Matt Siddall

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CanadaCanada  Matt Siddall Ice hockey player
Matt Siddall
Date of birth September 26, 1984
place of birth North Vancouver , British Columbia , Canada
size 185 cm
Weight 93 kg
position Right wing
Shot hand Right
Draft
NHL Entry Draft 2004 , 9th round, 270th position
Atlanta Thrashers
Career stations
2002-2004 Langley Hornets
Victoria Salsa
Powell River Kings
2004-2008 Northern Michigan University
2008-2011 Chicago Wolves
Gwinnett Gladiators
Victoria Salmon Kings
2011–2012 Fife Flyers
KHL Medveščak Zagreb
2012-2013 SG Cortina
2013-2014 SV Ritten-Renon
2014-2015 HC Innsbruck
2015-2016 Dornbirn EC
2016-2017 EC Graz 99ers
2017-2018 Dresden Ice Lions

Matthew "Matt" Siddall (born September 26, 1984 in North Vancouver , British Columbia ) is a Canadian ice hockey player who last played for the Dresdner Eislöwen in the DEL2 .

Career

Matt Siddall played in the Canadian Junior League BCHL and from 2004 four seasons with his university team in the NCAA . In 2004 he was also drafted by the Atlanta Thrashers for the top professional league NHL , but was never used in this division. In the 2008/09 season he played only 20 appearances for the Thrashers' farm team , the Chicago Wolves from the second-highest league AHL . With the Gwinnett Gladiators from Georgia and the Victoria Salmon Kings from British Columbia, he played in the ECHL , a league whose teams mainly come from the eastern United States. His greatest success there was reaching the Conference Finals with the Salmon Kings 2010/11.

In 2011 Siddall moved to Europe and made his debut at the Scottish club Fife Flyers in the EIHL , the top division of British ice hockey. He also acted as the club's assistant coach. After 32 games with 16 goals and 15 assists, he reinforced the offensive of the Croatian club Medveščak Zagreb from the EBEL at the beginning of 2012, which concealed the failure of Pascal Morency. With the Zagreb team he reached second place in the main round and the semi-finals of the play-offs in 2012 .

Then he was on the ice for the Italian club SG Cortina in Serie A and had 43 points scorer in 34 missions before a hand injury during a game against SG Pontebba threw him out of the current season. From mid-2013 he strengthened the squad of the "Rittner Buam" from South Tyrol and came to 57 missions, scoring 41 goals and 28 assists. He thus had a significant share in winning the Italian championship and the Coppa Italia .

An unsuccessful season at the Tyrolean EBEL club HC Innsbruck followed , before he was signed for 2015/16 by Vorarlberg league competitor Dornbirn . In the main round he contributed 19 goals and was together with club colleague Chris D'Alvise and Manuel Geier from the KAC in fourth place on the league's list of goalscorers. In addition, Siddall collected the third most penalty minutes in the league with 125 penalty minutes. In December 2016 he was released from the DEC and signed a contract with the EC Graz 99ers , as they had to cancel the long-term injured Stephen Werner .

In the summer of 2017 he was signed by the Dresdner Eislöwen from the DEL2 , but could not meet the expectations and therefore did not receive a new contract in 2018.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Hockey Time.net: Insaziabile Cortina: firmato fa il contratto con Matt Siddall. In: hockeytime.net. July 27, 2012, accessed June 27, 2017 (Italian).
  2. Haie sign goal getter - HC TWK Innsbruck. (No longer available online.) In: haifischbecken.at. May 13, 2014, archived from the original on September 24, 2015 ; accessed on June 27, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.haifischbecken.at
  3. Editor: Matt Siddall before the Bulldogs ended. In: neue.at. December 14, 2016, accessed June 27, 2017 .
  4. ^ Astrid Hofmann: Ice hockey - Dresdner Eislöwen sign Matt Siddall. In: Dresdner Latest News. June 24, 2017. Retrieved June 27, 2017 .
  5. Dnn-Online: Dresdner Eislöwen vigorously sort out players. In: dnn.de. March 15, 2018, accessed April 12, 2018 .