About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 60. Chapters: Aaron Boogaard, Alexander Pechurskiy, Alexandre Boikov, B. J. Young, Billy Tibbetts, Blake Evans, Brad Ference, Brendan Shinnimin, Brett Festerling, Brian Boucher, Brian Sakic, Carey Price, Clayton Stoner, Colton Yellow Horn, Cory Dosdall, Curtis Huppe, Dan Focht, Dan O'Rourke (ice hockey), Dan Smith (ice hockey), Daymond Langkow, Dean Beuker, Dean Tiltgen, Dorian Anneck, Eric Johansson, Eric Schneider, Jaroslav Kristek, Jaroslav Svejkovsky, Jason Bowen (ice hockey), Jason LaBarbera, Jason Marshall, Jeff Hoad, Jesse Schultz, Joel Broda, Joel Martin, Jon Mirasty, Josef Melichar, K. C. Timmons, Kimbi Daniels, Ladislav urko, Logan Stephenson, Mark Dutiaume, Milan Bartovi, Mitch Fadden, Nathan Barrett, Nikita Korovkin, Olaf Kolzig, Peter Lorentzen, Ray Schultz, Ronald Petrovicky, Ryan Kinasewich, Scott Gomez, Scott Kelman, Scott Levins, Sean Curry, Sergei Drozd, Shawn Belle, Sheldon Souray, Stephen Peat, Steve Passmore, Stu Barnes, T. J. Fast, Terran Sandwith, Terry Ryan (ice hockey b. 1977), Terry Virtue, Todd Esselmont, Todd Simpson, Tyler Weiman, Ty Rimmer, Vladimir V jtek. Excerpt: Daymond Randolph Langkow (born September 27, 1976) is a Canadian professional ice hockey centre for the Phoenix Coyotes of the National Hockey League (NHL). He was a first round selection, fifth overall, of the Tampa Bay Lightning at the 1995 NHL Entry Draft. He played junior hockey with the Tri-City Americans in the Western Hockey League (WHL) and is their franchise record holder for career goals at 159. He won the Bob Clarke Trophy in 1995 as the WHL scoring leader with 140 points, and competed with the Canadian junior team at the 1996 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships where he won a gold medal. Langkow made his NHL debut in 1995 with the Lightning, and has also played for the Philadelphia Flyers and Calgary Flames. He has scored 30 goals twice in his career, both with the Flames, and scored more than 50 points in eight consecutive seasons between 1999 and 2008. He was a nominee for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy in 1997 and has played over 1,000 games in the NHL. His older brother, Scott, is also a professional hockey player, presently in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga Langkow was selected by the Tri-City Americans in the second round of the 1991 Western Hockey League (WHL) Bantam Draft. He completed the 1991 92 season with the Edmonton Pats of the Alberta Midget Hockey League, scoring 81 points in 35 games while appearing in one game with the Americans as a 15-year-old. He joined Tri-City full-time in 1992 93, scoring 22 goals and 64 points in 64 games and improved to 40 goals and 83 points in 1993 94. Langkow averaged nearly two points per game in 1994 95, scoring 140 points in 72 games. He was named the recipient of the Bob Clarke Trophy as the top scorer in the WHL, and was named to the WHL West and Canadian Hockey League First All-Star Teams. He finished as the runner-up to Marty Murray for the Four Broncos Memorial Trophy as the WHL's most valuable player. The Tampa Bay Lightning selected Langkow fifth overall in the 1995 NHL Entry Draft. On the eve of"