James Patrick is a comic book writer who wrote the comic "Alien Spotlight: Vulcans", published by IDW Publishing in 2007. An article in issue 138 of the Star Trek Magazine suggested he would also be writing an issue in the second Alien Spotlight miniseries.
| IDW Publishing writers and editors | ||
|---|---|---|
| Writers | Mike W. Barr • John Byrne • Derek Chester • Peter David • Keith R.A. DeCandido • Ian Edginton • D.C. Fontana • Andrew Steven Harris • Tim Jones • Mike Johnson • Stuart Moore • James Patrick • Chris Ryall • Andy Schmidt • Paul D. Storrie • David Tipton • Scott Tipton • David Tischman • Ty Templeton | |
| Story credits | Harve Bennett • Alex Kurtzman • Roberto Orci • Rick Remender • Jack B. Sowards | |
| Editors | Scott Dunbier • Andrew Steven Harris • Chris Ryall • Andy Schmidt • Dan Taylor • Denton J. Tipton | |
| Position | Defenceman |
| Shoots | Right |
| Height Weight |
6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 200 lb (91 kg) |
| Teams | New York Rangers Hartford Whalers Calgary Flames Buffalo Sabres |
| Nationality | |
| Born | June 14 1963 , Winnipeg, MB, CAN |
| NHL Draft | 9th overall, 1981 New York Rangers |
| Pro Career | 1983 – 2004 2005 – 2006 |
James Patrick (born June 14, 1963, in Winnipeg, Manitoba) is a former professional defenceman, and is now a coach with the Buffalo Sabres of the National Hockey League.
After a successful collegiate career at the University of North Dakota, Patrick represented Canada at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. After the Olympics, Patrick signed his first professional contract on March 5, 1984, and made his NHL debut two days later in Minnesota. Patrick scored his first NHL goal on March 17, 1984, in Philadelphia. Patrick enjoyed ten productive seasons in New York before being traded to the Hartford Whalers and then to the Calgary Flames during the 1993–94 season.
After several years in Calgary, Patrick signed with the Buffalo Sabres as a free agent after the 1997–98 season. Though he was chosen to play in the 1987 Canada Cup and many other international events, Patrick was never selected to the NHL All Star game. He ranks high among defenceman in both all times game played (1280) and total points (639). Patrick set a record (since broken) for career games played by a Team Canada player with 40 career games, breaking previous record of 37 games in 2002. On September 8, 2005, Patrick announced his retirement from the NHL at the age of 42. He was immediately named to the Sabres' staff as a skill development coach. However, he left the team before the season to play in Germany's Deutsche Eishockey Liga with the Frankfurt Lions.
On September 12, 2006, Patrick was re-signed as an assistant coach with Buffalo.
| Preceded by Chris Drury |
Buffalo Sabres captains December 2003 |
Succeeded by Jean-Pierre Dumont |
| New York Rangers first-round draft picks | |
|---|---|
| Osborne • Graham • Veilleux • Park • Dickson • Dupont • Jarry • Gratton • Vickers • Durbano • Blanchard • MacMillan • Middleton • Maloney • Dillon • Murdoch • DeBlois • Duguay • Sulliman • Malone • Patrick • Kontos • Gagner • Carkner • Dahlen • Leetch • More • Rice • Stewart • Kovalev • Ferraro • Sundstrom • Cloutier • Brown • Cherneski • Malhotra • Brendl • Lundmark • Blackburn • Jessiman • Montoya • Korpikoski • Staal • Sanguinetti • Cherepanov | |
| This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at James Patrick. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |
|
|