Trent Whitfield
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| Date of birth | 17th June 1977 |
| place of birth | Estevan , Saskatchewan , Canada |
| size | 180 cm |
| Weight | 95 kg |
| position | center |
| Shot hand | Left |
| Draft | |
| NHL Entry Draft |
1996 , 4th round, 100th position Boston Bruins |
| Career stations | |
| 1994-1998 | Spokane Chiefs |
| 1998-2000 | Portland Pirates |
| 2000-2004 | Washington Capitals |
| 2004-2005 | Portland Pirates |
| 2005-2006 | St. Louis Blues |
| 2006-2009 | Peoria Rivermen |
| 2009-2013 | Providence Bruins |
| 2013-2014 | HC Bolzano |
Trenton Grant Whitfield (born June 17, 1977 in Estevan , Saskatchewan ) is a retired Canadian ice hockey player who has played 194 NHL games for the Washington Capitals , St. Louis Blues and Boston Bruins during his career . He has been an assistant coach with the Portland Pirates since 2014 .
Career
Trent Whitfield began his career as a hockey player with the Spokane Chiefs , for which he was active from 1994 to 1998 in the Western Hockey League . During this period he was selected in the NHL Entry Draft 1996 in the fourth round as a total of 100th player by the Boston Bruins , but they did not commit him. Instead, the attacker received on September 1, 1998 as a free agent a contract with the Washington Capitals , for which he made his debut in the National Hockey League in the play-offs of the 1999/2000 season , with no point and punishment in three games stayed. During the time in the franchise of the Washington Capitals, where he was employed until 2005, the left-shooter also played regularly for their farm team from the American Hockey League , the Portland Pirates , where he was exclusively for Portland in the 2004/05 season due to the lockout the AHL ran aground. During the 2001/02 season he also played once for the New York Rangers .
After resumption of play in the NHL Whitfield was signed on August 2, 2005 as a free agent by the St. Louis Blues , for which he posted seven scorer points in 30 games in his first year . During the 2008/09 season he completed three NHL missions for the Blues, otherwise he was only used for their AHL farm team Peoria Rivermen , where he was team captain . On July 13, 2009, the Canadian received a two-year contract with the Boston Bruins .
Before the 2013/14 season he signed a contract with the Italian EBEL entry-level HC Bozen , with whom he defeated EC Red Bull Salzburg 3-2 in the playoff final and won the EBEL championship. He then ended his career and became an assistant coach with the Portland Pirates .
Achievements and Awards
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International
- 1997 gold medal at the Junior World Championship
NHL statistics
| Seasons | Games | Gates | Assists | Points | Penalty minutes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regular season | 7th | 193 | 11 | 18th | 29 | 104 |
| Playoffs | 4th | 18th | 0 | 0 | 0 | 12 |
(Status: end of the 2009/10 season)
Web links
- Trent Whitfield at eliteprospects.com (English)
- Trent Whitfield at legendsofhockey.net (English)
- Trent Whitfield at sonice.it
Individual evidence
- ↑ pjstar.com, Rivermen captain ships out
| personal data | |
|---|---|
| SURNAME | Whitfield, Trent |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Whitfield, Trenton Grant |
| BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Canadian ice hockey player |
| DATE OF BIRTH | 17th June 1977 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Estevan , Saskatchewan, Canada |