Frank Pietrangelo | |||
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Born |
Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada |
December 17, 1964 ||
Height | 5 ft 10 in (178 cm) | ||
Weight | 185 lb (84 kg; 13 st 3 lb) | ||
Position | Goaltender | ||
Caught | Left | ||
Played for |
NHL Pittsburgh Penguins Hartford Whalers AHL Springfield Indians IHL Minnesota Moose Muskegon Lumberjacks BISL Manchester Storm DEL Kaufbeuren Eagles Serie A Asiago HC HC Bolzano |
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NHL Draft | 67th overall, 1983 Pittsburgh Penguins |
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Playing career | 1986–2001 |
Frank Pietrangelo (born December 17, 1964 in Niagara Falls, Ontario) is a retired Canadian ice hockey goaltender.
Pietrangelo started his National Hockey League career with the Pittsburgh Penguins in 1988, winning the Stanley Cup in 1991. He also played for the Hartford Whalers. He left the NHL after the 1994 season. He played several more years in the IHL with the Minnesota Moose, Italy with HC Bolzano and Asiago Hockey AS, Germany in the DEL with Kaufbeuren Eagles, and England in the BISL with the Manchester Storm before retiring after the 2001 season. He was named the Sekonda Face to Watch while playing for Manchester in December 1998.
He is perhaps best known for his play during the 1991 Stanley Cup playoffs in place of injured Penguins' starting goaltender Tom Barrasso. In Game 6 of the opening round against the New Jersey Devils, Pietrangelo helped the Penguins stave off elimination with one of the most significant stops in Stanley Cup history, a glove save against Peter Stastny, who was shooting at a mostly-open net at point-blank range. The play, which would become known simply as "The Save," helped the Penguins win the game and the series. The Penguins, with a healthy Barrasso, would eventually win their first Stanley Cup.