Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Alek Stojanov

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Height
  
1.93 m

Position
  
Winger

Role
  
Ice hockey player

Career end
  
1997

Name
  
Alek Stojanov

Career start
  
1994

Playing career
  
1992–2002

Weight
  
104 kg


Alek Stojanov Alek Stojanov Players cards since 1996 1997 penguinshockey


Born
  
April 25, 1973 (age 50) Windsor, ON, CAN (
1973-04-25
)

NHL Draft
  
7th overall, 1991 Vancouver Canucks

Played for
  
Vancouver Canucks, Pittsburgh Penguins

Mark tinordi vs alek stojanov apr 26 1996


Alexander Stojanov (born April 25, 1973) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey player of Macedonian descent who spent three seasons in the National Hockey League. He is best known for his trade from Vancouver to Pittsburgh in exchange for Markus Naslund, in what is recognized as one of the most lopsided trades in the history of the NHL. Selected seventh overall in the 1991 NHL Entry Draft, he is now widely regarded as a draft bust.

Contents

Alek Stojanov vs Denis Chasse


Playing career

Born in Windsor, Ontario, Stojanov was a first round selection of the Vancouver Canucks in the 1991 NHL Entry Draft, chosen one selection after future superstar Peter Forsberg was taken by the Philadelphia Flyers. The 6'4" Stojanov had crafted a fearsome reputation in junior hockey, and impressed scouts by pummeling the much-hyped Eric Lindros in a fight during their draft year. He also possessed a soft pair of hands and a nice scoring touch around the net, scoring 25 goals for the Hamilton Dukes, and earned comparisons to Bob Probert, considered the NHL's top enforcer at the time.

Stojanov's Duke team then relocated to Guelph and became the Storm where he had an injury-plagued 1991–92 campaign. Stojanov's club went 4–51–11 in what amounted to an expansion team, however, the first rounder only played in 33 of 66 games that season.

In 1992–93, Stojanov was traded mid-way through the season to the Newmarket Royals for Ryan Vanden Bussche, Mike Prokopec and a draft choice. Stojanov collected 55 points in 35 games as the rebuilding Storm moved the then 19-year-old for youth. He played parts of the 1992–93 season in Guelph with 16-year-old rookie, Jeff O'Neill and sophomore Todd Bertuzzi.

At the conclusion of the season, he turned pro and joined the Hamilton Canucks, Vancouver's American Hockey League affiliate, and impressed by scoring four goals in his first four games. However, a shoulder injury would require major surgical reconstruction and he missed almost the entire 1993–94 campaign as a result, and never again showed the offensive touch he had earlier in his career.

In 1994–95, Stojanov recorded 18 goals and 270 penalty minutes for the Syracuse Crunch, and earned himself a four-game callup to the NHL. He was also kept on Vancouver's roster for the NHL playoffs, and appeared in the first five playoff games of his career.

For the 1995–96 campaign, Stojanov cracked the Canucks' roster full-time as the team's enforcer, appearing in 58 games and recording a single assist. His highlight as a Canuck was probably an epic fight with Kelly Chase of the Hartford Whalers. However, at the trade deadline, Stojanov was dealt to the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for Markus Näslund. He scored his first NHL goal in his Penguin debut, and finished the year with a goal and two points in 68 games between Vancouver and Pittsburgh, along with 130 penalty minutes.

In 1996–97, Stojanov spent the entire year in Pittsburgh, but appeared in only 35 games, recording one goal and four assists for five points along with 79 penalty minutes. By the 1997–98 season, he found himself back in the AHL, assigned to the Penguins' farm team in Syracuse, and would never play in the NHL again.

Released by Pittsburgh in 1998, Stojanov toiled for two more years in the International Hockey League and then for two years with the New Mexico Scorpions of the Central Hockey League before retiring in 2002. He finished his NHL career with totals of two goals and five assists for seven points in 107 NHL games, along with 222 penalty minutes.

While Stojanov was considered a major disappointment for a seventh overall pick during his time in Vancouver, he is now best known as the player dealt for Markus Näslund. Näslund would go on to captain the Canucks, and become the club's all-time leading scorer, remaining with the team more than a decade after the trade.

Career statistics

--- Regular Season --- ---- Playoffs ---- Season Team Lge GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1989-90 Hamilton Dukes OHL 37 4 4 8 91 -- -- -- -- -- 1990-91 Hamilton Dukes OHL 62 25 20 45 179 4 1 1 17 14 1991-92 Guelph Storm OHL 33 12 15 27 91 -- -- -- -- -- 1992-93 Hamilton Canucks AHL 4 4 0 4 0 -- -- -- -- -- 1992-93 Guelph Storm OHL 35 27 28 55 11 -- -- -- -- -- 1992-93 Newmarket Royals OHL 14 9 7 16 21 7 1 3 4 26 1993-94 Hamilton Canucks AHL 4 0 1 1 5 -- -- -- -- -- 1994-95 Vancouver Canucks NHL 4 0 0 0 13 5 0 0 0 2 1994-95 Syracuse Crunch AHL 73 18 12 30 270 -- -- -- -- -- 1995-96 Vancouver Canucks NHL 58 0 1 1 123 -- -- -- -- -- 1995-96 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 10 1 0 1 7 9 0 0 0 19 1996-97 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 35 1 4 5 79 -- -- -- -- -- 1997-98 Syracuse Crunch AHL 41 5 4 9 215 3 1 0 1 4 1998-99 Milwaukee Admirals IHL 13 0 1 1 58 -- -- -- -- -- 1998-99 Detroit Vipers IHL 27 1 3 4 91 -- -- -- -- -- 1998-99 Hamilton Bulldogs AHL 12 0 1 1 35 -- -- -- -- -- 1999-00 Detroit Vipers IHL 43 4 10 14 135 -- -- -- -- -- 2000-01 New Mexico Scorpions WPHL 36 10 16 26 131 -- -- -- -- -- 2001-02 New Mexico Scorpions CHL 28 10 6 16 98 -- -- -- -- -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NHL Totals 107 2 5 7 222 14 0 0 0 21

References

Alek Stojanov Wikipedia