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Birth Date: June 25, 1963
Place of Birth: Kingston, ON
Height: 5′11″
Weight: 175 lbs.
Position: Centre
Shoots: Left
Year Drafted: 1982
Round Drafted: 7
Overall Pick: 134
Drafted by: St Louis Blues
Sweater Number: 93
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 Doug Gilmour - Maple Leaf Captain |
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Doug Gilmour was born in Kingston, Ontario, on June 25, 1963. He has been a major player for all teams he’s played with including the St. Louis Blues (83-88), the Calgary Flames (88-92), the Maple Leafs (92-97), the New Jersey Devils (97-98), and the Chicago Blackhawks (98-present). While with the Calgary Flames he scored the game winning goal that captured the Stanley Cup in 88-89.
Doug Gilmour is 5′11, 165lbs. He was captain of the Toronto Maple Leafs from the beginning of the 94-95 season when then captain Wendel Clark was traded to the Quebec Nordiques until February 25, 1997 when he was traded to the Devils. While in Toronto he helped the Leafs get to the Western Conference Finals twice.
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* Traded to Calgary by St. Louis with Mark Hunter, Steve Bozek, and Michael Dark for Mike Bullard, Craig Coxe and Tim Corkery. September 6, 1988.
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| * Traded to Toronto by Calgary with Jamie Macoun, Ric Nattress, Kent Manderville and Rick Wamsley for Gary Leeman, Alexander Godynyuk, Jeff Reese, Michel Petit and Craig Berube. January 2, 1992. |
| * Traded to New Jersey by Toronto with Dave Ellett for Alyn McCauley, Steve Sullivan, and Jason Smith. February 25, 1997. |
| * Signed with Chicago as a free agent. July 28, 1998. |
| * Buffalo Sabres traded Michal Grosek to the Chicago Blackhawks for Doug Gilmour and Jean-Pierre Dumont on March 10, 2000. |
| * Signed as an unrestricted free agent by the Montreal Canadiens on October 6, 2001 |
| * Montreal Canadiens traded Doug Gilmour to the Toronto Maple Leafs for a 6th round selection in 2003 on March 11, 2003 |
| 1993-94 |
Played in NHL All-Star |
| 1992-93 |
NHL – Frank J. Selke Trophy (Best Defensive Forward) |
| 1992-93 |
Played in NHL All-Star |
| 1988-89 |
Stanley Cup (Calgary) |
| 1982-83 |
OHL – Red Tilson Trophy (Most Oustanding Player) |
| 1982-83 |
OHL – Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy (Leading Scorer) |
| 1982-83 |
OHL – First All-Star Team |
| 1988-89 |
Two fastest shorthanded goals, scored 4 seconds apart NHL record |
| 1992-93 |
Nominated for Hart Trophy (1993) |
| 1992-93 |
Most points in one season (127), Toronto club record |
| 1992-93 |
Most assists in one season (95), Toronto club record |
| 1992-93 |
Most Assist (game *tied)- 6, Toronto club record |
| 1981-90 |
17 International matches (8 in Canada Cup -87 + 9 in World Championship-90) and 5 in the Junior World Championship -81 |
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