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Scott Campbell
Born (1986-06-06)June 6, 1986,
Navan, Ontario, Canada
Height
Weight
6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
209 lb (95 kg; 14 st 13 lb)
Position Left Wing
Shoots Left
Metal Ligaen team
F. teams
SønderjyskE Ishockey
Houston Aeros
Rochester Americans
Texas Stars
Bridgeport Sound Tigers
Providence Bruins
HC Valpellice
NHL Draft Undrafted
Playing career 2011–2017

Scott Campbell (born June 6, 1986) is a Canadian professional ice hockey winger. He last played for SC Riessersee of the DEL2 in 2016-17.

Playing career[]

Campbell played 3 seasons of junior hockey for the Pembroke Lumber Kings of the Central Canada Hockey League playing 130 games scoring 74 goals and 96 assists for 170 points and a 1.31 points per game average.

Starting in the 2007–08 season Campbell began attending the University of Massachusetts Lowell and playing for the River Hawks. In 4 seasons of college hockey at UMass Lowell he played 126 games, scored 39 goals and 46 assists for 85 points and was named to the 2009–10 and 2010–11 Hockey East All-Academic Teams.

Following his final season with UMass Lowell Campbell signed a professional tryout contract with the Houston Aeros and played 6 games without scoring a point.

The 2011–12 season saw Campbell sign with the Las Vegas Wranglers of the ECHL where he played 51 regular season games, scoring 31 points. In the playoffs, he played 18 games scoring 10 points helping the Wranglers to the Western Conference championship, coming up 3 games short of a Kelly Cup Championship. On December 21, 2011 the Rochester Americans signed Campbell to a professional tryout contract, he played 1 game for the Americans before being released to return to the Wranglers.[1] Campbell also signed a tryout contract with the Texas Stars of the AHL on February 18, 2012 where he played 12 games scoring no points, before being returned again to the Wranglers.[2]

Campbell signed an extension with the Wranglers on August 14, 2012 to play in Las Vegas for the 2012–13 ECHL season, however he was signed to a tryout contract by the Bridgeport Sound Tigers on December 18, 2012.[3] Campbell was successful in his tryout and signed a standard player contract with the team on February 13, 2013.[4]

The Boston Bruins invited Campbell to their 2013–14 training camp[5] but he was among the first round of cuts on September 18, 2013[6] and was reassigned to the Providence Bruins of the AHL. Campbell attended the Providence training camp however he was assigned to their ECHL affiliate the South Carolina Stingrays.[7] After 21 games with the Stingrays he was recalled to the Providence Bruins on December 10, 2013.[8]

On September 13, 2014, Campbell as a free agent signed his first contract abroad, agreeing to a one-year contract with Italian club, HC Valpellice of the Serie A.[9]

After one season in Italy Campbell signed a one-year contract with SønderjyskE Ishockey of the Metal Ligaen.[10]

Career statistics[]

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
2002–03 Pembroke Lumber Kings CJHL 51 3 12 15 43
2004–05 Pembroke Lumber Kings CJHL 38 18 30 48 32
2006–07 Pembroke Lumber Kings CJHL 41 53 54 107 34 15 10 11 21 12
2007–08 UMass Lowell HE 37 7 11 18 20
2008–09 UMass Lowell HE 38 14 16 30 32
2009–10 UMass Lowell HE 39 16 18 34 20
2010–11 UMass Lowell HE 12 2 1 3 8
2010–11 Houston Aeros AHL 6 0 0 0 0
2011–12 Las Vegas Wranglers ECHL 51 15 16 31 34 18 8 2 10 14
2011–12 Rochester Americans AHL 1 0 0 0 0
2011–12 Texas Stars AHL 12 0 0 0 0
2012–13 Las Vegas Wranglers ECHL 24 4 6 10 17
2012–13 Bridgeport Sound Tigers AHL 46 7 11 18 33
2013–14 South Carolina Stingrays ECHL 32 11 13 24 11 2 0 0 0 2
2013–14 Providence Bruins AHL 23 2 1 3 0
2014–15 HC Valpellice Serie A 37 26 37 63 16
2015–16 SønderjyskE Metal Ligaen 45 26 15 41 20 13 3 5 8 4
AHL totals 88 9 12 21 33

Awards and honors[]

Award Year(s)
CJHL Most Goals 2006–07
CJHL Most Points 2006–07
CJHL Champion - Pembroke Lumber Kings 2006–07
Fred Page Cup Champion - Pembroke Lumber Kings 2006–07
Hockey East All-Tournament Team 2009 [11]
NCAA (Hockey East) All-Academic Team 2009–10, 2010–11

References[]

External links[]

This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Scott Campbell (b. 1986). 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).


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