Stéphane Barin

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FranceFrance  Stéphane Barin Ice hockey player
Date of birth January 8, 1971
place of birth Saint-Martin-d'Hères , France
size 179 cm
Weight 78 kg
position striker
number 39
Shot hand Right
Career stations
1988-1991 Brûleurs de Loups de Grenoble
1991-1995 Chamois de Chamonix
1995-1996 Gothiques d'Amiens
1996-1997 EC VSV
1997-1998 Brûleurs de Loups de Grenoble
1998-2003 Krefeld penguins
2003-2005 Mont-Blanc HC
2005-2007, 2008-2009 Ours de Villard-de-Lans

Stéphane Barin (born January 8, 1971 in Saint-Martin-d'Hères ) is a former French ice hockey player and today's coach , who played for the Krefeld Penguins in the German Ice Hockey League from 1988 to 2009 . His brother Lionel Barin was also a professional ice hockey player.

Career

Stéphane Barin began his career at Grenoble Métropole Hockey 38 , for which he played in Ligue Magnus from 1990 to 1991 . After playing seven games for the team towards the end of the 1988/89 season, the striker received the Jean-Pierre Graff trophy as the best rookie after his first full first division season in 1990 . The following year Barin won the championship with his team , but he left the team at the end of the season and was the following four years for their league rivals, the Chamois de Chamonix , on the ice. After a season with the Gothiques d'Amiens , Barin was under contract for the first time abroad in the 1996/97 season, where he played for the EC VSV from the Austrian Ice Hockey League .

After the season with the Austrians, Barin returned to his French homeland, where he was again active for his ex-club from Grenoble , with which he won the French championship for the second time at the end of the season. Following this success, the Krefeld Penguins signed him from the German Ice Hockey League , for which he played for a total of five years from 1998 to 2003. In his last season in Krefeld the Frenchman celebrated winning the championship with his team .

After winning the title with Krefeld, the now 32-year-old Barin returned to France in the summer of 2003, where he worked as a player-coach for Mont-Blanc HC in Division 1 , the second French division, until 2005 and with whom he was in his second and last season the promotion to the Ligue Magnus reached as a second division champion. After this success, Barin also signed a contract as a player - coach with the first division club Ours de Villard-de-Lans , for whom he worked in this role until 2007. He then ended his active career, but since it came in the course of the 2008/09 season with his team to a series of failures among the defenders, Barin was forced to make a comeback as a player. From 2009 to 2011, the four-time Olympian was behind the gang exclusively at the Ours de Villard-de-Lans.

International

For France , Barin took part in the junior division of the U20 Junior B World Championships in 1990 and 1991 . In the senior sector, he was in his country's squad at the B World Championships in 1991 , 2002 , 2006 and 2007 and at the A World Championships in 1992 , 1993 , 1994 , 1995 , 1996 , 1997 , 1998 , 1999 and 2000 . He also played for France at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville , 1994 in Lillehammer , 1998 in Nagano and 2002 in Salt Lake City .

Due to a lack of defenders Barin was called up again in February 2009 in the French national team, with which he played a qualifying tournament for the Olympic ice hockey competition in Vancouver in Oslo. In the last game of this tournament (8-2 defeat of the French against Kazakhstan) he was named the best player of his team. Barin played a total of 245 internationals.

Achievements and Awards

International

statistics

Seasons Games Gates Assists Points Penalty minutes
DEL main round 5 262 36 71 107 94
DEL playoffs 4th 25th 5 2 7th 18th
LM main round 11 294 99 153 252 321
LM playoffs 6th 54 10 12 22nd 62

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