Bob Carpenter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Position Center
Height
Weight
ft 0 in (1.83 m)
200 lb (91 kg)
Pro Clubs Washington Capitals
New York Rangers
Los Angeles Kings
Boston Bruins
New Jersey Devils
Nationality Flag of United States United States
Born July 13, 1963,
Beverly, Massachusetts
NHL Draft Round 1, 3rd overall, 1981
Washington Capitals
Pro Career 19811999

Robert E. Carpenter Jr. (born July 13, 1963 in Beverly, Massachusetts) is a former professional ice hockey center who played in the National Hockey League for 18 seasons from 1981-82 until 1998-99. He has the distinction of being the first U.S. Citizen to be drafted into the National Hockey League directly out of high school, and the first U.S.-born hockey player to be selected within the top five picks of the NHL Draft.

Selected third overall in the 1981 NHL Entry Draft out of St. John's Preparatory School in Danvers, Massachusetts, Carpenter was called the "Can't-Miss Kid" in the February 23, 1981 issue of Sports Illustrated. During his first tour with the Capitals, he would have his best season statistics-wise during the 1984-85 NHL season when he scored 53 goals and 42 assists.

Primarily due to his clashes with head coach Bryan Murray, the Capitals traded Carpenter to the New York Rangers in the deal that sent Mike Ridley and Kelly Miller to Washington during the middle of the 1986-87 NHL season. Later in the season, he would be dealt again, this time to the Los Angeles Kings in the trade that sent Marcel Dionne to the Rangers.

Carpenter was traded to the Boston Bruins during the 1988-89 NHL season, and a year later he would help guide the Bruins to the NHL Stanley Cup Finals. Interestingly enough, the Bruins defeated his former team the Capitals in the semifinals. By this time in his career, Carpenter was contributing more as a defensive-minded center than the high-scoring superstar that he was once projected to be.

Carpenter signed with the Capitals in 1992 and spent one season in his second tour with the team that originally drafted him. In 1993, he signed with the New Jersey Devils, where he would play for the final six seasons of his NHL career. It was during his time with the Devils that he would help the team win their first Stanley Cup in the lockout-shortened 1994-95 NHL season. After he retired in 1999, he would remain in the Devils organization as an assistant coach first with their AHL affiliate Albany River Rats, and then with the parent team.

In his NHL career that spanned 18 years, Carpenter played 1,178 games, scoring 320 goals and 408 assists for 728 points.

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