|
|
 |
|  |
|
Home > Hockey > NHL Players > Jarret Stoll
Jarret Stoll
NHL, the National Hockey League is a premier professional North American Sports League played in indoor stadiums. It’s divided into two conferences, each comprising of three divisions of ice hockey teams. Jarret Stoll was born on 24 June 1982 in Melville, Saskatchewan and he plays centre in the National Hockey League. With a height of 6 foot 1 inch and weighing 215 pounds, he plays in centre position. Kootenay is the last Amateur Club in which he played. He was originally Calgary’s 3rd choice, 46th overall, in 2000 NHL Entry Draft re-entered NHL Entry Draft and was selected by Edmonton in 2nd round of 2002 draft. In 2004-05 he was named MVP, most valuable player, of the Edmonton Road Runners, scoring 21-17-38 in 66 games for Edmonton’s AHL, American Hockey League, affiliate was fourth in scoring on the Road Runners, while he led the team in plus 13 and shots on goal, 224, tied for third in both goals and powerplay goals. In 2003-04 his first full NHL season saw him establish single-season career-highs in games, goals, assists, points and PIM, the penalty minutes was 12th on Oilers scoring list and 9th in goals as he registered 10-11-21 with 40 PIM and was plus 8 in 68 games played. He was among the NHL rookie leaders in 24th game, 14th goals, 25th assists, 21st points, plus 8, shots, shooting percentage of 9.3 percent, short hand goals and shorthanded scoring, netted 1st career Oilers-NHL goal at NY Rangers on November 10. In 2006 Playoffs he made Stanley Cup Playoff debut, scoring 4-6-10 with 24 PIM in 24 games. He played in first post-season game at Detroit in Game 1 on Apr. 21 and scored first playoff point in Game 2 played on April 23, he was involved assisting Ales Hemksy’s winner in Game 6 on 29 April is a powerful skater with a lethal shot who back-checked responsibly and played the game cleanly. He, with all his dedication and devotion in his play has achieved many goals in his overall hockey-playing career. He has the ability of defeating the opponent easily by giving some extra hard work and efforts.
Back to NHL Players
|
|
 |
|  |
|
|
|