Ice Hockey Wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Tag: Visual edit
 
(9 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Infobox Ice Hockey Player
 
{{Infobox Ice Hockey Player
  +
| position = [[Winger (hockey)|Right wing]]
| image = Shane_Doan.JPG
 
| image_size = 250px
+
| shoots =
  +
| height_ft = 6
| position = [[Centre]]
 
| shoots = Right
+
| height_in = 1
| shot =
+
| weight_lb =
  +
| team = retired
| catches =
 
| caught =
+
| league =
  +
| former_teams = '''''AAHA'''''<br>Killam Selects<br>'''''WHL'''''<br>[[Kamloops Blazers]]<br>'''''NHL'''''<br>[[Winnipeg Jets (1972-1996)|Winnipeg Jets]]<br>[[Phoenix Coyotes]]<br>[[Arizona Coyotes]]<br>'''''AHL'''''<br>[[Springfield Falcons]]
| nickname =
 
| height_ft = 6
+
| ntl_team = Canada
 
| birth_date = October 10, 1976
| height_in = 2
 
 
| birth_place = [[Halkirk, Alberta|Halkirk]], [[Alberta]], [[Canada]]
| weight_lb = 216
 
 
| career_start = 1991
| team = [[Phoenix Coyotes]]
 
 
| draft = 7th overall
| league = [[NHL]]
 
| prospect_team =
+
| draft_year = 1995
 
| draft_team = [[Winnipeg Jets (1972-1996)|Winnipeg Jets]]
| former_teams = 1996-08: [[Phoenix Coyotes]] (NHL)<br />1996-97: [[Springfield Falcons]] (AHL)<br />1995-96: [[Winnipeg Jets]] (NHL)<br />1992-95: [[Kamloops Blazers]] (WHL)
 
  +
| image = ShaneDoan2011.jpg
| played_for =
 
  +
| image_size = 250px
| nationality = [[Image:CanadianFlag.jpeg|border|25px]] [[Canada]]
 
  +
|shot = Right|weight_lbs = 223|played_for = [[Canada national ice hockey team|Canada]]|Olympics = [[2006 Olympics|2006]]|World Champ = [[1999 World Championship|1999]], [[2003 World Championship|2003]], [[2005 World Championship|2005]], [[2007 World Championship|2007]], [[2008 World Championship|2008]], [[2009 World Championship|2009]], [[2019 IIHF World Championship|2019]]|Coach = 2007-present [[Kamloops Blazers]]<br>2019-present [[Canada national ice hockey team|Canadian National Team]]|nationality = {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Canadian]]|career_end = 2017}}
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1976|10|10}}
 
  +
'''Shane Albert Doan''' (born October 10, 1976) is a former [[Canada|Canadian]] professional [[ice hockey]] [[forward (ice hockey)|forward]] and former [[captain (ice hockey)|captain]] for the [[Phoenix Coyotes]] of the [[National Hockey League]] (NHL). Doan is the longest tenured player on the club, having played all fourteen of his NHL seasons with the original [[Winnipeg Jets (1972-1996)|Winnipeg Jets]]/Phoenix Coyotes franchise. He was the last remaining Coyote to have played for the original Jets. Currently, he is a franchise owner of the [[Kamloops Blazers]] of the [[WHL]] and an assistant GM of the [[Canada national ice hockey team|Canadian National Team]] on the [[Spengler Cup]].
| birth_place = Halkirk, Alberta, Canada
 
| death_date =
 
| death_place =
 
| draft =
 
| draft_year = 1995
 
| draft_team = Winnipeg Jets
 
| wha_draft =
 
| wha_draft_year=
 
| wha_draft_team=
 
| career_start = 1995
 
| career_end =
 
| halloffame =
 
| website =
 
}}
 
'''Shane Albert Doan''' (b. October 10th [[1976]] in [[Halkirk, Alberta]], [[Canada]]) is a [[National Hockey League]] player, for the [[Phoenix Coyotes]].
 
   
  +
Competing internationally for [[Canada national men's ice hockey team|Team Canada]], he has won two gold medals and two silvers at the [[World Ice Hockey Championships|World Championships]], as well as one [[World Cup of Hockey|World Cup]] championship in [[2004 World Cup of Hockey|2004]]. He was also a member of Canada's [[Ice hockey at the 2006 Winter Olympics|2006 Winter Olympic]] team. He won one silver medal at the [[2019 IIHF World Championship|2019 World Championship]] as a team consultant.
Selected seventh overall in the [[1995 NHL Entry Draft]] by the [[Winnipeg Jets]], Doan made his NHL debut on October 5th of that year with an [[assist]] against the [[Dallas Stars]]. He scored his first [[goal]] on November 14, against the [[Chicago Blackhawks]]. The following season, the franchise relocated to Phoenix, where they were renamed the Coyotes.
 
   
  +
== Playing career ==
Doan took part to several international tournaments; he [[captain]]ed the [[Canadian National Team]] to both the [[2007 World Championship|2007]] and [[2008 World Championship]]s.
 
  +
[[File:ShaneDoan.jpg|thumb|left|200px]]
  +
After winning the [[Memorial Cup]] and [[Stafford Smythe Memorial Trophy]] as tournament MVP with the [[Kamloops Blazers]] in [[1995 Memorial Cup|1995]], Doan was drafted by the [[Winnipeg Jets]] in the first round, seventh overall, in the [[1995 NHL Entry Draft]]. He was the Jets' final first-round pick prior to the franchise moving to Phoenix. He immediately made the transition from [[major junior]] to the [[National Hockey League|NHL]] in [[1995–96 NHL season|1995–96]] and tallied 17 points in his rookie season with the Jets. After the Jets relocated to Phoenix and became the Coyotes the following season, his points total did not improve greatly until the [[1999–2000 NHL season|1999–2000 season]] when he scored 26 goals (the first of nine consecutive 20-goal campaigns for Doan).
   
  +
After the departure of team captain [[Teppo Numminen]], Doan assumed the captaincy in [[2003–04 NHL season|2003–04]] and scored which were then career-highs in all statistical categories with 27 goals, 41 assists and 68 points. During the campaign, Doan was selected to play in his first [[NHL All-Star Game]] in [[2004 NHL All-Star Game|2004]]. He then hit the 30-goal mark for the first time in his career the following season to go with 36 assists and 66 points. Late in the [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07 season]], Doan agreed to a five-year, $22.75 million contract extension with the Coyotes on February 14, 2007, He responded the following season with his best campaign to date when he led the Coyotes in scoring in [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]] with 28 goals and a career-high 50 assists and 78 points. In [[2008–09 NHL season|2008–09]], Doan was selected to the [[2009 NHL All-Star Game]] and won the inaugural Elimination Shootout segment of the [[57th National Hockey League All-Star Game#Skills Competition|Skills Competition]], outlasting [[Marc Savard]] of the [[Boston Bruins]] in the seventh round. He completed that season with his second straight 70-point season and a career-high 31 goals.
His cousin [[Carey Price]] also plays in the [[National Hockey League]] for the [[Montreal Canadiens]].
 
   
  +
On October 18, 2010, Doan was suspended for 3 games due to a hit that he placed on [[Dan Sexton]] of the [[Anaheim Ducks]] the night previous. NHL disciplinarian Colin Campbell ruled that the hit was "a late hit from the blind side to the head of an unsuspecting opponent", violating the NHL's ban on blindside hits to the head.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=Associated Press, Yahoo! Sports |url=http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/news;_ylt=Aru5BoTM19Oif6z8lcGTl9p7vLYF?slug=ap-coyotes-doansuspended |title=Coyotes' Doan Suspended 3 Games for Illegal Hit |date=October 18, 2010 |accessdate=October 18, 2010}}</ref> This was the first suspension of Doan's career.
{{Phoenix Coyotes Captains}}
 
  +
[[Category:Canadian hockey players|Doan, Shane]]
 
  +
==International play==
[[Category:Kamloops Blazers player|Doan, Shane]]
 
  +
{{MedalTableTop|Shane Doan WC2008.jpg|200px|Doan at the 2008 World Championships}}
[[Category:Winnipeg Jets player|Doan, Shane]]
 
  +
{{MedalCountry|{{ih|CAN}}}}
[[Category:Springfield Falcons player|Doan, Shane]]
 
  +
{{MedalSport|[[Ice hockey]]}}
[[Category:Phoenix Coyotes player|Doan, Shane]]
 
  +
{{MedalCompetition|[[World Ice Hockey Championships|World Championships]]}}
[[Category:NHL captains]]
 
  +
{{MedalSilver|[[2009 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2009 Switzerland]]|}}
  +
{{MedalSilver|[[2008 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2008 Canada]]|}}
  +
{{MedalGold|[[2007 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2007 Russia]]|}}
  +
{{MedalSilver|[[2005 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2005 Austria]]|}}
  +
{{MedalGold|[[2003 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2003 Finland]]|}}
  +
{{MedalBottom}}
  +
  +
Doan made his international debut for [[Canada national men's ice hockey team|Team Canada]] at the [[1999 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|1999 World Championships]] in [[Norway]] and finished fourth with the team. He then won his first gold medal four years later at the [[2003 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2003 World Championships]] in [[Finland]]. Prior to the [[2004–05 NHL lockout]], Doan competed in the [[2004 World Cup of Hockey|2004 World Cup]] and scored the [[game winning goal]] in the finals against [[Finland national men's ice hockey team|Finland]] to win the championship. Doan had also been named to Canada's [[2004 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2004 World Championship]] team several months earlier, but could not attend due to injury.
  +
  +
In [[2005 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2005]], Doan was named an [[alternate captain (hockey)|alternate captain]] for Canada and helped lead the team to a silver medal at the World Championships in [[Austria]]. Two years later, he was promoted to [[captain (ice hockey)|team captain]] at the [[2007 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2007 World Championships]] in [[Moscow]]. During the tournament, he scored the game winning goal in a 4–2 preliminary round victory over [[Norway national ice hockey team|Norway]], then scored a [[hat-trick]] in a span of 6 minutes and 25 seconds in a 6–3 qualification round victory over [[Belarus national men's ice hockey team|Belarus]]. Canada went undefeated en route to a 4–2 gold medal game victory over Finland in the final. He remained captain for the [[2008 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2008 World Championships]] and won his second silver, losing to [[Russia national men's ice hockey team|Russia]] in the gold medal game.
  +
  +
===Controversy===
  +
  +
When Doan was selected for the [[2006 Olympics]] [[Canadian national men's hockey team]], Canadian Liberal MP Denis Coderre wrote a letter to [[Hockey Canada]] president [[Bob Nicholson (ice hockey)|Bob Nicholson]] asking to remove Doan from the team unless Doan apologized for an alleged racial slur he used on December 13, 2005 against a Francophone referee during a game against the [[Montreal Canadiens]].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.tsn.ca/canadian_hockey/news_story/?ID=147956&hubname= | title=MP: Doan should not represent Canada |publisher=TSN |date=2005-12-22 |accessdate=2007-05-03}}</ref> In January 2006, Doan filed a lawsuit against Coderre for defamation seeking $250,000 in damages and promising to contribute any damage awards to charity.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.tsn.ca/nhl/story/?id=151190 | title=Doan files lawsuit against Coderre |publisher=TSN |date=2006-01-17 |accessdate=2007-05-03}}</ref> Coderre filed a counter-suit in April 2007, seeking $45,000 in damages.
  +
  +
When Doan was selected as captain on the 2007 [[Canadian national men's hockey team]], a Canadian Official Languages parliamentary committee demanded [[Hockey Canada]] appear before the committee to explain their decision to name Doan as captain in light of the alleged comment made on December 13, 2005.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.tsn.ca/canadian_hockey/news_story/?ID=206352&hubname= | title=Hockey Canada officials head to Ottawa |publisher=TSN |date=2007-05-02 |accessdate=2007-05-03}}</ref> Doan's selection was maintained citing that an NHL investigation had cleared him of any wrong doing.
  +
  +
Prior to Doan's trial, set to take place in September 2010, he and Coderre agreed to an out of court settlement stating that Superior Court of Montreal could put its resources to better use if this matter was settled.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.webcitation.org/5sIkEDR9L| title=NHL Forward Doan, Coderre Settle Language Spat Out of Court |publisher=[[The Sports Network|TSN]] |date=2010-08-27 |accessdate=2010-08-27}}</ref> However, Doan admitted in the settlement that a player on the ice did utter the racial comments, contradicting his previous statements. The settlement also stated that Coderre had been justified in denouncing the events.
  +
  +
==Awards==
  +
*Named to the [[Memorial Cup]] All-Star Team in [[1995 Memorial Cup|1995]].
  +
*Won the [[Stafford Smythe Memorial Trophy]] (Memorial Cup MVP) in 1995.
  +
*Played in the [[NHL All-Star Game]] in [[2004 NHL All-Star Game|2004]] and [[2009 NHL All-Star Game|2009]].
  +
*Won the [[King Clancy Memorial Trophy]] in 2010.
  +
  +
== Career statistics ==
  +
  +
{| border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:50em;"
  +
|- style="background:#e0e0e0;"
  +
! colspan="3" style="background:#fff;"| &nbsp;
  +
! rowspan="99" style="background:#fff;"| &nbsp;
  +
! colspan="5" | [[regular season|Regular&nbsp;season]]
  +
! rowspan="99" style="background:#fff;"| &nbsp;
  +
! colspan="5" | [[Playoffs]]
  +
|- style="background:#e0e0e0;"
  +
! [[Season (sports)|Season]]
  +
! Team
  +
! League
  +
! GP
  +
! [[Goal (ice hockey)|G]]
  +
! [[Assist (ice hockey)|A]]
  +
! [[Point (ice hockey)|Pts]]
  +
! [[Penalty (ice hockey)|PIM]]
  +
! GP
  +
! G
  +
! A
  +
! Pts
  +
! PIM
  +
|-
  +
| [[1992–93 WHL season|1992–93]]||[[Kamloops Blazers]]||[[Western Hockey League|WHL]]||51||7||12||19||55||13||0||1||1||8
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[1993–94 WHL season|1993–94]]||Kamloops Blazers||WHL||52||24||24||48||88||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|-
  +
| [[1994–95 WHL season|1994–95]]||Kamloops Blazers||WHL||71||37||57||94||106||21||6||10||16||16
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[1995–96 NHL season|1995–96]]||[[Winnipeg Jets]]||[[National Hockey League|NHL]]||74||7||10||17||101||6||0||0||0||6
  +
|-
  +
| [[1996–97 NHL season|1996–97]]||[[Phoenix Coyotes]]||NHL||63||4||8||12||49||4||0||0||0||2
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[1997–98 AHL season|1997–98]]||[[Springfield Falcons]]||[[American Hockey League|AHL]]||39||21||21||42||64||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|-
  +
| [[1997–98 NHL season|1997–98]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||33||5||6||11||35||6||1||0||1||6
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[1998–99 NHL season|1998–99]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||79||6||16||22||54||7||2||2||4||6
  +
|-
  +
| [[1999–2000 NHL season|1999–00]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||81||26||25||51||66||4||1||2||3||8
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[2000–01 NHL season|2000–01]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||76||26||37||63||89||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|-
  +
| [[2001–02 NHL season|2001–02]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||81||20||29||49||61||5||2||2||4||6
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[2002–03 NHL season|2002–03]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||82||21||37||58||86||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|-
  +
| [[2003–04 NHL season|2003–04]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||79||27||41||68||47||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[2005–06 NHL season|2005–06]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||82||30||36||66||123||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|-
  +
| [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||73||27||28||55||73||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||80||28||50||78||59||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|-
  +
| [[2008–09 NHL season|2008–09]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||82||31||42||73||72||—||—||—||—||—
  +
|- style="background:#f0f0f0;"
  +
| [[2009–10 NHL season|2009–10]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||82||18||37||55||41||3||1||1||2||4
  +
|-
  +
| [[2010–11 NHL season|2010–11]]||Phoenix Coyotes||NHL||72||20||40||60||67||4||3||2||5||6
  +
|- style="background:#e0e0e0;"
  +
! colspan="3" | NHL totals
  +
! 1119
  +
! 296
  +
! 442
  +
! 738
  +
! 1023
  +
! 39
  +
! 10
  +
! 9
  +
! 19
  +
! 44
 
|}
  +
  +
==References==
  +
{{reflist|2}}
  +
  +
==External links==
  +
*{{hockeydb|17661}}
  +
  +
{{s-start}}
  +
{{succession box | before = [[Mats Lindgren]] | title = [[List of Winnipeg Jets draft picks|Winnipeg Jets first round draft pick]] | years = [[1995 NHL Entry Draft|1995]] | after = [[Dan Focht]]}}
  +
{{incumbent succession box | before = [[Teppo Numminen]] | title = [[List of Phoenix Coyotes captains|Phoenix Coyotes captain]] | start = [[2003–04 NHL season|2003]]}}
  +
{{succession box | before = [[Brendan Shanahan]] | title=[[Canada national men's ice hockey team|Canadian]] [[World Ice Hockey Championships|World Championship]] captain | years = [[2007 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships|2007]]| after= None}}
  +
{{succession box | before = [[Ethan Moreau]] | title=[[King Clancy Memorial Trophy]] | years = [[2009–10 NHL season|2010]] | after = [[Doug Weight]]}}
  +
{{s-end}}
  +
  +
  +
{{DEFAULTSORT:Doan, Shane}}
  +
  +
{{Wikipedia}
 
[[Category:Born in 1976]]
 
[[Category:Canadian ice hockey players]]
  +
[[Category:2006 Olympian]]
 
[[Category:Kamloops Blazers alumni]]
  +
[[Category:Memorial Cup winners]]
  +
[[Category:National Hockey League All-Stars]]
  +
[[Category:National Hockey League first round draft picks]]
  +
[[Category:Olympic ice hockey players of Canada]]
 
[[Category:Phoenix Coyotes players]]
 
[[Category:Springfield Falcons players]]
 
[[Category:Winnipeg Jets draft picks]]
  +
[[Category:Winnipeg Jets players]]
  +
[[Category:IIHF Player]]

Latest revision as of 12:06, 21 April 2020

Shane Doan
ShaneDoan2011
Position Right wing
Shot Right
Height
Weight
6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
223 lb (101 kg)
Team
F. Teams
retired
AAHA
Killam Selects
WHL
Kamloops Blazers
NHL
Winnipeg Jets
Phoenix Coyotes
Arizona Coyotes
AHL
Springfield Falcons
Teams Canada
Olympics 2006
World Championships 1999, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2019
Coaching 2007-present Kamloops Blazers
2019-present Canadian National Team
Nationality Flag of Canada Canadian
Born October 10, 1976,
Halkirk, Alberta, Canada
NHL Draft 7th overall, 1995
Winnipeg Jets
Pro Career 1991 – 2017

Shane Albert Doan (born October 10, 1976) is a former Canadian professional ice hockey forward and former captain for the Phoenix Coyotes of the National Hockey League (NHL). Doan is the longest tenured player on the club, having played all fourteen of his NHL seasons with the original Winnipeg Jets/Phoenix Coyotes franchise. He was the last remaining Coyote to have played for the original Jets. Currently, he is a franchise owner of the Kamloops Blazers of the WHL and an assistant GM of the Canadian National Team on the Spengler Cup.

Competing internationally for Team Canada, he has won two gold medals and two silvers at the World Championships, as well as one World Cup championship in 2004. He was also a member of Canada's 2006 Winter Olympic team. He won one silver medal at the 2019 World Championship as a team consultant.

Playing career

ShaneDoan

After winning the Memorial Cup and Stafford Smythe Memorial Trophy as tournament MVP with the Kamloops Blazers in 1995, Doan was drafted by the Winnipeg Jets in the first round, seventh overall, in the 1995 NHL Entry Draft. He was the Jets' final first-round pick prior to the franchise moving to Phoenix. He immediately made the transition from major junior to the NHL in 1995–96 and tallied 17 points in his rookie season with the Jets. After the Jets relocated to Phoenix and became the Coyotes the following season, his points total did not improve greatly until the 1999–2000 season when he scored 26 goals (the first of nine consecutive 20-goal campaigns for Doan).

After the departure of team captain Teppo Numminen, Doan assumed the captaincy in 2003–04 and scored which were then career-highs in all statistical categories with 27 goals, 41 assists and 68 points. During the campaign, Doan was selected to play in his first NHL All-Star Game in 2004. He then hit the 30-goal mark for the first time in his career the following season to go with 36 assists and 66 points. Late in the 2006–07 season, Doan agreed to a five-year, $22.75 million contract extension with the Coyotes on February 14, 2007, He responded the following season with his best campaign to date when he led the Coyotes in scoring in 2007–08 with 28 goals and a career-high 50 assists and 78 points. In 2008–09, Doan was selected to the 2009 NHL All-Star Game and won the inaugural Elimination Shootout segment of the Skills Competition, outlasting Marc Savard of the Boston Bruins in the seventh round. He completed that season with his second straight 70-point season and a career-high 31 goals.

On October 18, 2010, Doan was suspended for 3 games due to a hit that he placed on Dan Sexton of the Anaheim Ducks the night previous. NHL disciplinarian Colin Campbell ruled that the hit was "a late hit from the blind side to the head of an unsuspecting opponent", violating the NHL's ban on blindside hits to the head.[1] This was the first suspension of Doan's career.

International play

Medal record
Shane Doan WC2008
Doan at the 2008 World Championships
Competitor for Flag of Canada Canada
Ice hockey
World Championships
Silver 2009 Switzerland
Silver 2008 Canada
Gold 2007 Russia
Silver 2005 Austria
Gold 2003 Finland

Doan made his international debut for Team Canada at the 1999 World Championships in Norway and finished fourth with the team. He then won his first gold medal four years later at the 2003 World Championships in Finland. Prior to the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Doan competed in the 2004 World Cup and scored the game winning goal in the finals against Finland to win the championship. Doan had also been named to Canada's 2004 World Championship team several months earlier, but could not attend due to injury.

In 2005, Doan was named an alternate captain for Canada and helped lead the team to a silver medal at the World Championships in Austria. Two years later, he was promoted to team captain at the 2007 World Championships in Moscow. During the tournament, he scored the game winning goal in a 4–2 preliminary round victory over Norway, then scored a hat-trick in a span of 6 minutes and 25 seconds in a 6–3 qualification round victory over Belarus. Canada went undefeated en route to a 4–2 gold medal game victory over Finland in the final. He remained captain for the 2008 World Championships and won his second silver, losing to Russia in the gold medal game.

Controversy

When Doan was selected for the 2006 Olympics Canadian national men's hockey team, Canadian Liberal MP Denis Coderre wrote a letter to Hockey Canada president Bob Nicholson asking to remove Doan from the team unless Doan apologized for an alleged racial slur he used on December 13, 2005 against a Francophone referee during a game against the Montreal Canadiens.[2] In January 2006, Doan filed a lawsuit against Coderre for defamation seeking $250,000 in damages and promising to contribute any damage awards to charity.[3] Coderre filed a counter-suit in April 2007, seeking $45,000 in damages.

When Doan was selected as captain on the 2007 Canadian national men's hockey team, a Canadian Official Languages parliamentary committee demanded Hockey Canada appear before the committee to explain their decision to name Doan as captain in light of the alleged comment made on December 13, 2005.[4] Doan's selection was maintained citing that an NHL investigation had cleared him of any wrong doing.

Prior to Doan's trial, set to take place in September 2010, he and Coderre agreed to an out of court settlement stating that Superior Court of Montreal could put its resources to better use if this matter was settled.[5] However, Doan admitted in the settlement that a player on the ice did utter the racial comments, contradicting his previous statements. The settlement also stated that Coderre had been justified in denouncing the events.

Awards

Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1992–93 Kamloops Blazers WHL 51 7 12 19 55 13 0 1 1 8
1993–94 Kamloops Blazers WHL 52 24 24 48 88
1994–95 Kamloops Blazers WHL 71 37 57 94 106 21 6 10 16 16
1995–96 Winnipeg Jets NHL 74 7 10 17 101 6 0 0 0 6
1996–97 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 63 4 8 12 49 4 0 0 0 2
1997–98 Springfield Falcons AHL 39 21 21 42 64
1997–98 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 33 5 6 11 35 6 1 0 1 6
1998–99 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 79 6 16 22 54 7 2 2 4 6
1999–00 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 81 26 25 51 66 4 1 2 3 8
2000–01 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 76 26 37 63 89
2001–02 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 81 20 29 49 61 5 2 2 4 6
2002–03 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 82 21 37 58 86
2003–04 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 79 27 41 68 47
2005–06 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 82 30 36 66 123
2006–07 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 73 27 28 55 73
2007–08 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 80 28 50 78 59
2008–09 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 82 31 42 73 72
2009–10 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 82 18 37 55 41 3 1 1 2 4
2010–11 Phoenix Coyotes NHL 72 20 40 60 67 4 3 2 5 6
NHL totals 1119 296 442 738 1023 39 10 9 19 44

References

  1. Coyotes' Doan Suspended 3 Games for Illegal Hit. Associated Press, Yahoo! Sports (October 18, 2010). Retrieved on October 18, 2010.
  2. MP: Doan should not represent Canada. TSN (2005-12-22). Retrieved on 2007-05-03.
  3. Doan files lawsuit against Coderre. TSN (2006-01-17). Retrieved on 2007-05-03.
  4. Hockey Canada officials head to Ottawa. TSN (2007-05-02). Retrieved on 2007-05-03.
  5. NHL Forward Doan, Coderre Settle Language Spat Out of Court. TSN (2010-08-27). Retrieved on 2010-08-27.

External links

Preceded by
Mats Lindgren
Winnipeg Jets first round draft pick
1995
Succeeded by
Dan Focht
Preceded by
Teppo Numminen
Phoenix Coyotes captain
2003 – present
Incumbent
Preceded by
Brendan Shanahan
Canadian World Championship captain
2007
Succeeded by
None
Preceded by
Ethan Moreau
King Clancy Memorial Trophy
2010
Succeeded by
Doug Weight



{{Wikipedia}