Joe Murphy (ice hockey)

Joe Murphy
Born (1967-10-16) October 16, 1967
London, ON, CAN
Height 6 ft 2 in (188 cm)
Weight 200 lb (91 kg; 14 st 4 lb)
Position Right Wing
Shot Left
Played for AHL
Adirondack Red Wings
NHL
Detroit Red Wings
Edmonton Oilers
Chicago Blackhawks
St. Louis Blues
San Jose Sharks
Boston Bruins
Washington Capitals
NHL Draft 1st overall, 1986
Detroit Red Wings
Playing career 19862001

Joseph Patrick Murphy born October 16, 1967 in London, Ontario is a Canadian former professional hockey right winger who was the first overall pick in the 1986 NHL Entry draft and won a Stanley Cup, Calder Cup and NCAA championship in his career.

Detroit Red Wings

Joe Murphy became the first NCAA college player to be selected first overall[1] when he was selected in the 1986 NHL Entry Draft by the Detroit Red Wings. Murphy had been a stand out centre with Michigan State, but with Steve Yzerman and Adam Oates handling the first and second line duties in Detroit, Murphy found little room to develop his game with the Red Wings. He spent the bulk of his rookie pro season in the American Hockey League with the Wings farm club in Adirondack. The following season Murphy split time between the AHL and the NHL playing fifty games with Detroit after converting to right wing. He managed just ten goals and 19 points and ended up back in the minor leagues for the majority of the 1988-89 season where he really found his game putting up 31 goals and 66 points in just 47 games. That spring Murphy played a key role the Adirondack Red Wings capturing the Calder Cup to complete his breakout pro season. The next season, 1989–90, Murphy scored three goals in the first nine games of the season for the Red Wings before he was shipped to the Edmonton Oilers as part of a blockbuster six-player trade that landed Jimmy Carson and Kevin McClelland with the Red Wings and sent Murphy, Adam Graves, Petr Klima and Jeff Sharples to Edmonton.[2]

Edmonton Oilers and Chicago Blackhawks

With the Oilers, Murphy joined a young and up-and-coming core but his development seem to stall with just seven goals and 25 points in 62 games. However, that spring, in the playoffs, he found another gear. Coach John Muckler put Murphy with Adam Graves and Martin Gelinas on a line dubbed the "Kid Line" (Murphy and Graves were 21 while Gelinas was just 19) he enjoyed great success putting up 14 points in 22 playoff games providing solid secondary scoring for the Oilers en route to a Stanley Cup triumph over the Boston Bruins. “They put our line together about the third game of the playoffs and all I recall is us just saying ‘Let’s go out there and work hard,’” Gelinas said of the 1990 Cup team. “Murph had a lot of skill and Gravy was the big, heavy guy. All three of us combined created a pretty good energy and a big buzz. We got some timely goals, but more importantly when we were on the ice we were just making things happen.[3]” Murphy built on this success the next year scoring 27 goals and 62 points then improved again the following year with career-best totals of 35-goals and 82-points. That spring Murphy led the surprising Oilers although way to the Conference Finals where they fell to Chicago but Murphy's team leading 24-points in just 16 playoff games saw him finish fourth in post season scoring despite his team not playing in the final round. The breakthrough offensive totals came at the right time for Murphy who's contract expired following the season. Murphy and Oilers General Manager Glen Sather tried to work out a new contract through the summer with no success and ultimately broke off talks in September, before training camp with the two sides $300,000 apart.[4] With Murphy holding out, the 1992-93 season went on with him working out with the Detroit Falcons of the Colonial Hockey League and awaiting a trade that wouldn't come until February.[5] Murphy was dealt to the Chicago Blackhawks and given a new three-year contract with an option year before he joined the club for the final 19 games of the season and posted 7 goals and 17 points. His first full season in Chicago, the 1993-94 campaign, saw Murphy pot 31-goals and 70 points, which would prove to be his best year with the Blackhawks. The following year Murphy led the Hawks in goals with 23 and posted 41 points in 40 games in a lockout shortened season. In 1995-96 he managed just one more goal despite playing 30 more games and dipped to 51 points in 70 games, well off his point-a-game pace of the previous season. Perhaps more concerning was the fact he was one of only two forwards - the other being tough-guy Jim Cummins - to finish the year with a negative plus/minus rating. With wingers Tony Amonte and Eric Daze eclipsing him as the primary scoring wings, Murphy was allowed to leave town when his contract expired.

St. Louis Blues

On July 3, 1996, Murphy signed a 3-year $10 million deal to join the St. Louis Blues [6] but after scoring 20-goals and 45 points he fell short of the lofty expectations that came with his new contract. The next season, he posted just four goals and 13 points in 29 games before the Blues traded him to the San Jose Sharks for defensemen Todd Gill. Because of his large contract, the Blues also needed to send cash to San Jose in the transaction to get the deal done.[7]

With the Sharks, Murphy rebounded and put up 9 points in ten games then led the team with 25 goals the following year and finished second on the team with 48 points. Despite his success, he left the team as a free agent in the off-season and was unable to find any takers.

Late Career Turmoil

The off-season came and went with Murphy not finding work before he eventually managed to land a try-out with the New York Rangers in November 1999. Rangers General Manager Neil Smith had been the GM of Adirondack when Murphy played for the club so the two had some history. However the try out would be very short lived as Murphy signed a contract with the Boston Bruins less than a week after beginning his try out with the Rangers. The Rangers, who weren't even offered a chance to match the offer, felt spurned in the situation and Murphy made bizarre accusations about his sticks being partially sawed in half and one of his skates being "thrown in the river" by Smith.[8] Things in Boston didn't go much better for Murphy. He lasted just 26-games with the Bruins before the team suspended him indefinitely for "screaming profanities at coach Pat Burns."[9] Murphy made few friends in the Bruins locker room and was said to have questioned his teammates work ethic and was known to tell off both teammates and the coaching staff. "This has been going on for a while," Coach Burns said at the time of the suspension. "The players have had enough and I have had enough."[10] The Bruins, unable to find a team willing to trade for Murphy, placed the winger on waivers where he was claimed by the Washington Capitals. With Washington, Murphy was given a very short leash. Team officials did their due diligence speaking with former coaches and teammates of Murphy before making the claim and General Manager George McPhee said if Murphy caused any issues with team he would be shipped out immediately.[11] Murphy played 43 games with Washington over the next two years before ending his career on a particularly low note. Murphy, who had just one goal and six points in 14 games to start the 2000-01 season, was involved in an altercation in New York. After a team dinner and a trip to a night club, Murphy tried to talk a woman into joining him in a limo. She refused and a fight ensued which led to the woman's male companion striking Murphy in the head with a bottle.[12] The following day the Capitals assigned Murphy to the American Hockey League affiliate. Murphy refused to report and was suspended by the team and never played professional hockey again. Murphy tried - and failed - to file for Workers Compensation because the incident happened while he was travelling for work. The Department of Employment Services ruled that while Murphy was in New York for work reasons and the dinner was a team event, the bar Murphy travelled to after the dinner had nothing to do with his employment. Murphy appealed the decision and lost.

Awards and achievements

Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1985–86Michigan State UniversityNCAA3524376150
1986–87Adirondack Red WingsAHL71213859611021333
1986–87Detroit Red WingsNHL50112
1987–88Adirondack Red WingsAHL656114
1987–88Detroit Red WingsNHL50109193780116
1988–89Adirondack Red WingsAHL4731356666166111717
1988–89Detroit Red WingsNHL2617828
1989–90Detroit Red WingsNHL93144
1989–90Edmonton OilersNHL62718255622681416
1990–91Edmonton OilersNHL80273562351525714
1991–92Edmonton OilersNHL8035478252168162412
1992–93Chicago BlackhawksNHL19710171840008
1993–94Chicago BlackhawksNHL80313970111613425
1994–95Chicago BlackhawksNHL402318418916931229
1995–96Chicago BlackhawksNHL70222951861062833
1996–97St. Louis BluesNHL7520254569611210
1997–98St. Louis BluesNHL27491322
1997–98San Jose SharksNHL1054914611220
1998–99San Jose SharksNHL762523487360334
1999–00Boston BruinsNHL26771441
1999–00Washington CapitalsNHL2958135350008
2000–01Washington CapitalsNHL1415620
NHL totals 779 233 295 528 810 120 34 43 77 185

Post-Retirement

Murphy became the coach and general manager of the GMHL Alliston Coyotes in their inaugural season, however he took leave from the team midway through the playoffs due to an undisclosed allegation which resulted in a Trespass Order issued against him by the Town of New Tecumseth.[13] On 5 March 2014, Murphy formally announced his resignation.[14]

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Paul Ysebaert
CCHA Rookie of the Year
1985–86
Succeeded by
Nelson Emerson
Preceded by
Wendel Clark
NHL first overall draft pick
1986
Succeeded by
Pierre Turgeon
Preceded by
Brent Fedyk
Detroit Red Wings first round draft pick
1986
Succeeded by
Yves Racine

References

  1. King, Tom (Sept 28th 2010). The Legendary Game: Ultimate Hockey Trivia. Trafford Publishing. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. "Hockey Hall of Fame". legends of hockey.
  3. Oilers Nation https://oilersnation.com/2017/03/19/top-100-oilers-joe-murphy-26/. Retrieved May 4, 2017. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. [UPI "Oilers Trade Murphy to Blackhawks"] Check |url= value (help). http://www.upi.com/Archives/1993/02/25/Oilers-trade-Murphy-to-Blackhawks/2625730616400/. External link in |website= (help)
  5. "Oilers Trade Murphy to Blackhawks". UPI.
  6. Hockey Zone Plus http://www.hockeyzoneplus.com/salaries/2749. Retrieved May 4, 2017. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. NHL Trade Tracker http://www.nhltradetracker.com/user/trade_list_by_player/Murphy,Joe. Retrieved May 4, 2017. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  8. "New York Times". nytimes.com. Retrieved May 4, 2017.
  9. "The Washington Post". www.washingtonpost.com.
  10. "The Globe & Mail". www.theglobeandmail.com. Retrieved May 4, 2017.
  11. "The Washington Post". www.washingtonpost.com.
  12. "Washington City Paper / District Line Daily D.C. Court of Appeals Rules Against Former Cap Player". www.washingtoncitypaper.com. Retrieved May 4, 2017.
  13. http://www.madhunt.com/murphy-banned-rec-facilities-20140224.html
  14. http://www.simcoe.com/sports-story/4396878-alliston-coyotes-coach-leaving-team/
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