Bruce Boudreau | |||
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Boudreau in 2012
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Born |
Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
January 9, 1955 ||
Height | 5 ft 9 in (175 cm) | ||
Weight | 182 lb (83 kg; 13 st 0 lb) | ||
Position | Centre | ||
Shot | Left | ||
Played for |
Toronto Maple Leafs Chicago Black Hawks Minnesota Fighting Saints |
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NHL Draft | 42nd overall, 1975 Toronto Maple Leafs |
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Playing career | 1975–1992 |
Bruce Allan "Gabby"Boudreau (born January 9, 1955) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player and coach. He is currently the head coach of the National Hockey League's Minnesota Wild and formerly the head coach of the Washington Capitals and Anaheim Ducks. As a player, Boudreau played professionally for 20 seasons, logging 141 games in the NHL and 30 games in the World Hockey Association (WHA). He played for the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Chicago Black Hawks of the NHL and the Minnesota Fighting Saints of the WHA. Boudreau won the Jack Adams Award for the NHL's most outstanding head coach in the 2007–08 NHL season during his tenure with the Capitals.
Boudreau was born in North York, Toronto, Ontario. He attended Nelson A. Boylen Collegiate Institute in the 1970s.
While Boudreau's major professional career was modest, he had a long career in the minor leagues, and was one of the most prolific minor league scorers of all time, largely in the American Hockey League (AHL). His junior career was spent with the Toronto Marlboros of the Ontario Hockey Association (OHA), for which he averaged over 100 points a season. He scored 165 points in his final season in juniors, adding 44 points in 27 games en route to captaining the Marlies to a Memorial Cup championship. He was awarded the Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy as the top goal scorer for the 1974–75 OMJHL season.