Miroslav Šatan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Position Left Wing
Shoots Left
Height
Weight
ft 3 in (1.91 m)
191 lb (87 kg)
NHL Team
F. Teams
New York Islanders
Edmonton Oilers
Buffalo Sabres
Nationality Flag of Slovakia Slovakia
Born October 22, 1974,
Topoľčany, CS
NHL Draft 111th overall, 1993
Edmonton Oilers
Pro Career 1994 – present

Miroslav Šatan (born October 22, 1974 in Topoľčany, Czechoslovakia, now Slovakia) is a professional ice hockey player who plays for the New York Islanders. The proper Slovak pronunciation of his name is SHAH-tahn (IPA: ['ʃatan]), but North Americans usually pronounce it "Shuh-TAN" (IPA: [ʃə'tæn]). He and wife Ingrid have a son, Miroslav Jr., born in March, 2006.

Contents

[edit] Playing career

Satan was drafted 111th overall in the 1993 NHL Entry Draft by the Edmonton Oilers. Prior to his entry into the NHL, he played in the Czechoslovak and Slovak leagues and he had scored 9 goals in 8 games representing Slovakia at the 1994 Winter Olympic Games.

In 1994-95, Satan played a season in the minor leagues, split between four teams including the Oilers' farm club in Cape Breton and the IHL's Detroit Vipers. While with the Vipers, he scored the winning goal in an exhibition game against Wayne Gretzky's Ninety-Niners, an all-star team put together by Gretzky during the 1994 NHL lockout.

After two seasons with the Oilers, the highly skilled winger was traded to the Buffalo Sabres for Craig Millar and Barrie Moore. He firmly established himself as a top-line forward and one of the key players of the Buffalo team. During the 2004-2005 NHL labor dispute, Satan played for HC Slovan Bratislava in the Slovak League. He signed as an unrestricted free agent with the New York Islanders on August 3, 2005.

His 35 goals during the 2005-06 season were his highest goal-output since the 2001-02 season, with the Buffalo Sabres. Almost half his 35 goals came on the power play (17), also a career personal best. He led the Islanders in goals in the 2005-06 season. Satan tied for the team lead in points with 66, shared with captain Alexei Yashin. Also in 2005-06, Satan went 7-for-10 (70%) and was third in the league in shooting percentage in the shootout.

On December 2, 2006, he scored his 300th career goal against the Pittsburgh Penguins. Earlier in the season he had recorded his 300th career assist and his 600th career point.

As of December 2, 2006, Satan had never missed a game as an Islander, having played in 107 consecutive games to that point. He had played in 257 consecutive games overall. It is the second time in his career that he has played over 250 consecutive games. He had 256 game streak as a Buffalo Sabre that ended in November 2002.

[edit] Awards

  • Played in NHL All-Star Game - 2000

[edit] Records

  • Six times best on Buffalo Sabres team in points scored
  • 10th place on Buffalo Sabres all-time scoring list with 224 goals and 232 assists (7th in goals scored)

[edit] Career statistics

    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1992-93 Trenčín Czech 38 11 6 17 -- -- -- -- -- --
1993-94 Trenčín Slovakia 30 32 16 48 16 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 Cape Breton AHL 25 24 16 40 15 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 Detroit IHL 8 1 3 4 4 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 Detroit UHL 1 0 2 2 2 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 San Diego IHL 6 0 2 2 6 -- -- -- -- --
1995-96 Edmonton NHL 62 18 17 35 22 -- -- -- -- --
1996-97 Edmonton NHL 64 17 11 28 22 -- -- -- -- --
1996-97 Buffalo NHL 12 8 2 10 4 7 0 0 0 0
1997-98 Buffalo NHL 79 22 24 46 34 14 5 4 9 4
1998-99 Buffalo NHL 81 40 26 66 44 12 3 5 8 2
1999-00 Trenčín Slovakia 3 2 8 10 2 -- -- -- -- --
1999-00 Buffalo NHL 81 33 34 67 32 5 3 2 5 0
2000-01 Buffalo NHL 82 29 33 62 36 13 3 10 13 8
2001-02 Buffalo NHL 82 37 36 73 33 -- -- -- -- --
2002-03 Buffalo NHL 79 26 49 75 20 -- -- -- -- --
2003-04 Slovan Slovakia 7 6 4 10 41 -- -- -- -- --
2003-04 Buffalo NHL 82 29 28 57 30 -- -- -- -- --
2004-05 Slovan Slovakia 18 11 9 20 14 -- -- -- -- --
2005-06 NY Islanders NHL 82 35 31 66 38 -- -- -- -- --
2006-07 NY Islanders NHL 26 7 11 18 16
NHL Totals 812 301 302 603 347 51 14 21 35 14

Stats as of December 4th, 2006


[edit] International play

Played for Slovakia in:


[edit] Trivia

Several popular sports websites currently assign him the ID number 666 in their player biography databases (visible in the URL), likely as a joke about his last name, which in Anglicized spelling is Satan.

An unsubstantiated (and untrue) rumor that he wanted to change his number to 666 led to the NHL adopting a rule stating that players could only wear whole numbers from 1-98. The rule is sometimes nicknamed the "Biron Rule" after Satan's then-teammate, Buffalo Sabres goaltender Martin Biron, who was the only player affected (he wore "00" and had to change to "43").

During the 2003-2004 NHL season, the Buffalo Sabres rotated their captaincy on a monthly basis. Satan served as captain in October 2003.

During his tenure with the Buffalo Sabres, a very popular t-shirt among fans of the team featured a stylized silhouette of Satan with "devil horns" on the back, and the words "Jesus Saves, Satan Scores" on the front.

The New Jersey Devils were among the teams trying to sign him as a free agent after he left Buffalo, even jokingly offering him the captainship (the mythical Satan being the "captain of the devils").

Sabres play-by-play commentator Rick Jeanneret referred to Satan as 'The Little Devil.'

[edit] External links

Preceded by:
Stu Barnes
Buffalo Sabres captains
Oct 2003
Succeeded by:
Chris Drury
In other languages