JP Bordeleau

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CanadaCanada  JP Bordeleau Ice hockey player
JP Bordeleau
Date of birth June 13, 1949
place of birth Noranda , Quebec , Canada
size 185 cm
Weight 79 kg
position Right wing
Shot hand Right
Draft
NHL Amateur Draft 1969 , 1st round, 13th position
Chicago Black Hawks
Career stations
1967-1969 Canadien junior de Montréal
1969-1972 Dallas Black Hawks
1972-1980 Chicago Black Hawks
1980-1982 New Brunswick Hawks

Jean-Pierre "JP" Bordeleau (born June 13, 1949 in Noranda , Québec ) is a former Canadian ice hockey player who played 567 games for the Chicago Black Hawks in the National Hockey League (NHL ) has contested on the position of the right winger . With the Chicago Black Hawks, Bordeleau reached the final series of the Stanley Cup in the course of the Stanley Cup playoffs in 1973 .

Career

Bordeleau spent his junior career between 1967 and 1969 with the Canadien junior de Montréal in the Ontario Hockey Association (OHA). There the striker was extremely successful in the two years and was able to win the double consisting of the J. Ross Robertson Cup of the OHA and the Memorial Cup of the umbrella organization Canadian Hockey League in 1969 at the end of his time in the junior division with the team . The team at that time consisted of numerous later professional players. Bordeleau himself was selected in the summer of the 1969 NHL Amateur Draft in the first round in 13th place by the Chicago Black Hawks from the National Hockey League (NHL).

For the 1969/70 season, the 20-year-old joined the Chicago Black Hawks. With the exception of one game in the Stanley Cup playoffs in 1970 and three games during the 1971/72 season , the French-Canadian was only part of their farm team , the Dallas Black Hawks , in the Central Hockey League (CHL ) on ice. Although he missed large parts of the 1970/71 game year due to a hernia , the winger developed continuously and became the team's top scorer in the year after the forced break. He was instrumental in winning the Adams Cup in the 1971/72 season , in which he scored 51 times in a total of 82 games and put up a further 33 goals for teammates. As a result, at the end of the season he was individually honored and rewarded with his appointment to the First All-Star Team of the CHL.

Bordeleau's achievements in the Dallas Black Hawks 'farm squad brought him to the NHL's 1972/73 season in the Chicago Black Hawks' regular squad. In his rookie season he reached the final series of the Stanley Cup with the team in the course of the Stanley Cup playoffs in 1973 , but where it was defeated by the Canadiens de Montréal 2: 4. In the following seven seasons up to 1980, the attacker was an integral part of the squad, who always contributed 20 to 30 scorer points per season to the success of the team and also performed defensive tasks. After missing many games in the 1979/80 season due to a back injury, the 31-year-old was eliminated from the squad before the start of the following season. Since he did not choose any other NHL franchise in the NHL Waiver Draft , but he still had a two-year contract, he let his career end in 1982 with the New Brunswick Hawks farm team in the American Hockey League (AHL). He then worked briefly as a player and coach for the Riverview Trappers in the New Brunswick Senior Hockey League until 1984 .

Achievements and Awards

Career statistics

Regular season Playoffs
season team league Sp T V Pt SM Sp T V Pt SM
1967/68 Canadien junior de Montréal OHA 54 22nd 21st 43 96 11 2 4th 6th 8th
1968/69 Canadien junior de Montréal OHA 51 17th 36 53 150 14th 2 11 13 8th
1969 Canadien junior de Montréal Memorial Cup 4th 4th 1 5 10
1969/70 Dallas Black Hawks CHL 62 14th 15th 29 44 - - - - -
1969/70 Chicago Black Hawks NHL - - - - - 1 0 0 0 0
1970/71 Dallas Black Hawks CHL 35 15th 15th 30th 48 6th 2 0 2 4th
1971/72 Dallas Black Hawks CHL 70 41 31 72 72 12 10 2 12 0
1971/72 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 3 0 2 2 2 - - - - -
1972/73 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 73 15th 15th 30th 6th 14th 1 0 1 4th
1973/74 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 64 11 9 20th 11 11 0 2 2 2
1974/75 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 59 7th 8th 15th 4th 7th 2 2 4th 2
1975/76 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 76 12 18th 30th 6th 4th 0 0 0 0
1976/77 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 60 15th 14th 29 20th 2 0 0 0 2
1977/78 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 76 15th 15th 30th 32 4th 0 1 1 0
1978/79 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 63 15th 21st 36 34 4th 0 1 1 2
1979/80 Chicago Black Hawks NHL 45 7th 14th 21st 28 1 0 0 0 0
1980/81 New Brunswick Hawks AHL 64 24 28 52 71 13 4th 9 13 6th
1981/82 New Brunswick Hawks AHL 15th 5 8th 13 10 - - - - -
OHA total 105 39 57 96 246 25th 4th 15th 19th 16
CHL total 167 70 61 131 164 18th 12 2 14th 4th
AHL total 79 29 36 65 81 13 4th 9 13 6th
NHL overall 519 97 116 213 143 48 3 6th 9 12

( Legend for player statistics: Sp or GP = games played; T or G = goals scored; V or A = assists scored ; Pkt or Pts = scorer points scored ; SM or PIM = penalty minutes received ; +/− = plus / minus balance; PP = overpaid goals scored ; SH = underpaid goals scored ; GW = winning goals scored; 1  play-downs / relegation )

family

Bordeleau's older brother Christian and younger brother Paulin were also professional ice hockey players. Christian first spent the beginning of his career in the National Hockey League (NHL), where he played three games for the Chicago Black Hawks with his brother JP in the 1971/72 season . In total, he completed over 220 NHL games for the Canadiens de Montréal , St. Louis Blues and Chicago. In the WHA he was on the ice in over 460 games for the Winnipeg Jets and Nordiques de Québec in the World Hockey Association (WHA). He is also one of the few players who were able to win both the Stanley Cup of the NHL and the Avco World Trophy of the WHA in their career . Paulin was also active in both the NHL and WHA. He played with Christian between 1976 and 1979 for the Nordiques de Québec. There they won the Avco World Trophy together in 1977. In the NHL, he previously appeared for the Vancouver Canucks over 180 times , while he was on the ice over 260 times in the WHA. He later spent many years in France, with whose national team he took part in the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary , Canada .

JP Bordeleau's nephews and sons of Paulin, Sébastien and Paulin junior , also made the leap into professional ice hockey. While Sébastien came to over 250 NHL games, his younger brother was only briefly active as a professional in the French Ligue Magnus .

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