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Byron Dafoe

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Caught
  
Left

Height
  
1.80 m

Position
  
Role
  
Ice hockey player

Career end
  
2004

Name
  
Byron Dafoe

Career start
  
1991

Playing career
  
1991–2004

Weight
  
86 kg


Byron Dafoe Quotes by Byron Dafoe Like Success


Born
  
February 25, 1971 (age 53) Worthing, England, GBR (
1971-02-25
)

Played for
  
Washington CapitalsLos Angeles KingsBoston BruinsAtlanta Thrashers

NHL Draft
  
35th overall, 1989Washington Capitals

Similar People
  
Olaf Kolzig, Claude Julien, Georges Vezina, Zdeno Chara

Fuhr, Dafoe provide old-school perspective on goalie interference


Byron Jaromir Dafoe (born February 25, 1971) is a Canadian former National Hockey League goaltender. He was born in Worthing, England, United Kingdom and moved to Comox, British Columbia with his mother at the age of two months old. Between 1992 and 2004, he played for the Washington Capitals, Los Angeles Kings, Boston Bruins and Atlanta Thrashers. He currently resides in Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.

Contents

Byron Dafoe Web Page On Byron Dafoe

Olaf kolzig versus byron dafoe


Playing career

Byron Dafoe Byron Dafoe

Dafoe was drafted 35th overall in the 2nd round of the 1989 NHL Entry Draft by the Washington Capitals, and made his NHL debut in the 1992-93 season. Dafoe also played for the Capitals in the 1993-94 and 1994-95 seasons. In 1995, Dafoe joined the Los Angeles Kings, with whom he stayed for two seasons before being traded to the Boston Bruins in 1997.

Byron Dafoe Boston Bruins goaltending history Byron Dafoe

In the following two season, Dafoe helped the Bruins back to the playoffs, winning a postseason series in 1999. He finished third in voting for the Vezina Trophy, and was named to the NHL Second All-Star Team, edging out Curtis Joseph in the voting. Due to a contract dispute with Bruins General Manager Harry Sinden, he was a holdout for part of the 1999–2000 season and suffered injuries during it, so he never regained his previous form.

Byron Dafoe Washington Capitals goaltending history Byron Dafoe

In 2002, he signed as a free agent with the Atlanta Thrashers. Byron Dafoe retired from professional hockey following the 2004–05 NHL lockout.

Outside of the NHL, Dafoe has played for WHL sides Portland Winter Hawks (1986–1990) and Prince Albert Raiders (1990–1991), ECHL side Hampton Roads Admirals, AHL sides Baltimore Skipjacks (1991–1992 and 1992–1993), New Haven Nighthawks (1992) and Portland Pirates (1993–1994 and 1994–1995), and IHL side Phoenix Roadrunners. He was voted a First Team AHL All-Star in 1993-94 and won a Calder Cup championship that season with the Portland Pirates.

During Dafoe's time with the Winter Hawks, he had an on-ice fistfight with Tri-City Americans goaltender Olaf Kölzig, someone with whom he would go on to have a friendly rivalry in the NHL—so friendly that they served as each other's best man when they got married. He and Kolzig also had a "friendly" fight later in their NHL careers on November 28, 1998, when the Boston Bruins took on the Washington Capitals. During the game, a fight broke out that was so violent and all encompassing, the goalies (Dafoe and Kolzig) also got caught up in it. The fight between the goalies was primarily comedic, with both Dafoe and Kolzig laughing as they landed punches.

Personal

Along with fellow NHLers Kölzig and Scott Mellanby, Dafoe is a founder of Athletes Against Autism, as his son has autism. Dafoe has two sons and resides in Kelowna, British Columbia, running a custom home electrical fit-out business.

References

Byron Dafoe Wikipedia


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