Stéphane Richer

Stéphane Richer
Born June 7, 1966 (1966-06-07) (age 45)
Ripon, QC, CAN
Height 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Weight 190 lb (86 kg; 13 st 8 lb)
Position Left wing
Shot Right
Played for New Jersey Devils
Montreal Canadiens
Tampa Bay Lightning
St. Louis Blues
Pittsburgh Penguins
NHL Draft 29th overall, 1984
Montreal Canadiens
Playing career 1984–2005

Stéphane Jean-Jacques Richer (French pronunciation: [stefan ʁiʃe]; born June 7, 1966) is a retired professional ice hockey left winger.

Contents

Playing career

Richer was drafted 29th overall by the Montreal Canadiens in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft. He played in 1,054 career NHL games, scoring 421 goals and 398 assists for 819 points. Richer won the Calder Cup in 1985. He also won the Stanley Cup with the Montreal Canadiens in 1986 and with the New Jersey Devils in 1995.

After his Stanley Cup run in New Jersey, he found himself bouncing from team to team through trades including Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay, St. Louis, a second stint in Montreal, and even a trip back to the minors before ultimately retiring.

He was openly criticized by other players for his comments during the NHL lockout of 1995 leading to 1/2 the normal season when he stated "...we should be playing hockey", when asked about the strike and his feelings about the negotiations.

Richer is among the all time leaders (tied in second with six other players) in playoff overtime goals, with four:

Richer scored 50 goals for the Montreal Canadiens in 1987–88 and 51 in 1989–90, becoming the only player to do so since Guy Lafleur's heyday. To this date, Richer is the last player to have scored 50 goals for the Montreal Canadiens.

The ensuing year after winning the Cup, New Jersey missed the playoffs, and Richer was traded back to the Montreal Canadiens in 1996.[1]

Richer confirmed during the 2001-02 season that he has been battling depression during the majority of his career.

Playing style

Richer was known to have one of the hardest shots in the NHL during his playing days, coupled with an extremely quick release. Unlike many other players, Richer only had to wind up his stick to about waist height to achieve full power on his shot. Recognition of his hard shot was noticed even more when Fleer trading cards included Richer in their "Slapshot Artists" limited set for the 1994–95 season.[2] During the 1994 New Jersey Devils team-only skills competition prior to the All-Star Game, Richer recorded multiple slapshots that exceeded the 100 mph mark.

In a well documented legend, during one pre-game warm up session in New Jersey, Richer fired a slapshot at his own goalie, Martin Brodeur, which shattered the cup in Brodeur's jock strap, leaving him bruised and nauseated. Brodeur had to leave the ice and change equipment moments before the game started.

A fast skater with a big body (approx. 6'3", 225 lbs.), Richer used skill and his shot to beat opponents as opposed to a hard-hitting power forward style which was prototypical of an NHL player of his proportions.

Scouting reports frequently criticized Richer for not squeezing more production out of his talent, given his physical gifts (size, skill, skating ability). He was sometimes described as "coasting" during the regular season and playing hard only when the playoffs began, although his statistics do not support this perception (his career regular-season points per game of 0.78 is higher than his 0.73 average in the playoffs). [1]

Retirement

In October 2009, Richer began competing as a pairs figure skater on the CBC Television reality show Battle of the Blades with Marie-France Dubreuil.

Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1983–84 Granby Bisons QMJHL 67 39 37 76 62 3 1 1 2 4
1984–85 Granby Bisons QMJHL 30 30 27 57 31
1984–85 Chicoutimi Saguenéens QMJHL 27 31 32 63 40 12 13 13 26 25
1984–85 Montreal Canadiens NHL 1 0 0 0 0
1984–85 Sherbrooke Canadiens AHL 9 3 6 9 10
1985–86 Montreal Canadiens NHL 65 21 16 37 50 16 4 1 5 23
1986–87 Sherbrooke Canadiens AHL 12 10 4 14 11
1986–87 Montreal Canadiens NHL 57 20 19 39 80 5 3 2 5 0
1987–88 Montreal Canadiens NHL 72 50 28 78 72 8 7 5 12 6
1988–89 Montreal Canadiens NHL 68 25 35 60 61 21 6 5 11 14
1989–90 Montreal Canadiens NHL 75 51 40 91 46 9 7 3 10 2
1990–91 Montreal Canadiens NHL 75 31 30 61 53 13 9 5 14 6
1991–92 New Jersey Devils NHL 74 29 35 64 25 7 1 2 3 0
1992–93 New Jersey Devils NHL 78 38 35 73 44 5 2 2 4 2
1993–94 New Jersey Devils NHL 80 36 36 72 16 20 7 5 12 6
1994–95 New Jersey Devils NHL 45 23 16 39 10 19 6 15 21 2
1995–96 New Jersey Devils NHL 73 20 12 32 30
1996–97 Montreal Canadiens NHL 63 22 24 46 32 5 0 0 0 0
1997–98 Montreal Canadiens NHL 14 5 4 9 5
1997–98 Tampa Bay Lightning NHL 26 9 11 20 36
1998–99 Tampa Bay Lightning NHL 64 12 21 33 22
1999–00 Tampa Bay Lightning NHL 20 7 5 12 4
1999–00 Detroit Vipers IHL 2 0 0 0 0
1999–00 St. Louis Blues NHL 36 8 17 25 14 3 1 0 1 0
2001–02 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 58 13 12 25 14
2001–02 New Jersey Devils NHL 10 1 2 3 0 3 0 0 0 0
2004–05 Sorel-Tracy Mission LNAH 8 2 6 8 0
NHL totals 1054 421 398 819 614 134 53 45 98 61

See also

References

External links