Sneha Girap (Editor)

Scott Arniel

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Height
  
1.85 m

Position
  
Winger

Role
  
Ice hockey player

Career end
  
1999

Name
  
Scott Arniel

Career start
  
1981

Playing career
  
1981–1999

Weight
  
86 kg


Scott Arniel Vancouver Canucks farm team coaching post intrigues Scott

Born
  
September 17, 1962 (age 62) Kingston, ON, CAN (
1962-09-17
)

NHL Draft
  
22nd overall, 1981Winnipeg Jets

Behind the Bench with Scott Arniel


CanucksTV: Scott Arniel interview


Scott William Arniel (born September 17, 1962) is a retired Canadian professional ice hockey player and currently the associate coach of the National Hockey League's New York Rangers. Previously, he was the head coach of the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Contents

Scott Arniel Welcome To Columbus Scott Arniel

Junior hockey

Scott Arniel wwwnhldigestcomwpcontentuploads200812scott

After entering the major junior ranks with the Kingston Canadians of the Ontario Major Junior Hockey League (OMJHL) in 1978–79, Arniel switched to the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League the next season to join the Cornwall Royals. Arniel played a pivotal role in the club's 1981 Memorial Cup championship with a hat trick in an 8–2 win over the Kitchener Rangers on May 10, 1981.

Professional career

Scott Arniel Scott Arniel Keeping Fit

That off-season, he was selected by the Winnipeg Jets 22nd overall in the 1981 NHL Entry Draft and immediately began playing for the team, making his NHL debut in 1981–82, appearing in 17 games. He was, however, returned to junior with the Royals, who had been realigned in the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), later that season. The reassignment to junior gave Arniel the opportunity to play at the 1982 World Junior Championships, helping Team Canada to their first-ever gold medal at the tournament.

Scott Arniel Scott Arniel Keeping Fit

In 1982–83, Arniel joined the Jets full-time and recorded 18 points in his rookie season. He went on to play five seasons in his initial stint with the Jets, including a career-high 56-point campaign with the team in 1983–84. He joined the Buffalo Sabres in 1986–87, going on to play four seasons with Buffalo, before returning to the Jets in 1990–91.

After splitting the 1991–92 season between the Boston Bruins and the New Haven Nighthawks and Maine Mariners of the American Hockey League (AHL), Arniel played the remainder of his career in the minor leagues, spending time with the San Diego Gulls, Houston Aeros, Utah Grizzlies and Manitoba Moose of the International Hockey League (IHL). He retired following the 1998–99 season.

Coaching career

Arniel began his coaching career as an assistant coach in 1995 while still playing for the Houston Aeros of the IHL as a mid-season replacement. After retiring as a player in 1999, he joined the coaching staff of the Manitoba Moose as an assistant. He held that position for three years until 2002, when he was named to the Buffalo Sabres' coaching staff as an assistant.

After four years with the Sabres, Arniel returned to the Moose as their new head coach when he was hired by their parent club, the Vancouver Canucks. Arniel led the team to the league's best regular season record in 2008–09 and a birth in the Calder Cup finals, earning him the Louis A. R. Pieri Memorial Award as coach of the year.

Arniel returned to the National Hockey League as a head coach in 2010, when he was hired by the Columbus Blue Jackets. Arniel replaced interim coach Claude Noel, who coincidentally was hired as his replacement in Manitoba. After only one and a half seasons behind the Blue Jackets' bench, Arniel was fired in January 2012.

In June 2012, the Canucks rehired Arniel to coach the Chicago Wolves, their new AHL affiliate. In the summer of 2013, Arniel left the Canucks organization, along with head coach Alain Vigneault, to join the New York Rangers.

Personal life

He has a nephew, Jamie Arniel, who has been drafted into the NHL by the Boston Bruins and plays for the Berlin Polar Bears of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL) in Germany. Scott is married to Lia Arniel; they have two children and make their home in Greenwich, Connecticut during the season and Winnipeg during the off-season.

Scott was inducted into the Kingston and District Sports Hall of Fame on May 2, 2008.

Awards

  • Kingston and District Sports Hall of Fame, inducted May 2, 2008.
  • Louis A. R. Pieri Memorial Award (AHL coach of the year), 2009.
  • References

    Scott Arniel Wikipedia


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