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Dan Murphy (ice hockey)

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Dan Murphy
Born (1976-05-06) May 6, 1976 (age 48)
Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
Height 6 ft 2 in (188 cm)
Weight 190 lb (86 kg; 13 st 8 lb)
Position Goaltender
Caught Left
Played for Worcester IceCats
Peoria Rivermen
Quebec Citadelles
Philadelphia Phantoms
Springfield Falcons
Trenton Titans
Milwaukee Admirals
Lexington Men O' War
Alaska Aces
Fort Worth Brahmas
Playing career 1993–2005

Daniel Murphy is a Canadian retired ice hockey goaltender who was a two-time All-American for Clarkson.[1]

Career

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Murphy began attending Clarkson University in 1994 after a three-year stint with his home-town junior team, the Nanaimo Clippers. Murphy became the first freshman goaltender to start for the Golden Knights since 1972. Dan helped the team win the ECAC Hockey regular season title. His numbers improved greatly as a sophomore and he finished in the top 10 in the nation with a 2.70 goals against average. Dan was named an All American after his sophomore season and he earned a spot on the All-American Second Team. Clarkson University made its second consecutive NCAA appearance with Murphy as their goaltender and lost a closely-fought game against top-seeded Boston University. Murphy improved again as a junior, winning 27 games and leading Clarkson to another league championship. While the team fell in the ECAC championship game, Clarkson received the top eastern seed and was expected to make a run for the NCAA Championship. For his senior season, Murphy played in 23 games and had a record of 10–9–2. Murphy finished his college career as Clarkson's All-Time Wins Leader.[2] Clarkson finished second in the ECAC and made their fourth consecutive NCAA appearance. They were set against CC in the First Round bout couldn't exact their revenge, losing 3–1. Murphy became the ECAC All Time Wins leader with 85 wins, a record that stands to this day.

After graduating, Murphy began his professional career signing with the St Louis Blues (NHL) and split the season between the Peoria Rivermen (ECHL) and the Worcester Ice Cats (AHL). His second pro season he signed a 1-year deal with the Montreal Canadiens (NHL) and found himself with the Quebec Citadelles. Murphy was an AHL All-Star that year. Murphy was traded at the deadline to the Philadelphia Flyers (NHL) and signed a 3-year deal with Philadelphia. During his time with the Flyers Dan would play for the Philadelphia Phantoms (AHL), the Springfield Falcons (AHL) and Trenton Tians (ECHL) Upon completion of his contract he signed with the Lexington Men’O’War (ECHL) and then the Alaska Aces (ECHL). Dan's final season was with the Fort Worth Brahmas (CHL). His season was cut short due to a career ending back injury which caused him to retire. He finished his 7-year professional career with Fort Worth.[3]

Statistics

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Regular season and playoffs

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Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA SV% GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1991–92 Nanaimo Clippers BCJHL 19 8 6 0 919 79 0 5.16 .832 1 0 0 26 2 0 4.65 0.833
1992–93 Nanaimo Clippers BCJHL 42 14 20 0 2224 199 1 5.36 .856 7 3 4 426 28 0 3.92 0.906
1993–94 Nanaimo Clippers BCJHL 52 18 30 0 2846 252 0 5.31 .881 5 1 4 300 25 0 5.00 0.867
1994–95 Clarkson University ECAC 37 23 9 4 2157 118 0 3.28 .889
1995–96 Clarkson University ECAC 38 25 10 3 2224 100 1 2.70 .912
1996–97 Clarkson University ECAC 37 27 10 0 2162 84 3 2.33 .917
1997–98 Clarkson University ECAC 23 10 9 2 1266 48 2 2.27 .907
1998–99 Worcester IceCats AHL 8 2 4 1 410 26 0 3.81 .846
1998–99 Peoria Rivermen ECHL 29 16 10 2 1672 92 1 3.30 .902 3 1 2 180 11 0 3.67 0.888
1999–00 Quebec Citadelles AHL 33 16 9 1 1573 62 3 2.37 .924
1999–00 Philadelphia Phantoms AHL 5 1 4 0 258 17 0 3.95 .864
2000–01 Philadelphia Phantoms AHL 2 0 2 0 80 9 0 6.75 .795
2000–01 Springfield Falcons AHL 16 4 7 2 824 51 0 3.71 .875
2000–01 Trenton Titans ECHL 15 7 7 1 862 33 2 2.30 .925 3 1 0 156 8 0 3.08 0.895
2001–02 Philadelphia Phantoms AHL 4 2 1 0 208 12 0 3.46 .915
2001–02 Trenton Titans ECHL 45 30 10 4 2662 94 3 2.12 .921 7 3 4 422 18 0 2.56 0.908
2002–03 Milwaukee Admirals AHL 1 0 1 0 60 4 0 4.00 .862
2002–03 Lexington Men O' War ECHL 43 21 19 3 2591 123 2 2.85 .907 2 0 2 85 8 0 5.64 0.867
2003–04 Alaska Aces ECHL 51 27 20 3 3015 138 1 2.75 .898 7 3 4 435 19 1 2.62 0.914
2004–05 Fort Worth Brahmas CHL 38 18 14 4 2136 99 2 2.78 .900
BCJHL totals 113 40 56 0 5,989 530 1 5.31 .867 13 4 8 752 55 0 4.38 0.890
NCAA totals 135 85 37 9 7,809 350 6 2.69 .906
ECHL totals 183 101 66 13 12,178 480 9 2.66 .908 24 9 11 1279 64 1 2.98 0.902
AHL totals 69 25 28 4 3,413 181 3 3.15 .896
CHL totals 38 18 14 4 2,136 99 2 2.78 .900

Awards and honors

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Award Year - AHL-American Hockey League All Star 2000-2001 1997-98 [4]
All-ECAC Hockey All Time Wins Leader 1997-98 [4]
All-ECHL Hockey All Star 2001-2002 [4]
All-ECAC Hockey Rookie Team 1994–95 [5]
AHCA East Second-Team All-American 1995–96 [1]
All-ECAC Hockey Second Team 1996–97 [4]
AHCA East Second-Team All-American 1996–97 [1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved June 11, 2013.
  2. ^ "Clarkson Men's Hockey 2017-18 Media Guide". Clarkson Golden Knights. Retrieved 2018-09-17.
  3. ^ "CLARKSON Hockey Alumni - DAN MURPHY". Clarkson Golden Knights. Retrieved October 29, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d "ECAC All-Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
  5. ^ "ECAC All-Rookie Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
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