U. of North Dakota NCAA 30 2 9 11 32 -- -- -- -- -- 1970-71 U. of North Dakota NCAA 0 0 0 0 0 -- -- -- -- -- 1972-73 Nova-Scotia Voyageurs AHL 70 4 11 15 163 12 1 0 1 56 1973-74 Nova-Scotia Voyageurs AHL 47 4 19 23 65 -- -- -- -- -- 1973-74 Montreal Canadiens NHL 21 0 2 2 6 -- -- -- -- -- 1974-75 St. Louis Blues NHL 76 2 5 7 83 2 0 0 0 0 1975-76 St. Louis Blues NHL 65 1 6 7 20 1 0 0 0 0 1976-77 Detroit Red Wings NHL 77 3 13 16 56 -- -- -- -- -- 1977-78 Philadelphia Firebirds AHL 75 4 28 32 101 4 0 1 1 2 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NHL Totals 239 6 26 32 165 3 0 0 0 0
Coaching statistics[]
Team | Lge | Season | Record |
---|---|---|---|
Prince Albert | WHL | 1986–87 | 43–26–3 |
Prince Albert | WHL | 1987–88 | 43–24–5 |
NYI | NHL | 1988–89 | Assistant |
Los Angeles | NHL | 1989–90 | Assistant |
Los Angeles | NHL | 1990–91 | Assistant |
Los Angeles | NHL | 1991–92 | Assistant |
Minnesota | NHL | 1992–93 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 1993–94 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 1994–95 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 1995–96 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 1996–97 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 1997–98 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 1998–99 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 1999–00 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2000–01 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2001–02 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2001–02 | 13–11–8 |
Dallas | NHL | 2002–03 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2003–04 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2005–06 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2006–07 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2007–08 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2008–09 | Assistant |
Dallas | NHL | 2009–10 | Assistant |
Minnesota | NHL | 2010–11 | Assistant |
NHL Coaching Totals | 13–11–8 |
External links[]
Preceded by Ken Hitchcock |
Head coaches of the Dallas Stars 2002 |
Succeeded by Dave Tippett |
Dallas Stars Head Coaches | |
---|---|
Gainey • Hitchcock • Wilson • Tippett • Crawford • Gulutzan • Ruff • Hitchcock • Montgomery • Bowness |
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Rick Wilson. 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). |