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Gregory Campbell (ice hockey)

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Position
  
Center

Role
  
Ice hockey player

Salary
  
1.7 million USD (2015)

Name
  
Gregory Campbell

Spouse
  
Katie Campbell (m. 2012)

Playing career
  
2003–present

Parents
  
Colin Campbell

Shoots
  
Left

Height
  
1.83 m


Gregory Campbell (ice hockey) l1yimgcombtapires12aW7wkYkwat1qtcSaqrClFg

Born
  
December 17, 1983 (age 40) London, ON, CAN (
1983-12-17
)

Weight
  
197 lb (89 kg; 14 st 1 lb)

NHL teamFormer teams
  
Columbus Blue JacketsFlorida PanthersBoston Bruins

NHL Draft
  
67th overall, 2002Florida Panthers

Current team
  
Columbus Blue Jackets (#9 / Centerman)

Similar People
  
Daniel Paille, Chris Kelly, Adam McQuaid, Matt Bartkowski, Reilly Smith

Gregory campbell hard core after slapshot to leg 6 5 13 pittsburgh penguins vs boston bruins nhl


Gregory James Campbell (born December 17, 1983) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey centre and current developmental coach for the Columbus Blue Jackets. He was drafted by the Florida Panthers in the third round, 67th overall, in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft. Campbell is the son of former NHLer and current NHL Director of Hockey Operations Colin Campbell.

Contents

Gregory Campbell (ice hockey) Boston Bruins forward Gregory Campbell waiting for leg to

Jordin tootoo vs gregory campbell feb 25 2016


Amateur

Gregory Campbell (ice hockey) Boston Bruins forward Gregory Campbell inspires teammates

Born in London, Ontario, Campbell grew up in nearby Tillsonburg, playing the majority of his minor hockey with the Tillsonburg Tornados BB teams of the OMHA Southern Counties League and the AAA Elgin-Middlesex Chiefs of the Alliance Pavilion League until Minor Bantam.

Gregory Campbell (ice hockey) Colin Campbell Photos Boston Bruins v Vancouver Canucks

Campbell was drafted by the Plymouth Whalers in the sixth round, 102nd overall, in the 1999 OHL Bantam Supplemental Draft after playing the 1998–99 season with the Aylmer Aces Jr.B. club.

Gregory Campbell (ice hockey) Gregory Campbell ice hockey Wikipedia the free

Campbell was traded by Plymouth on August 2, 2002, to the Kitchener Rangers, along with a third-round draft pick, in exchange for Ryan Ramsey, Gary Klapowski and a second-round pick. According to the Rangers, Campbell was brought in to "fill the need for a strong forward to park in the crease area to play alongside Derek Roy on the Rangers top unit and especially on the powerplay, filling a gap left by graduating power forwards Jeff Szwez and John Osborne, who combined for 42 goals for the Rangers last season."

Campbell was a late invitee to the World Junior Championships camp, joining Rangers teammates Steve Eminger and Derek Roy at the camp. Campbell, along with Roy and Eminger (as well as current Bruins teammate Daniel Paille), were ultimately selected to play for Team Canada at the 2003 World Junior Championships, where they won the silver medal, falling to Russia in the tournament final.

Through 55 games for Kitchener, Campbell racked up 23 goals and 33 assists for 56 points playing alongside Derek Roy. In 21 playoff games, Campbell scored 15 goals and picked up four assists for 19 points with 34 penalties in minutes, leading his team to contend for the Memorial Cup in 2003. Campbell recorded one goal and six assists for seven points in four games in the tournament. He was named to the Memorial Cup All-Star Team along with Derek Roy, Mike Richards, Steve Eminger, Doug O'Brien and Scott Dickie. Campbell was also awarded the Ed Chynoweth Trophy as the tournament's leading scorer and the George Parsons Trophy as most sportsmanlike player.

Professional

Campbell was drafted 67th overall by the Florida Panthers in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft. He played two NHL games in 2003–04, but did not register a point in the contests. He scored his first goal in the 2005–06 NHL season in a 4–3 loss to the Montreal Canadiens against goaltender Yann Danis.

On June 22, 2010, Campbell was traded by the Panthers, along with Nathan Horton, to the Boston Bruins in exchange for Dennis Wideman and a first-round draft pick (15th overall) in 2010 and a third-round pick in 2011.

In the 2010–11 season, Campbell set a career high in penalty minutes (93) and tied a career high in goals (13). During the 2011 Stanley Cup playoffs, he centred the Bruins' top penalty killing unit, which notably neutralized the potent Vancouver Canucks' power play in the Stanley Cup Finals, limiting them to just two power play goals through the seven-game series. On June 15, 2011, Campbell won the Stanley Cup with the Bruins. At the end of the next off-season, on June 12, 2012, he re-signed a three-year, $4.8 million contract extension.

On June 5, 2013, during Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Finals, Campbell suffered a broken right fibula after throwing himself in front of an Evgeni Malkin slapshot during a crucial penalty kill against the Pittsburgh Penguins. Campbell regained his footing, however, and despite being unable to put any pressure on his right leg, he remained on the ice for more than a minute. In doing so, he helped kill off the Penguins power play before painstakingly skating himself to the bench. While Campbell exited the Ice, Bruins fans were heard to be chanting "Campbell, Campbell!" in support of the beloved Bruin. The Bruins went on to win the game 2–1 in double overtime, ultimately progressing to the Finals against the Chicago Blackhawks.

After five seasons with the Bruins, Campbell left as a free agent and signed a two-year contract with the Columbus Blue Jackets on July 1, 2015. On December 17, 2016 Columbus put Campbell on unconditional waivers. Campbell was released on December 19. Reports state that Campbell was unwilling to move to the Blue Jackets minor league system. Campbell officially retired on June 9, 2017, and joined the Columbus Blue Jackets as a developmental coach the same day.

References

Gregory Campbell (ice hockey) Wikipedia