Rod Brind'Amour

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Position Center
Shoots Left
Nickname Rod the Bod
Height
Weight
ft 1 in (1.85 m)
205 lb (93 kg)
NHL Team
F. Teams
Carolina Hurricanes
St. Louis Blues
Philadelphia Flyers
Nationality Flag of Canada Canada
Born August 9, 1970,
Ottawa, ON, CAN
NHL Draft 9th overall, 1988
St. Louis Blues
Pro Career 1989 – present

Rod Brind'Amour (b. August 9, 1970 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) is a Canadian professional hockey forward. He currently plays for the National Hockey League's Carolina Hurricanes(2005-2006 Stanley Cup Champions).

Contents

Born in Ottawa but raised in Prince Rupert and Campbell River, British Columbia, Brind'Amour played at Michigan State University where he played until he was drafted to the NHL. Brind'Amour became well-known for working out constantly, earning the nickname "Rod the Bod". This became all the more evident due to a story out of Michigan State that occurred when Brind'Amour was a sophomore there. Allegedly, in an effort to end Brind'Amour's constant workouts, the weight room at the university was locked so he could not get in. Not welcoming the deterrent, Brind'Amour literally took matters into his own hands, breaking the lock off of the door by his own strength, and continuing his workout regimen.[citation needed] There were even stories from his days of playing in St. Louis of Rod working out after games.

Brind'Amour was drafted by the St. Louis Blues in the 1988 NHL Entry Draft, first round, ninth overall. He began his career with the Blues, then was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers with Dan Quinn for Murray Baron and Ron Sutter following the 1990-91 season. Following his return from an ankle injury during the 1999-2000 season, he was dealt to the Carolina Hurricanes along with Jean-Marc Pelletier in exchange for Keith Primeau.

Rod was one of Philadelphia's most popular players. He spent his years in Philadelphia as an alternate captain to Kevin Dineen and then Eric Lindros, filling in as captain and wearing the "C" when Lindros was out of the lineup. During his stint with Philadelphia he was considered one of the league's 'ironmen', with a consecutive games streak of 484 played, a Flyers franchise record. Additionally, he was one-third of the "BBC Line" featuring Bates Battaglia and Erik Cole during the Carolina HurricanesStanley Cup run in 2002. Brind'Amour was named Captain of the Hurricanes before the 2005-06 season.

He won his first Stanley Cup on June 19, 2006 with the Hurricanes, defeating the Edmonton Oilers in 7.

In December 2006, he scored his 1000th career point and in February 2007, he recorded his 400th career goal.

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1988-89 Michigan State University NCAA 42 27 32 59 63 - - - - -
1988-89 St. Louis Blues NHL - - - - - 5 2 0 2 4
1989-90 St. Louis Blues NHL 79 26 35 61 46 12 5 8 13 6
1990-91 St. Louis Blues NHL 78 17 32 49 93 13 2 5 7 10
1991-92 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 80 33 44 77 100 - - - - -
1992-93 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 81 37 49 86 89 - - - - -
1993-94 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 84 35 62 97 85 - - - - -
1994-95 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 48 12 27 39 33 15 6 9 15 8
1995-96 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 82 26 61 87 110 12 2 5 7 6
1996-97 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 82 27 32 59 41 19 13 8 21 10
1997-98 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 82 36 38 74 54 5 2 2 4 7
1998-99 Philadelphia Flyers NHL 82 24 50 74 47 6 1 3 4 0
1999-00 Philadelphia/Carolina NHL 45 9 13 22 22 - - - - -
2000-01 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 79 20 36 56 47 6 1 3 4 6
2001-02 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 81 23 32 55 40 23 4 8 12 16
2002-03 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 48 14 23 37 37 - - - - -
2003-04 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 78 12 26 38 28 - - - - -
2004-05 Kloten Flyers Swiss 2 2 1 3 0 - - - - -
2005-06 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 78 31 39 70 68 25 12 6 18 16
NHL totals 1204 387 615 1002 954 141 50 57 107 89

Preceded by
Pelle Eklund
Winner of the Bobby Clarke Trophy
1992
Succeeded by
Mark Recchi
Preceded by
Ron Francis
Carolina Hurricanes captains
2005 – present
Incumbent
Preceded by
Kris Draper (2004)
Winner of the Frank J. Selke Trophy
2006 – present
Incumbent
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