Jay McKee

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Position Defence
Shoots Left
Height
Weight
6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
199 lb (90 kg/14 st 3 lb)
NHL Team
F. teams
St. Louis Blues
Buffalo Sabres
Nationality Flag of Canada Canada
Born September 8, 1977 (1977-09-08) (age 30),
Kingston, ON, CAN
NHL Draft 14th overall, 1995
Buffalo Sabres
Pro career 1996 – present

Jay McKee (born September 8, 1977, Kingston, Ontario) is an ice hockey defenceman who plays for the St. Louis Blues. Throughout his career he has been noted as one of the NHL's best shot-blockers. McKee was drafted in the first round, 14th overall, of the 1995 NHL Entry Draft by the Buffalo Sabres. McKee played his junior hockey with the Niagara Falls Thunder, where he was an OHL second team all-star in 1996.

McKee parlayed his solid junior career into a steady pro career, becoming one of the Sabres top defenceman in his 9 years with the club. McKee played in 582 regular season games with the Sabres, amassing 98 points and 470 penalty minutes. During the 2005–06 NHL season with the Buffalo Sabres he served as an alternate captain under co-captains Daniel Briere and Chris Drury.

McKee was part of the Sabres' Eastern Conference Championship run in 1999 (before losing to the Dallas Stars in the Stanley Cup Finals). McKee was injured during the Sabres's two subsequent playoff runs. In 2001, he missed the team's final five games of the playoffs after a vicious collision with the Pittsburgh Penguins's Mario Lemieux during game 2 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals, and in 2006 McKee missed the deciding seventh game of the Eastern Conference Finals against the Carolina Hurricanes when he was sidelined with a severe infection in his leg, reportedly caused by a cut or bruise that McKee sustained blocking a shot in an earlier round of the playoffs. All totaled, McKee appeared in 51 playoff games with the Sabres, recording 9 points and 60 penalty minutes.

On July 1, 2006, McKee signed with the St. Louis Blues for a four-year, $16 million contract. His first season with the Blues was cut short due to various injuries including a knee injury, a broken finger, and two lower body injuries.

[edit] Career statistics

    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1993–94 Sudbury Wolves OHL 51 0 1 1 51 3 0 0 0 0
1994–95 Sudbury Wolves OHL 39 6 6 12 91 -- -- -- -- --
1994–95 Niagara Falls Thunder OHL 26 3 13 16 60 6 2 3 5 10
1995–96 Rochester Americans AHL 4 0 1 1 15 -- -- -- -- --
1995–96 Buffalo Sabres NHL 1 0 1 1 2 -- -- -- -- --
1996–97 Rochester Americans AHL 7 2 5 7 4 -- -- -- -- --
1996–97 Buffalo Sabres NHL 43 1 9 10 35 3 0 0 0 0
1997–98 Rochester Americans AHL 13 1 7 8 11 -- -- -- -- --
1997–98 Buffalo Sabres NHL 56 1 13 14 55 1 0 0 0 0
1998–99 Buffalo Sabres NHL 72 0 6 6 75 21 0 3 3 24
1999–00 Buffalo Sabres NHL 78 5 12 17 50 1 0 0 0 0
2000–01 Buffalo Sabres NHL 74 1 10 11 76 8 1 0 1 6
2001–02 Buffalo Sabres NHL 81 2 11 13 43 -- -- -- -- --
2002–03 Buffalo Sabres NHL 59 0 5 5 49 -- -- -- -- --
2003–04 Buffalo Sabres NHL 43 2 3 5 41 -- -- -- -- --
2005–06 Buffalo Sabres NHL 75 5 11 16 57 17 2 3 5 30
2006–07 St. Louis Blues NHL 23 0 0 0 12 -- -- -- -- --
2007–08 St. Louis Blues NHL 66 2 7 9 42 -- -- -- -- --
NHL Totals 671 19 88 107 524 51 3 6 9 60

[edit] See also

[edit] External links