Simon Nolet | |
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Position | Right Wing |
Shot | Right |
Height Weight |
5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) 182 lb (83 kg) |
Teams | Philadelphia Flyers Kansas City Scouts Pittsburgh Penguins Colorado Rockies |
Nationality | ![]() |
Born | Saint-Odilon-de-Cranbourne, PQ, CAN | September 23, 1941,
Pro Career | 1962 – 1977 |
Simon Laurent Nolet (born September 23, 1941 in Saint-Odilon-de-Cranbourne, Quebec, Canada) is a retired professional forward, most notably for the Philadelphia Flyers of the National Hockey League.
Playing career[]
After a junior career with the Quebec Citadelles of the that saw them in the 1961-62 Eastern Canada Memorial Cup Playoffs, he played senior hockey in various leagues. His 1964 team, the Windsor Maple Leafs, reached the 1963-64 Eastern Canada Allan Cup Playoffs, led by Nolet, who scored 68 goals in 68 games and added ten goals in the Cup playoffs. Nolet sat out most of the following season, but joined the Sherbrooke Castors for their own Allan Cup run in 1965, scoring 21 goals in 15 games to lead them to the Allan Cup.
Immediately after that, Nolet signed with the Quebec Aces of the American Hockey League, scoring two goals and an assist in his professional debut. He would star with the Aces for three more seasons and part of two others, breaking out in 1968 to lead the league in scoring with 44 goals and 52 assists for 96 points and adding 15 points in ten playoff games as the Aces reached the Calder Cup finals, a pinnacle Nolet would help them reach the following season as well.
In the meantime, however, the expansion Philadelphia Flyers of the NHL had purchased the Aces and the rights to its players in 1967. The Flyers' early years had a distinct Francophone flavor thereby, with ex-Aces Jean-Guy Gendron, André Lacroix, Serge Bernier, Rosaire Paiement, Leon Rochefort, Dick Sarrazin and Jim Johnson playing key roles with the fledgling franchise. Nolet made his NHL debut in 1968 and was a firm fixture by two seasons later, scoring 22 goals in only 56 games after his permanent promotion from Quebec and adding noteworthy two-way play and penalty killing. He was a regular in Philadelphia for four more years, earning a trip to the All-Star Game in the 1972 season.
Left unexposed in the 1974 NHL Expansion Draft, Nolet was selected fifth overall by the Kansas City Scouts, and was named the team's first captain. Leading a weak squad in scoring that first season, he was Kansas City's sole representative in the All-Star Game. Halfway through the next year, he was dealt to the Pittsburgh Penguins before being reacquired by the Scouts' franchise in the 1976 offseason - which had moved to Denver to become the Colorado Rockies. Once again named to his former post as team captain, Nolet played out the the 1977 campaign before retiring.
Retirement[]
He finished his NHL career having scored 150 goals and 182 assists for 332 points in 562 games.
After Nolet's playing career was over, he worked as a scout for the Quebec Nordiques of the World Hockey Association, and later served as an assistant coach for the club from 1982 until 1987. He remains a scout in the Flyers' organization.
Achievements and facts[]
- Won the John B. Sollenberger Trophy as the AHL's leading scorer in 1968.
- Named to the AHL Second All-Star Team in 1968.
- Played in the NHL All-Star Game in 1972 NHL All-Star Game and 1975.
- Scored the first goal in Kansas City Scouts' history, and therefore the first goal for the New Jersey Devils' franchise.
- Was on a Stanley Cup-winning team with the Flyers in 1974.
External links[]
Preceded by 'new creation' |
Kansas City Scouts/Colorado Rockies captains 1974–77 |
Succeeded by Wilf Paiement |
Colorado Rockies captains |
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Nolet • Paiement • Croteau • Christie • Robert • McDonald • Ramage |
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Simon Nolet. 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). |