Mike Stothers: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎External links: alphabetize categories
 
(30 intermediate revisions by 21 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Canadian ice hockey player & coach}}
{{Infobox ice hockey player
{{Infobox ice hockey player
| image = Mike Stothers (40259270692) (cropped).jpg
| image = Mike Stothers (40259270692) (cropped).jpg
| image_size =
| image_size =
| caption = Stothers in 2015
| position = [[Defenceman|Defence]]
| position = [[Defenceman|Defence]]
| played_for = [[Philadelphia Flyers]]<br> [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
| played_for = [[Philadelphia Flyers]]<br> [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
Line 17: Line 19:
}}
}}


'''Michael Patrick Stothers''' (born February 22, 1962) is a [[Canadian]] retired professional [[ice hockey]] player who played for the [[Philadelphia Flyers]] and [[Toronto Maple Leafs]], and was the head coach of the [[Grand Rapids Griffins]] of the [[American Hockey League|AHL]], the [[Owen Sound Attack]] of the [[Ontario Hockey League|OHL]] and the [[Moose Jaw Warriors]] of the [[Western Hockey League]]. He is currently the head coach for the [[Ontario Reign]] of the [[American Hockey League|AHL]]
'''Michael Patrick Stothers''' (born February 22, 1962) is a [[Canadian]] former professional [[ice hockey]] player who is an assistant coach for the [[Anaheim Ducks]] of the [[National Hockey League]]. He played for the [[Philadelphia Flyers]] and [[Toronto Maple Leafs]], and was previously the head coach of the [[Grand Rapids Griffins]] of the [[American Hockey League|AHL]], the [[Owen Sound Attack]] of the [[Ontario Hockey League|OHL]], the [[Moose Jaw Warriors]] of the [[Western Hockey League]], and the [[Ontario Reign]] of the [[American Hockey League]].


==Playing career==
==Playing career==
As a youth, Stothers played in the 1975 [[Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament]] with the Toronto Shopsy's [[minor ice hockey]] team.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.publicationsports.com/ressources/files/439/Joueurs_Pro.pdf|title=Pee-Wee players who have reached NHL or WHA|year=2018|website=Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament|access-date=2019-01-11}}</ref>
Mike Stothers played his junior hockey with the [[Kingston Canadians]] of the [[Ontario Major Junior Hockey League|OMJHL]] from 1979–1982, appearing in 183 games, registering 74 points (9 goals-65 assists), and in 21 playoff games with Kingston, Stothers had 6 points (1G-5A). The [[Philadelphia Flyers]] drafted Stothers with their 1st round draft pick, 21st overall in the [[1980 NHL Entry Draft]].


After Kingston was eliminated from the 1982 OHL playoffs, Stothers joined the [[Maine Mariners]] of the [[American Hockey League|AHL]] for the rest of the 1981–82 season, going pointless in 5 regular season games and in 1 playoff game. Stothers played the entire 1982–83 season with Maine, playing in all 80 games while scoring 18 points (2G-16). He then went pointless in 12 playoff games. Stothers once again spent an entire season with the Mariners in 1983–84, getting 12 points (2G-10A) in 61 games, and then in 17 playoff games, he recorded an assist. The Flyers moved their AHL affiliate to Hershey in 1984–85, and Stothers moved along with them, and had the best season of his career, setting a career high with 26 points (8G-18A) with the [[Hershey Bears]] in 60 games. He also made his NHL debut with the Flyers, getting no points in his only game of the season in Philadelphia.
Mike Stothers played junior hockey with the [[Kingston Canadians]] of the [[Ontario Major Junior Hockey League|OMJHL]] from 1979 to 1982, appearing in 183 games, registering 74 points (9 goals-65 assists), and in 21 playoff games with Kingston, Stothers had 6 points (1G-5A). The [[Philadelphia Flyers]] drafted Stothers with their 1st round draft pick, 21st overall in the [[1980 NHL Entry Draft]].
After Kingston was eliminated from the 1982 OHL playoffs, Stothers joined the [[Maine Mariners (AHL)|Maine Mariners]] of the [[American Hockey League|AHL]] for the rest of the 1981–82 season, going pointless in 5 regular season games and in 1 playoff game. Stothers played the entire 1982–83 season with Maine, playing in all 80 games while scoring 18 points (2G-16). He then went pointless in 12 playoff games. Stothers once again spent an entire season with the Mariners in 1983–84, getting 12 points (2G-10A) in 61 games, and then in 17 playoff games, he recorded an assist. The Flyers moved their AHL affiliate to Hershey in 1984–85, and Stothers moved along with them, and had the best season of his career, setting a career high with 26 points (8G-18A) with the [[Hershey Bears]] in 60 games. He also made his NHL debut with the Flyers, getting no points in his only game of the season in Philadelphia.


Stothers returned to Hershey in 1985–86, getting 13 points (4G-9A) in 66 games, and 3 points (0G-3A) in 13 playoff games. He also played in 6 games with the Flyers, getting an assist, and played in 3 playoff games with Philadelphia, getting no points. In 1986–87, Stothers was in Hershey again, getting a career high 283 penalty minutes, and had 16 points (5G-11A) in 75 games. He had no points in 5 playoff games with the Bears. He also once again appeared in some games with Philadelphia, getting no points in 2 regular season games, and no points in 2 playoff games with the Flyers.
Stothers returned to Hershey in 1985–86, getting 13 points (4G-9A) in 66 games, and 3 points (0G-3A) in 13 playoff games. He also played in 6 games with the Flyers, getting an assist, and played in 3 playoff games with Philadelphia, getting no points. In 1986–87, Stothers was in Hershey again, getting a career high 283 penalty minutes, and had 16 points (5G-11A) in 75 games. He had no points in 5 playoff games with the Bears. He also once again appeared in some games with Philadelphia, getting no points in 2 regular season games, and no points in 2 playoff games with the Flyers.
Line 28: Line 32:
Stothers started the 1987–88 season splitting time between Hershey, where in 13 games he had 5 points (3G-2A), and in 3 games with the Flyers, he was held pointless. On December 4, 1987, the Flyers sent Stothers to the [[Toronto Maple Leafs]] for future considerations. He spent the rest of the season spending time with both the Maple Leafs, getting an assist in 18 games, and the [[Newmarket Saints]] of the [[American Hockey League|AHL]], with 10 points (1G-9A) in 38 games.
Stothers started the 1987–88 season splitting time between Hershey, where in 13 games he had 5 points (3G-2A), and in 3 games with the Flyers, he was held pointless. On December 4, 1987, the Flyers sent Stothers to the [[Toronto Maple Leafs]] for future considerations. He spent the rest of the season spending time with both the Maple Leafs, getting an assist in 18 games, and the [[Newmarket Saints]] of the [[American Hockey League|AHL]], with 10 points (1G-9A) in 38 games.


On June 21, 1988, the Maple Leafs sent Stothers back to the [[Philadelphia Flyers]] for [[Bill Root]], however he would spend the last 4 years of his playing career with the [[Hershey Bears]] of the AHL. In 1988–89, Stothers would get 15 points (4G-11A) in 76 games, along with 262 PIM, and he would earn 2 assists in 9 playoff games. In 1989–90, Stothers would see his production slip to 7 points (1G-6A) in 56 games as the Bears failed to make the playoffs. In 1990–91, Stothers would get 11 points (5G-6A) in 72 games, and chipped in with an assist in 7 playoff games. The 1991–92 season was the final one of Stothers playing career, and he ended it as a player-assistant coach with the Bears, getting 11 points (3G-8A) in 70 games, and had an assist in 6 playoff games. Stothers retired as a hockey player in the summer of 1992 and decided to get into coaching.
On June 21, 1988, the Maple Leafs sent Stothers back to the [[Philadelphia Flyers]] for [[Bill Root (ice hockey)|Bill Root]], however he would spend the last 4 years of his playing career with the [[Hershey Bears]] of the AHL. In 1988–89, Stothers would get 15 points (4G-11A) in 76 games, along with 262 PIM, and he would earn 2 assists in 9 playoff games. In 1989–90, Stothers would see his production slip to 7 points (1G-6A) in 56 games as the Bears failed to make the playoffs. In 1990–91, Stothers would get 11 points (5G-6A) in 72 games, and chipped in with an assist in 7 playoff games. The 1991–92 season was the final one of Stothers playing career, and he ended it as a player-assistant coach with the Bears, getting 11 points (3G-8A) in 70 games, and had an assist in 6 playoff games. Stothers retired as a hockey player in the summer of 1992 and decided to get into coaching.


== Career statistics ==
==Career statistics==
{| border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:75%"
{| border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:60em"
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! colspan="3" bgcolor="#ffffff" | &nbsp;
! colspan="3" bgcolor="#ffffff" | &nbsp;
! rowspan="99" bgcolor="#ffffff" | &nbsp;
! rowspan="99" bgcolor="#ffffff" | &nbsp;
! colspan="5" | [[Regular season|Regular&nbsp;season]]
! colspan="5" | [[regular season|Regular&nbsp;season]]
! rowspan="99" bgcolor="#ffffff" | &nbsp;
! rowspan="99" bgcolor="#ffffff" | &nbsp;
! colspan="5" | [[Playoffs]]
! colspan="5" | [[Playoffs]]
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! [[Season (sports)|Season]]
! [[Season (sports)|Season]]
Line 52: Line 56:
! Pts
! Pts
! PIM
! PIM
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| 1978–79
| ALIGN="center" | [[1979–80 OMJHL season|1979–80]]
| [[St. Michael's Buzzers]]
| ALIGN="center" | [[Kingston Canadians]]
| ALIGN="center" | [[Ontario Major Junior Hockey League|OMJHL]]
| [[Metro Junior B Hockey League|MetJHL]]
| 40
| ALIGN="center" | 66
| 15
| ALIGN="center" | 4
| 35
| ALIGN="center" | 23
| 50
| ALIGN="center" | 27
|
| ALIGN="center" | 137
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 2
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 26
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1980–81 OHL season|1980–81]]
| [[1979–80 OMJHL season|1979–80]]
| ALIGN="center" | Kingston Canadians
| [[Kingston Canadians]]
| ALIGN="center" | [[Ontario Hockey League|OHL]]
| [[Ontario Hockey League|OMJHL]]
| 66
| ALIGN="center" | 66
| 4
| ALIGN="center" | 4
| 23
| ALIGN="center" | 22
| 27
| ALIGN="center" | 26
| 137
| ALIGN="center" | 237
| 3
| ALIGN="center" | 14
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| 2
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| 26
| ALIGN="center" | 27
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1981–82 OHL season|1981–82]]
| [[1980–81 OHL season|1980–81]]
| ALIGN="center" | Kingston Canadians
| Kingston Canadians
| ALIGN="center" | OHL
| OHL
| 65
| ALIGN="center" | 61
| 4
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 22
| ALIGN="center" | 20
| 26
| ALIGN="center" | 21
| 237
| ALIGN="center" | 203
| 14
| ALIGN="center" | 4
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 3
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 3
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 27
| ALIGN="center" | 8
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1981–82 AHL season|1981–82]]
| [[1981–82 OHL season|1981–82]]
| Kingston Canadians
| ALIGN="center" | [[Maine Mariners]]
| OHL
| ALIGN="center" | [[American Hockey League|AHL]]
| 61
| ALIGN="center" | 5
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 20
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 21
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 203
| ALIGN="center" | 4
| 4
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 8
| ALIGN="center" | 0
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1982–83 AHL season|1982–83]]
| [[1981–82 AHL season|1981–82]]
| ALIGN="center" | Maine Mariners
| [[Maine Mariners (AHL)|Maine Mariners]]
| [[American Hockey League|AHL]]
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| 5
| ALIGN="center" | 80
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 2
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 16
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 18
| 4
| ALIGN="center" | 139
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 12
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 21
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1983–84 AHL season|1983–84]]
| [[1982–83 AHL season|1982–83]]
| ALIGN="center" | Maine Mariners
| Maine Mariners
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 80
| ALIGN="center" | 61
| 2
| ALIGN="center" | 2
| 16
| ALIGN="center" | 10
| 18
| ALIGN="center" | 12
| 139
| ALIGN="center" | 109
| 12
| ALIGN="center" | 17
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 21
| ALIGN="center" | 34
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1984–85 AHL season|1984–85]]
| [[1983–84 AHL season|1983–84]]
| Maine Mariners
| ALIGN="center" | [[Hershey Bears]]
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 61
| ALIGN="center" | 60
| 2
| ALIGN="center" | 8
| 10
| ALIGN="center" | 18
| 12
| ALIGN="center" | 26
| 109
| ALIGN="center" | 142
| 17
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 34
| ALIGN="center" | —
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1984–85 NHL season|1984–85]]
| [[1984–85 NHL season|1984–85]]
| ALIGN="center" | [[Philadelphia Flyers]]
| [[Philadelphia Flyers]]
| ALIGN="center" | [[National Hockey League|NHL]]
| [[National Hockey League|NHL]]
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1985–86 AHL season|1985–86]]
| [[1984–85 AHL season|1984–85]]
| ALIGN="center" | Hershey Bears
| [[Hershey Bears]]
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 59
| ALIGN="center" | 66
| 8
| ALIGN="center" | 4
| 18
| ALIGN="center" | 9
| 26
| ALIGN="center" | 13
| 142
| ALIGN="center" | 221
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 13
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 88
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1985–86 NHL season|1985–86]]
| [[1985–86 NHL season|1985–86]]
| ALIGN="center" | Philadelphia Flyers
| Philadelphia Flyers
| ALIGN="center" | NHL
| NHL
| 6
| ALIGN="center" | 6
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 6
| ALIGN="center" | 6
| 3
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 4
| ALIGN="center" | 4
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1986–87 AHL season|1986–87]]
| [[1985–86 AHL season|1985–86]]
| ALIGN="center" | Hershey Bears
| Hershey Bears
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 66
| ALIGN="center" | 75
| 4
| ALIGN="center" | 5
| 9
| ALIGN="center" | 11
| 13
| ALIGN="center" | 16
| 221
| ALIGN="center" | 283
| 13
| ALIGN="center" | 5
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 3
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 3
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 88
| ALIGN="center" | 10
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1986–87 NHL season|1986–87]]
| [[1986–87 NHL season|1986–87]]
| ALIGN="center" | Philadelphia Flyers
| Philadelphia Flyers
| ALIGN="center" | NHL
| NHL
| 2
| ALIGN="center" | 2
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 4
| ALIGN="center" | 4
| 2
| ALIGN="center" | 2
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 7
| ALIGN="center" | 7
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1987–88 AHL season|1987–88]]
| [[1986–87 AHL season|1986–87]]
| ALIGN="center" | Hershey Bears
| Hershey Bears
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 75
| ALIGN="center" | 13
| 5
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| 11
| ALIGN="center" | 2
| 16
| ALIGN="center" | 5
| 283
| ALIGN="center" | 55
| 5
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 10
| ALIGN="center" | —
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1987–88 NHL season|1987–88]]
| [[1987–88 NHL season|1987–88]]
| ALIGN="center" | Philadelphia Flyers
| Philadelphia Flyers
| ALIGN="center" | NHL
| NHL
| 3
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 13
| ALIGN="center" | 13
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| ALIGN="center" | 1987–88
| [[1987–88 AHL season|1987–88]]
| Hershey Bears
| ALIGN="center" | [[Newmarket Saints]]
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 13
| ALIGN="center" | 39
| 3
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 2
| ALIGN="center" | 9
| 5
| ALIGN="center" | 10
| 55
| ALIGN="center" | 69
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 1987–88
| ALIGN="center" | 1987–88
| ALIGN="center" | [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
| [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
| ALIGN="center" | NHL
| NHL
| 18
| ALIGN="center" | 18
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 42
| ALIGN="center" | 42
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
| ALIGN="center" | —
| —
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| 1987–88
| ALIGN="center" | [[1988–89 AHL season|1988–89]]
| [[Newmarket Saints]]
| ALIGN="center" | Hershey Bears
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 38
| ALIGN="center" | 76
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 4
| 9
| ALIGN="center" | 11
| 10
| ALIGN="center" | 15
| 69
| ALIGN="center" | 262
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 9
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 2
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 2
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 29
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1989–90 AHL season|1989–90]]
| [[1988–89 AHL season|1988–89]]
| ALIGN="center" | Hershey Bears
| Hershey Bears
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 76
| ALIGN="center" | 56
| 4
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 11
| ALIGN="center" | 6
| 15
| ALIGN="center" | 7
| 262
| ALIGN="center" | 170
| 9
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 2
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 2
| ALIGN="center" | —
| 29
| ALIGN="center" | —
|-
|- ALIGN="center"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1990–91 AHL season|1990–91]]
| [[1989–90 AHL season|1989–90]]
| ALIGN="center" | Hershey Bears
| Hershey Bears
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 51
| ALIGN="center" | 72
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 5
| 6
| ALIGN="center" | 6
| 7
| ALIGN="center" | 11
| 170
| ALIGN="center" | 234
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 7
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| —
| ALIGN="center" | 9
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| ALIGN="center" | [[1991–92 AHL season|1991–92]]
| [[1990–91 AHL season|1990–91]]
| ALIGN="center" | Hershey Bears
| Hershey Bears
| ALIGN="center" | AHL
| AHL
| 72
| ALIGN="center" | 70
| 5
| ALIGN="center" | 3
| 6
| ALIGN="center" | 8
| 11
| ALIGN="center" | 11
| 234
| ALIGN="center" | 152
| 7
| ALIGN="center" | 6
| 0
| ALIGN="center" | 0
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 1
| ALIGN="center" | 1
| 9
| ALIGN="center" | 6
|-
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
| [[1991–92 AHL season|1991–92]]
! colspan="3" | OMJHL/OHL totals
| Hershey Bears
! ALIGN="center" | 193
| AHL
! ALIGN="center" | 9
| 70
! ALIGN="center" | 65
| 3
! ALIGN="center" | 74
| 8
! ALIGN="center" | 577
| 11
! ALIGN="center" | 21
| 152
! ALIGN="center" | 1
| 6
! ALIGN="center" | 5
| 0
! ALIGN="center" | 6
| 1
! ALIGN="center" | 61
| 1
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
| 6
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! colspan="3" | AHL totals
! colspan="3" | AHL totals
! 671
! ALIGN="center" | 672
! 38
! ALIGN="center" | 38
! ALIGN="center" | 106
! 106
! ALIGN="center" | 144
! 144
! ALIGN="center" | 1840
! 1840
! 70
! ALIGN="center" | 70
! 0
! ALIGN="center" | 0
! 8
! ALIGN="center" | 8
! 8
! ALIGN="center" | 8
! ALIGN="center" | 197
! 197
|- ALIGN="center" bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! colspan="3" | NHL totals
! colspan="3" | NHL totals
! 30
! ALIGN="center" | 30
! 0
! ALIGN="center" | 0
! 2
! ALIGN="center" | 2
! 2
! ALIGN="center" | 2
! 65
! ALIGN="center" | 65
! 5
! ALIGN="center" | 5
! 0
! ALIGN="center" | 0
! 0
! ALIGN="center" | 0
! 0
! ALIGN="center" | 0
! 11
! ALIGN="center" | 11
|}
|}


==Coaching career==
==Coaching career==
Mike Stothers was an assistant coach with the [[Hershey Bears]], the [[Philadelphia Flyers]] [[American Hockey League|AHL]] affiliate, from 1992–1996. When the Flyers relocated their AHL team to Philadelphia and became the [[Philadelphia Phantoms]], Stothers went along with them, and was an assistant coach from 1996–2000. He also spent some time with the Flyers as an interim assistant coach in the 1998–1999 season, and once again in the 1999–2000 season before getting the job permanently on June 13, 2000. Stothers stayed with the Flyers through the 2001–02 season. On July 17, 2002, Stothers would leave the Flyers organization to take the head coaching job of the [[Owen Sound Attack]] of the [[Ontario Hockey League|OHL]].
Mike Stothers was an assistant coach with the [[Hershey Bears]], the [[Philadelphia Flyers]] [[American Hockey League|AHL]] affiliate, from 1992 to 1996. When the Flyers relocated their AHL team to Philadelphia and became the [[Philadelphia Phantoms]], Stothers went along with them, and was an assistant coach from 1996 to 2000. He also spent some time with the Flyers as an interim assistant coach in the 1998–1999 season, and once again in the 1999–2000 season before getting the job permanently on June 13, 2000. Stothers stayed with the Flyers through the 2001–02 season. On July 17, 2002, Stothers would leave the Flyers organization to take the head coaching job of the [[Owen Sound Attack]] of the [[Ontario Hockey League|OHL]].


In his first season with Owen Sound in 2002–03, he guided the Attack to a 27–30–7–4 record for 65 points, an improvement of 4 points the team had the previous season, however his team was swept in the 1st round of the playoffs to the [[Plymouth Whalers]]. The Attack improved to a record of 30–27–7–4, 71 points, which was good for 6th place in the Western Conference. The Attack would then go on to lost in a hard fought 7 game series against the [[Guelph Storm]], who went on to win the league championship that season. The Attack improved more in 2004–05, to a record of 40–18–7–3, 90 points, which is a franchise record. Owen Sound then won their first playoff round since 1999, sweeping Plymouth, before getting swept themselves by the [[Kitchener Rangers]] in the 2nd round. The Attack went into a rebuilding stage in 2005–06, however they played much better than people predicted, finishing with a 32–29–7, 71 point season. They had a rematch against the heavily favoured Kitchener Rangers, and took them out in 5 games in the opening round. The Attack then gave the [[London Knights]] a scare in the 2nd round before falling to them in 6 games.
In his first season with Owen Sound in 2002–03, he guided the Attack to a 27–30–7–4 record for 65 points, an improvement of 4 points the team had the previous season, however his team was swept in the 1st round of the playoffs to the [[Plymouth Whalers]]. The Attack improved to a record of 30–27–7–4, 71 points, which was good for 6th place in the Western Conference. The Attack would then go on to lost in a hard-fought 7-game series against the [[Guelph Storm]], who went on to win the league championship that season. The Attack improved more in 2004–05, to a record of 40–18–7–3, 90 points, which is a franchise record. Owen Sound then won their first playoff round since 1999, sweeping Plymouth, before getting swept themselves by the [[Kitchener Rangers]] in the 2nd round. The Attack went into a rebuilding stage in 2005–06, however they played much better than people predicted, finishing with a 32–29–7, 71-point season. They had a rematch against the heavily favoured Kitchener Rangers, and took them out in 5 games in the opening round. The Attack then gave the [[London Knights]] a scare in the 2nd round before falling to them in 6 games.


On July 18, 2007, Stothers was named as the next head coach of the Grand Rapids Griffins, according to the Grand Rapids Press [http://blog.mlive.com/snapshots/2007/07/griffins_name_mike_stothers_co.html]. He succeeded Greg Ireland, who had been head coach of the Griffins from 2004–05 to 2006–07. His coaching career in Grand Rapids was limited to only one season, as he was relieved of his coaching duties when the Griffins reacquired coaching responsibilities from the Detroit Red Wings on June 18, 2008.<ref>[http://griffinshockey.com/newsstats/releases/index.html?article_id=1078 Grand Rapids Griffins: News Releases<!-- Bot generated title -->]{{dead link|date=January 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
On July 18, 2007, Stothers was named as the next head coach of the Grand Rapids Griffins, according to the Grand Rapids Press [http://blog.mlive.com/snapshots/2007/07/griffins_name_mike_stothers_co.html]. He succeeded Greg Ireland, who had been head coach of the Griffins from 2004–05 to 2006–07. His coaching career in Grand Rapids was limited to only one season, as he was relieved of his coaching duties when the Griffins reacquired coaching responsibilities from the Detroit Red Wings on June 18, 2008.<ref>[http://griffinshockey.com/newsstats/releases/index.html?article_id=1078 Grand Rapids Griffins: News Releases<!-- Bot generated title -->]{{dead link|date=January 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>


In July 2014, Stothers was named the new head coach for the Manchester Monarchs, an affiliate team of the L.A. Kings.<ref>{{cite web|title=Mike Stothers Named Manchester Monarchs New Head Coach|url=http://www.sportsmedia101.com/losangeleskings/2014/07/02/mike-stothers-named-manchester-monarchs-new-head-coach/}}</ref> In June 2015, Mike led the team to the Calder Cup Championship.
In July 2014, Stothers was named the new head coach for the Manchester Monarchs, an affiliate team of the L.A. Kings.<ref>{{cite web|title=Mike Stothers Named Manchester Monarchs New Head Coach|url=http://www.sportsmedia101.com/losangeleskings/2014/07/02/mike-stothers-named-manchester-monarchs-new-head-coach/|access-date=2014-07-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714122729/http://www.sportsmedia101.com/losangeleskings/2014/07/02/mike-stothers-named-manchester-monarchs-new-head-coach/|archive-date=2014-07-14|url-status=dead}}</ref> In June 2015, Mike led the team to the Calder Cup Championship. Stothers then moved with the franchise to [[Ontario, California]] in 2015, and he remained with the team until his contract was not renewed in May 2020.

He joined the Anaheim Ducks as an assistant to head coach [[Dallas Eakins]] on June 15, 2021.<ref>{{cite web |title=Ducks Name Ward, Stothers as Assistant Coaches |url=https://www.nhl.com/ducks/news/ducks-name-ward-stothers-as-assistant-coaches/c-325345696 |website=nhl.com/ducks |date=15 June 2021 |access-date=16 June 2021}}</ref>


==Coaching record==
==Coaching record==
Line 386: Line 394:
! G !! W !! L !! T !! OTL !! Pts !!Finish !! Result
! G !! W !! L !! T !! OTL !! Pts !!Finish !! Result
|-
|-
![[Owen Sound Attack|OS]]||[[2002–03 OHL season|2002–03]]
![[Owen Sound Attack|Owen Sound]]||[[2002–03 OHL season|2002–03]]
|68||27||30||7||4||65||4th in Midwest||Lost in First Round
|68||27||30||7||4||65||4th in Midwest||Lost in first round
|-
|-
![[Owen Sound Attack|OS]]||[[2003–04 OHL season|2003–04]]
![[Owen Sound Attack|Owen Sound]]||[[2003–04 OHL season|2003–04]]
|68||30||27||7||4||71||4th in Midwest||Lost in First Round
|68||30||27||7||4||71||4th in Midwest||Lost in first round
|-
|-
![[Owen Sound Attack|OS]]||[[2004–05 OHL season|2004–05]]
![[Owen Sound Attack|Owen Sound]]||[[2004–05 OHL season|2004–05]]
|68||40||18||7||3||90||2nd in Midwest||Lost in Second Round
|68||40||18||7||3||90||2nd in Midwest||Lost in second round
|-
|-
![[Owen Sound Attack|OS]]||[[2005–06 OHL season|2005–06]]
![[Owen Sound Attack|Owen Sound]]||[[2005–06 OHL season|2005–06]]
|68||32||29||-||7||71||4th in Midwest||Lost in Second Round
|68||32||29||-||7||71||4th in Midwest||Lost in second round
|-
|-
![[Grand Rapids Griffins|GR]]||[[2007–08 AHL season|2007–08]]
![[Grand Rapids Griffins|Grand Rapids]]||[[2007–08 AHL season|2007–08]]
|80||31||41||-||8||70||5th in North||Missed Playoffs
|80||31||41||-||8||70||5th in North||Missed playoffs
|-
|-
![[Moose Jaw Warriors|MJ]]||[[2011–12 WHL season|2011–12]]
![[Moose Jaw Warriors|Moose Jaw]]||[[2011–12 WHL season|2011–12]]
|72||45||19||-||8||98||1st in East||Lost in Conference Finals
|72||45||19||-||8||98||1st in East||Lost in conference finals
|-
|-
![[Moose Jaw Warriors|MJ]]||[[2012–13 WHL season|2012–13]]
![[Moose Jaw Warriors|Moose Jaw]]||[[2012–13 WHL season|2012–13]]
|72||25||36||-||11||61||4th in East||Missed Playoffs
|72||25||36||-||11||61||4th in East||Missed playoffs
|-
|-
![[Moose Jaw Warriors|MJ]]||[[2013–14 WHL season|2013–14]]
![[Moose Jaw Warriors|Moose Jaw]]||[[2013–14 WHL season|2013–14]]
|72||21||42||-||9||51||5th in East||Missed Playoffs
|72||21||42||-||9||51||5th in East||Missed playoffs
|-
|-
![[Manchester Monarchs (AHL)|MM]]||[[2014–15 AHL season|2014–15]]
![[Manchester Monarchs (AHL)|Manchester]]||[[2014–15 AHL season|2014–15]]
|76||50||17||-||9||109||1st in Atlantic||[[Calder Cup]] champions
|76||50||17||-||9||109||1st in Atlantic||[[Calder Cup]] champions
|-
|-
Line 416: Line 424:


== References ==
== References ==
re80grand
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* {{Ice hockey stats |nhl=8451758 |elite= |euro= |hr=s/stothmi01 |hockeydb=5216 |legends=11582 }}
* {{Ice hockey stats}}


{{S-start}}
{{S-start}}
{{succession box | before = [[Brian Propp]] | title = [[List of Philadelphia Flyers draft picks|Philadelphia Flyers' first round draft pick]] | years = [[1980 NHL Entry Draft|1980]] | after = [[Steve Smith (ice hockey, born in Canada)|Steve Smith]]}}
{{succession box | before = [[Brian Propp]] | title = [[List of Philadelphia Flyers draft picks|Philadelphia Flyers' first round draft pick]] | years = [[1980 NHL Entry Draft|1980]] | after = [[Steve Smith (ice hockey, born April 4, 1963)|Steve Smith]]}}
{{S-end}}
{{S-end}}

{{Ontario Reign}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Stothers, Mike}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Stothers, Mike}}
Line 430: Line 439:
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Atlanta Thrashers coaches]]
[[Category:Atlanta Thrashers coaches]]
[[Category:Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in the United States]]
[[Category:Canadian ice hockey coaches]]
[[Category:Canadian ice hockey defencemen]]
[[Category:Canadian ice hockey defencemen]]
[[Category:Grand Rapids Griffins coaches]]
[[Category:Grand Rapids Griffins coaches]]
[[Category:Hershey Bears players]]
[[Category:Hershey Bears players]]
[[Category:Sportspeople from Toronto]]
[[Category:Ice hockey people from Toronto]]
[[Category:Kingston Canadians players]]
[[Category:Kingston Canadians players]]
[[Category:Maine Mariners (AHL) players]]
[[Category:Moose Jaw Warriors coaches]]
[[Category:Moose Jaw Warriors coaches]]
[[Category:National Hockey League first round draft picks]]
[[Category:Newmarket Saints players]]
[[Category:NHL first-round draft picks]]
[[Category:Owen Sound Attack coaches]]
[[Category:Owen Sound Attack coaches]]
[[Category:Philadelphia Flyers coaches]]
[[Category:Philadelphia Flyers coaches]]
[[Category:Philadelphia Flyers draft picks]]
[[Category:Philadelphia Flyers draft picks]]
[[Category:Philadelphia Flyers players]]
[[Category:Philadelphia Flyers players]]
[[Category:St. Michael's Buzzers players]]
[[Category:Toronto Maple Leafs players]]
[[Category:Toronto Maple Leafs players]]
[[Category:Ice hockey people from Ontario]]

Latest revision as of 00:13, 12 May 2024

Mike Stothers
Stothers in 2015
Born (1962-02-22) February 22, 1962 (age 62)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Height 6 ft 4 in (193 cm)
Weight 212 lb (96 kg; 15 st 2 lb)
Position Defence
Shot Left
Played for Philadelphia Flyers
Toronto Maple Leafs
NHL draft 21st overall, 1980
Philadelphia Flyers
Playing career 1981–1992

Michael Patrick Stothers (born February 22, 1962) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who is an assistant coach for the Anaheim Ducks of the National Hockey League. He played for the Philadelphia Flyers and Toronto Maple Leafs, and was previously the head coach of the Grand Rapids Griffins of the AHL, the Owen Sound Attack of the OHL, the Moose Jaw Warriors of the Western Hockey League, and the Ontario Reign of the American Hockey League.

Playing career[edit]

As a youth, Stothers played in the 1975 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with the Toronto Shopsy's minor ice hockey team.[1]

Mike Stothers played junior hockey with the Kingston Canadians of the OMJHL from 1979 to 1982, appearing in 183 games, registering 74 points (9 goals-65 assists), and in 21 playoff games with Kingston, Stothers had 6 points (1G-5A). The Philadelphia Flyers drafted Stothers with their 1st round draft pick, 21st overall in the 1980 NHL Entry Draft.

After Kingston was eliminated from the 1982 OHL playoffs, Stothers joined the Maine Mariners of the AHL for the rest of the 1981–82 season, going pointless in 5 regular season games and in 1 playoff game. Stothers played the entire 1982–83 season with Maine, playing in all 80 games while scoring 18 points (2G-16). He then went pointless in 12 playoff games. Stothers once again spent an entire season with the Mariners in 1983–84, getting 12 points (2G-10A) in 61 games, and then in 17 playoff games, he recorded an assist. The Flyers moved their AHL affiliate to Hershey in 1984–85, and Stothers moved along with them, and had the best season of his career, setting a career high with 26 points (8G-18A) with the Hershey Bears in 60 games. He also made his NHL debut with the Flyers, getting no points in his only game of the season in Philadelphia.

Stothers returned to Hershey in 1985–86, getting 13 points (4G-9A) in 66 games, and 3 points (0G-3A) in 13 playoff games. He also played in 6 games with the Flyers, getting an assist, and played in 3 playoff games with Philadelphia, getting no points. In 1986–87, Stothers was in Hershey again, getting a career high 283 penalty minutes, and had 16 points (5G-11A) in 75 games. He had no points in 5 playoff games with the Bears. He also once again appeared in some games with Philadelphia, getting no points in 2 regular season games, and no points in 2 playoff games with the Flyers.

Stothers started the 1987–88 season splitting time between Hershey, where in 13 games he had 5 points (3G-2A), and in 3 games with the Flyers, he was held pointless. On December 4, 1987, the Flyers sent Stothers to the Toronto Maple Leafs for future considerations. He spent the rest of the season spending time with both the Maple Leafs, getting an assist in 18 games, and the Newmarket Saints of the AHL, with 10 points (1G-9A) in 38 games.

On June 21, 1988, the Maple Leafs sent Stothers back to the Philadelphia Flyers for Bill Root, however he would spend the last 4 years of his playing career with the Hershey Bears of the AHL. In 1988–89, Stothers would get 15 points (4G-11A) in 76 games, along with 262 PIM, and he would earn 2 assists in 9 playoff games. In 1989–90, Stothers would see his production slip to 7 points (1G-6A) in 56 games as the Bears failed to make the playoffs. In 1990–91, Stothers would get 11 points (5G-6A) in 72 games, and chipped in with an assist in 7 playoff games. The 1991–92 season was the final one of Stothers playing career, and he ended it as a player-assistant coach with the Bears, getting 11 points (3G-8A) in 70 games, and had an assist in 6 playoff games. Stothers retired as a hockey player in the summer of 1992 and decided to get into coaching.

Career statistics[edit]

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1978–79 St. Michael's Buzzers MetJHL 40 15 35 50
1979–80 Kingston Canadians OMJHL 66 4 23 27 137 3 1 1 2 26
1980–81 Kingston Canadians OHL 65 4 22 26 237 14 0 3 3 27
1981–82 Kingston Canadians OHL 61 1 20 21 203 4 0 1 1 8
1981–82 Maine Mariners AHL 5 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 0 0
1982–83 Maine Mariners AHL 80 2 16 18 139 12 0 0 0 21
1983–84 Maine Mariners AHL 61 2 10 12 109 17 0 1 1 34
1984–85 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 1 0 0 0 0
1984–85 Hershey Bears AHL 59 8 18 26 142
1985–86 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 6 0 1 1 6 3 0 0 0 4
1985–86 Hershey Bears AHL 66 4 9 13 221 13 0 3 3 88
1986–87 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 2 0 0 0 4 2 0 0 0 7
1986–87 Hershey Bears AHL 75 5 11 16 283 5 0 0 0 10
1987–88 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 3 0 0 0 13
1987–88 Hershey Bears AHL 13 3 2 5 55
1987–88 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 18 0 1 1 42
1987–88 Newmarket Saints AHL 38 1 9 10 69
1988–89 Hershey Bears AHL 76 4 11 15 262 9 0 2 2 29
1989–90 Hershey Bears AHL 51 1 6 7 170
1990–91 Hershey Bears AHL 72 5 6 11 234 7 0 1 1 9
1991–92 Hershey Bears AHL 70 3 8 11 152 6 0 1 1 6
AHL totals 671 38 106 144 1840 70 0 8 8 197
NHL totals 30 0 2 2 65 5 0 0 0 11

Coaching career[edit]

Mike Stothers was an assistant coach with the Hershey Bears, the Philadelphia Flyers AHL affiliate, from 1992 to 1996. When the Flyers relocated their AHL team to Philadelphia and became the Philadelphia Phantoms, Stothers went along with them, and was an assistant coach from 1996 to 2000. He also spent some time with the Flyers as an interim assistant coach in the 1998–1999 season, and once again in the 1999–2000 season before getting the job permanently on June 13, 2000. Stothers stayed with the Flyers through the 2001–02 season. On July 17, 2002, Stothers would leave the Flyers organization to take the head coaching job of the Owen Sound Attack of the OHL.

In his first season with Owen Sound in 2002–03, he guided the Attack to a 27–30–7–4 record for 65 points, an improvement of 4 points the team had the previous season, however his team was swept in the 1st round of the playoffs to the Plymouth Whalers. The Attack improved to a record of 30–27–7–4, 71 points, which was good for 6th place in the Western Conference. The Attack would then go on to lost in a hard-fought 7-game series against the Guelph Storm, who went on to win the league championship that season. The Attack improved more in 2004–05, to a record of 40–18–7–3, 90 points, which is a franchise record. Owen Sound then won their first playoff round since 1999, sweeping Plymouth, before getting swept themselves by the Kitchener Rangers in the 2nd round. The Attack went into a rebuilding stage in 2005–06, however they played much better than people predicted, finishing with a 32–29–7, 71-point season. They had a rematch against the heavily favoured Kitchener Rangers, and took them out in 5 games in the opening round. The Attack then gave the London Knights a scare in the 2nd round before falling to them in 6 games.

On July 18, 2007, Stothers was named as the next head coach of the Grand Rapids Griffins, according to the Grand Rapids Press [1]. He succeeded Greg Ireland, who had been head coach of the Griffins from 2004–05 to 2006–07. His coaching career in Grand Rapids was limited to only one season, as he was relieved of his coaching duties when the Griffins reacquired coaching responsibilities from the Detroit Red Wings on June 18, 2008.[2]

In July 2014, Stothers was named the new head coach for the Manchester Monarchs, an affiliate team of the L.A. Kings.[3] In June 2015, Mike led the team to the Calder Cup Championship. Stothers then moved with the franchise to Ontario, California in 2015, and he remained with the team until his contract was not renewed in May 2020.

He joined the Anaheim Ducks as an assistant to head coach Dallas Eakins on June 15, 2021.[4]

Coaching record[edit]

Team Year Regular Season Post Season
G W L T OTL Pts Finish Result
Owen Sound 2002–03 68 27 30 7 4 65 4th in Midwest Lost in first round
Owen Sound 2003–04 68 30 27 7 4 71 4th in Midwest Lost in first round
Owen Sound 2004–05 68 40 18 7 3 90 2nd in Midwest Lost in second round
Owen Sound 2005–06 68 32 29 - 7 71 4th in Midwest Lost in second round
Grand Rapids 2007–08 80 31 41 - 8 70 5th in North Missed playoffs
Moose Jaw 2011–12 72 45 19 - 8 98 1st in East Lost in conference finals
Moose Jaw 2012–13 72 25 36 - 11 61 4th in East Missed playoffs
Moose Jaw 2013–14 72 21 42 - 9 51 5th in East Missed playoffs
Manchester 2014–15 76 50 17 - 9 109 1st in Atlantic Calder Cup champions

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Pee-Wee players who have reached NHL or WHA" (PDF). Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament. 2018. Retrieved 2019-01-11.
  2. ^ Grand Rapids Griffins: News Releases[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "Mike Stothers Named Manchester Monarchs New Head Coach". Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-07-03.
  4. ^ "Ducks Name Ward, Stothers as Assistant Coaches". nhl.com/ducks. 15 June 2021. Retrieved 16 June 2021.

External links[edit]

Preceded by Philadelphia Flyers' first round draft pick
1980
Succeeded by