Robby Fabbri

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CanadaCanada  Robby Fabbri Ice hockey player
Robby Fabbri
Date of birth January 22, 1996
place of birth Mississauga , Ontario , Canada
size 179 cm
Weight 80 kg
position center
Shot hand Left
Draft
NHL Entry Draft 2014 , 1st round, 21st position
St. Louis Blues
Career stations
2012-2015 Guelph Storm
2015-2019 St. Louis Blues
since 2019 Detroit Red Wings

Robert "Robby" Fabbri (born January 22, 1996 in Mississauga , Ontario ) is a Canadian ice hockey player who has been under contract with the Detroit Red Wings in the National Hockey League since November 2019 . Previously, he spent four years in the organization of the St. Louis Blues , with whom he won the Stanley Cup in the 2019 playoffs .

Career

youth

Fabbri at the CHL Top Prospects Game (2014)

Robby Fabbri was born in Mississauga into a family with Italian roots and played there in his youth for the Mississauga Rebels - as did his older brother Lenny Fabbri, who has not yet made it beyond the Canadian University League. In 2012 Robby Fabbri was selected by the Guelph Storm in sixth place in the Priority Selection of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) and thus played in one of the three major Canadian junior leagues , the OHL, from the start of the 2012/13 season . In his rookie season, the attacker scored 33 points in 59 games and took part in the 2013 World U-17 Hockey Challenge with Team Canada Ontario over the turn of the year . He also won the gold medal at the Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament in the summer of 2013 with the Canadian U18 team .

In the 2013/14 season, Fabbri made his breakthrough in Guelph, not only winning the J. Ross Robertson Cup with the team , but was also honored with the Wayne Gretzky 99 Award as MVP of the playoffs . Overall, he scored 58 goals and 57 assists in 74 games throughout the season, so that he was rated eighth of the field players for the upcoming NHL Entry Draft 2014 by the International Scouting Services ; he also took part in the CHL Top Prospects Game . In the end, the St. Louis Blues selected him in 21st position and provided him with an entry-level contract in September 2014 . For another season, however, Fabbri initially stayed in Guelph and won the gold medal with the Canadian U20 national team at the World Cup in his own country at the turn of the year .

St. Louis Blues

At the end of the 2014/15 season, Fabbri was appointed to the Chicago Wolves , the Blues farm team from the American Hockey League , where he completed his first six professional appearances. During the preparation for the 2015/16 season, the center earned a place in the NHL squad of the Blues and thus debuted on the first day of play against the Edmonton Oilers . Fabbri scored his first (and at the same time game-deciding) goal, making him the youngest player in franchise history to score his first goal in his NHL debut. In the course of the regular season, Fabbri scored 37 points and led the team in the subsequent playoffs with 11 assists and 15 points (together with Wladimir Tarassenko ).

In February 2017, Fabbri tore the cruciate ligament in his left knee and missed the rest of the season. In the course of the following pre-season season, the same injury occurred again in September 2017, so that the attacker was also out for the entire 2017/18 season. It was not until November 2018 that Fabbri completed another NHL game for the Blues. At the end of the season, he won the Stanley Cup with the team in the 2019 playoffs .

Detroit Red Wings

In November 2019, Fabbri was transferred to the Detroit Red Wings after four years in the organization of the Blues . In return, Jacob de la Rose moved to St. Louis. In the "Motor City" the Canadian built on his performance before the injury with 31 points from 52 games and therefore signed a new two-year contract with the Red Wings in August 2020, which earned him an average annual salary of 2.95 million US dollars should.

Achievements and Awards

International

Career statistics

Status: end of the 2019/20 season

Regular season Playoffs
season team league Sp T V Pt +/- SM Sp T V Pt +/- SM
2012/13 Guelph Storm OHL 59 10 23 33 +13 38 5 0 1 1 -1 4th
2013/14 Guelph Storm OHL 58 45 42 87 +45 55 16 13 15th 28 +16 12
2014 Guelph Storm Memorial Cup 4th 2 4th 6th +2 4th
2014/15 Guelph Storm OHL 30th 25th 26th 51 +9 40 9 1 3 4th -3 17th
2014/15 Chicago Wolves AHL 3 1 3 4th ± 0 2 3 0 0 0 -1 0
2015/16 St. Louis Blues NHL 72 18th 19th 37 -2 25th 20th 4th 11 15th +1 6th
2016/17 St. Louis Blues NHL 51 11 18th 29 -16 27 - - - - - -
2017/18 St. Louis Blues NHL due to a knee injury without use
2018/19 San Antonio Rampage AHL 3 1 1 2 -4 4th - - - - - -
2018/19 St. Louis Blues NHL 32 2 4th 6th -4 6th 10 1 0 1 -4 0
2019/20 St. Louis Blues NHL 9 1 0 1 -4 2 - - - - - -
2019/20 Detroit Red Wings NHL 52 14th 17th 31 -29 18th - - - - - -
OHL total 147 80 91 171 +67 133 30th 14th 19th 33 +12 33
AHL total 6th 2 4th 6th -4 6th 3 0 0 0 -1 0
NHL overall 216 46 58 104 -55 78 30th 5 11 16 -3 6th

International

Represented Canada to:

year team event result Sp T V Pt +/- SM
2013 Canada Ontario WHC 6th place 5 3 1 4th 27
2013 Canada Hlinka Memorial gold medal 5 0 1 1 -2 4th
2015 Canada U20 World Cup gold medal 5 2 4th 6th +7 0
Juniors overall 15th 5 6th 11 31

( 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 )

Web links

Commons : Robby Fabbri  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Greg Ross: Proud grandparents watch Robby Fabbri chase gold for Canada. cbc.ca, December 29, 2014, accessed January 5, 2016 .
  2. ^ Fabbri Signs Two-Way Entry Level Deal. blues.nhl.com, September 2, 2014, accessed January 7, 2016 .
  3. Rob Rains: St. Louis Blues' Robby Fabbri bests Edmonton Oilers' Connor McDavid in teens' debut. upi.com, October 9, 2015, accessed January 5, 2016 .
  4. Chris Pinkert: Fabbri to undergo surgery to repair injured knee. nhl.com, September 28, 2017, accessed September 28, 2017 .