From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dominik Hašek (Czech
pronunciation: [ˈdomɪnɪk ˈɦaʃɛk]; born January 29, 1965) is a
Czech ice hockey goaltender who currently
plays for HC Pardubice
in Czech
Extraliga.
[1]
In his 16-season National Hockey League (NHL)
career, he played for the Chicago Blackhawks, Buffalo Sabres,
Detroit Red
Wings, and the Ottawa Senators. During his years in
Buffalo, he became one of the league's finest goaltenders, earning
him the nickname "The Dominator". His strong play
has been credited with establishing European goaltenders in a
league widely dominated by North Americans.[2]
Hašek was one of the league's most successful goaltenders of the
1990s and early 2000s. From 1993 to 2001, he won six Vezina Trophies,
and in 1998 he became the first goaltender to win consecutive Hart
Trophies.[3]
During the 1998 Winter
Olympics in Nagano, Japan, he led the Czech
national ice hockey team to its first and only Olympic gold
medal. The feat made him a popular figure in his home country[4]
and prompted hockey legend Wayne Gretzky to call him "the best
player in the game".[5]
While with the Red Wings in 2002, Hašek became the first
European starting goaltender to win the Stanley Cup.[6] In the
process, he set a record for shutouts in a postseason year.
Hašek is considered an unorthodox goaltender, with a distinct
style that has labeled him a "flopper".[7]
He is best known for his concentration, foot speed, flexibility,
and unconventional saves, such as covering the puck with his
blocker rather than his trapper.[7]
Hašek is regarded as a future Hall of Famer by those in the
hockey world.[8] At the
time of his retirement, he was the oldest active goalie in the NHL
at 43, and the second oldest active player in the league after Red
Wings teammate Chris
Chelios, who was 46. Hašek announced his retirement on June 9,
2008,[9] but on
April 21, 2009 he announced a comeback to professional hockey and
signed a contract with HC Moeller
Pardubice of the Czech Extraliga.[10]
Early
life
Hašek started playing hockey at the age of six in his native Czechoslovakia. As he
explains:[11]
“ |
They held a tryout for
5-year-old boys and my father took me there. I didn't even have
real skates. I had those blades that you screwed onto the soles of
your shoes, but I was tall, and the 9-year-olds didn't have a
goalie, so they put me in with them and thats where I fell in love
with the game of hockey. |
” |
In 1980, the 15-year old Hašek joined the top hockey league in
the country, becoming the youngest hockey player in history to play
at the professional level, playing for his home team HC Pardubice of the
Czechoslovak Extraliga, winning two league
titles in 1987 and 1989. The next year, he was drafted by the Czech
army to play for Dukla Jihlava. After making his mark and
eventually playing for the Czechoslovakian National team, Hašek
entered the NHL draft and was drafted by the Chicago Blackhawks in
1983. At the time, NHL teams were
wary of drafting players from behind the Iron Curtain who were often unwilling to
play in the NHL or barred from doing so by their countries.
Consequently, Hašek was picked in the 10th round (199th overall)
and was the seventeenth goalie selected. Hašek did not even know he
had been drafted until several months later.[12]
Until 1990, Hašek played in his native Czechoslovakia for HC Pardubice and HC
Jihlava. He was named the top ice hockey player of the Czechoslovak
Extraliga in 1987, 1989, and 1990, and Goaltender of the Year from
1986 through 1990.[13]
With the end
of communist rule in 1989, the borders of the Soviet Bloc
countries opened, allowing Hašek to emigrate to the United States
with aspirations of playing in the NHL.[12]
His American career began with the Indianapolis Ice of the IHL, where he played parts of two seasons.
His NHL debut with the Blackhawks finally came in the 1990–91 season, eight years after
the 1983 NHL Entry Draft.
NHL
career
Chicago
Blackhawks
In Chicago, Hašek spent time as the backup to Ed Belfour, and played
only 25 games over two seasons with the Blackhawks. On November 6,
1990, wearing the number 34 (31 was worn by Ed Belfour in his
rookie year), Hašek made his first NHL start in a 1–1 tie against
the Hartford
Whalers.[14]
His first victory came on March 8, 1991, in a 5–3 performance over
the Buffalo Sabres, and on January 9, 1992, he recorded his first
shutout in a 2–0 win against the Toronto Maple Leafs.[14]
Buffalo Sabres
(1992–1998)
After a Stanley Cup finals loss to Mario Lemieux and the Pittsburgh
Penguins, Hašek was traded to the Buffalo Sabres for goalie Stephane Beauregard and future
considerations, which later materialized into a draft pick used to
obtain Éric
Dazé. In Buffalo, wearing number 39, he was initially the
backup goaltender, first playing behind Tom Draper and then Grant Fuhr. When Fuhr was injured partway
through the season, Hašek was elevated to starter, where he soon
developed into a top tier goaltender. In 1994, he won his first Vezina Trophy, was
runner-up for the Hart Trophy and shared the William M. Jennings Trophy
with Fuhr. Hašek played 58 games with a league-best 1.95 goals
against average (GAA), seven shutouts, and a .930 save
percentage. He followed this feat by again winning the Vezina
Trophy and again placing as a Hart finalist in 1995.
Hašek's continued success in the 1996–97 season was overshadowed by a
conflict with then-head coach Ted Nolan. The conflict created a tense,
clique-like atmosphere in the Sabres' clubhouse.[15]
In game three of the first round series against the Ottawa
Senators, Hašek removed himself in the second period and was
replaced by Steve
Shields.[16]
Hašek suffered a mild sprain of his right MCL, and the team doctor
pronounced him day-to-day. However, the media and some teammates
speculated that Hašek was using his injury to bail out on the
team.[15]
One such individual was Buffalo News
columnist Jim Kelley,
who wrote a column which detailed Hašek's injury and his conflict
with Nolan, and questioned the goaltender's mental toughness.[17]
When Kelley approached Hašek for an interview after a loss in game
five of the best-of-seven series, Hašek attacked the journalist[17]
and received a three-game suspension and a $10,000 (US) fine as a
result of the incident. With Steve Shields in goal, the Sabres
fought back against the Senators and took the series in seven
games. However, Hašek claimed his knee was still injured and did
not play in the five-game loss in the following series against the
Philadelphia Flyers.
Though General Manager John Muckler was named "Executive of the
Year", he was fired for his constant feuding with Nolan. Hašek, who
sided with Muckler, stated in an interview during the 1997 NHL
Awards Ceremony that it would be better if Nolan was not
rehired.[18]
Despite winning the Jack Adams Award as top coach and
being popular with the Sabres fanbase, Nolan was only offered a
one-year contract extension by replacement GM Darcy Regier. He
rejected this under the grounds that it was too short, and decided
to part ways with the franchise. This upset many fans, who blamed
Nolan's departure on Hašek's alleged attempt to rid him.[19] For
the first six weeks of the next season he was booed so vigorously
that arena workers would play tapes of a crowd cheering to help
balance it out.[20] As
the season progressed, Hašek played well and won back many fans. He
won the Vezina Trophy again, as well as the Lester B. Pearson Award and the
Hart
Trophy for league MVP. He became one the few goaltenders in NHL
history to win the Hart, alongside Al Rollins and José
Théodore, and Hall of Famers Jacques Plante, Chuck Rayner and Roy Worters.
Hašek played a career high 72 games in the 1997–98 season, and set a team
record with 13 shutouts. Six of these shutouts came in December,
which tied the all-time NHL record for most in one month.[21]
He again won the Lester B. Pearson Award, the Hart Trophy, and the
Vezina Trophy, becoming the first goalie in NHL history to win the
Hart twice. He donated the $10,000 prize money after winning the
Pearson Award in 1998 to the Variety Club of Buffalo.[21]
In the off-season he signed a $26 million deal, the highest
goaltender salary contract at that time.[22]
1999
Stanley Cup Finals
In 1999, Hašek averaged a career best
1.87 GAA and .937 save percentage, capturing him his third
consecutive Vezina, and fifth overall. He was also a finalist for
the Hart and Pearson trophies. Though the Sabres did not have a
stellar regular season and finished with the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference, they
defeated the Ottawa Senators, Boston Bruins, and Toronto Maple Leafs in
the playoffs en route to a best-of-seven Stanley Cup Final against
the Presidents' Trophy-winning Dallas Stars. The
Sabres eventually lost the series four games to two, with the
decisive sixth game being one of the longest Stanley Cup playoff
games in NHL history. Hašek and Ed Belfour made 50 and 53 saves,
respectively, in a sudden-death triple-overtime duel that only
ended when Brett Hull
scored a controversial Cup-winning goal with his foot in the goal
crease.[23]
The goal was not reviewed immediately, so officials did not notice
Hull's foot in the crease until minutes later. After video reviews
showed Hull's position, the goal was still upheld, leaving the
Sabres infuriated. Hašek commented, "Maybe [the video goal judge]
was in the bathroom. Maybe he was sleeping. Maybe he doesn't know
the rule."[24]
The following season, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman announced that video replays
would no longer be used to judge if players are in the crease or
not, and that it would be a judgment call by the officiating
crew.
After the season ended, Hašek contemplated retirement because of
a combination of injuries and a desire to become more involved in
his family life.[25]
The announcement stunned many of his teammates, particularly Mike
Peca and Jason
Woolley.[25]
Final years
with Buffalo (1999–2001)
In the 1999–2000 season, Hašek was
hampered by a nagging groin injury.[26]
He missed forty games and failed to win a major NHL award for the
first time in several years. Though he healed in time for the
playoffs, the Sabres were eliminated in the first round in five
games by the Philadelphia Flyers.
In 2000–01—his final season with
Buffalo—Hašek set a modern era record by collecting his sixth
Vezina Trophy. He also won his second William M. Jennings Trophy.
The Sabres played Philadelphia in the first round of the playoffs
again, where Hašek outplayed his 1998 Olympic back-up Roman
Čechmánek.[27]
In the clinching sixth game, Hašek recorded a shutout against the
Flyers. In the second round, the Sabres played a seven-game series
against Mario
Lemieux's Pittsburgh Penguins, which
culminated with the Penguins winning the final game in
overtime.
Detroit
Red Wings and Ottawa Senators (2001–2008)
Before the start of the next season, Hašek was traded to
the Detroit Red Wings in an attempt to lower the Sabres' payroll
and to send Hašek to a more competitive team.[2]
He was dealt for Vyacheslav Kozlov, a first round
selection in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft and future
considerations, which eventually became the draft pick of Jim
Slater. During his first season with
Detroit, Hašek posted a career high 41 wins with just 15
losses,[28]
helping the Red Wings earn the President's Trophy with the league's
best record. In the playoffs, he led the Wings past the Vancouver
Canucks, the St. Louis
Blues, the Colorado Avalanche and eventually
the Carolina Hurricanes in the finals
to win the Stanley
Cup. During the conference finals against Colorado, he became
the first goalie to be awarded an assist on an overtime
game-winning goal in the post-season after passing the puck to
Wings captain Steve
Yzerman,[29]
who then assisted Fredrik Olausson in scoring the final
goal of the third game of that series. He also set a record for
most shutouts in a post-season with six.
That summer, Hašek officially announced his retirement so that
he could spend time with his family and other hobbies.[30]
However, after Detroit's first round loss to the Mighty Ducks of
Anaheim in the following season, he expressed his
desire to play again. This created a difficult situation for the
Red Wings, who had two years left on Curtis Joseph's three-year $24 million
contract, which had a no-trade clause. Detroit was also under
pressure knowing that the rival Colorado Avalanche would be looking
for a goalie to replace Patrick Roy after his retirement.[30]
With Manny
Legacé also on the Wings' roster, Detroit now had three
potential starting goalies.
In the 2003–04 season Hašek
injured his groin after playing just 14 games. On January 9, he and
the team agreed he should rest his injury for two to four weeks.
Hašek privately told general manager Ken Holland that he would not accept any
pay while he was injured. On February 10, he announced that he was
not going to continue to play that season, surprising the Red Wings
management.[31] He
eventually revealed that he refused about $3 million of his $6
million salary.[32] In
April 2004, he underwent groin surgery in Prague, and returned to his hometown of
Pardubice to recuperate. After his contract with the Wings expired,
Hašek announced his intention to play for a Stanley Cup contender,
and specifically named the Ottawa Senators as a possibility.[33] On
July 6, 2004, after trading Patrick Lalime to the St. Louis Blues,
the Senators signed Hašek to a one-year deal.
During the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Hašek toured
with the Primus Worldstars. Similar to the tour Wayne Gretzky and IMG formed during
the 1994–95 NHL lockout, the Primus
Worldstars Tour ran December 7–23, playing in seven different
countries (Riga, Latvia; Moscow and St Petersburg, Russia;
Bratislava, Slovakia; Bern, Switzerland; Karlstad, Jonkoping and
Linkoping, Sweden; Oslo, Norway; Katowice, Poland) in ten scheduled
games. The tour competed against all-star teams or club teams of
each country.[34]
Hašek played increasingly well for the Senators up until the 2006
Winter Olympics in Turin.
During the season, he reached 300 career wins, and his GAA and save
percentage were the second-best in the league. Upon departure to
Turin, Hašek's equipment was accidentally left behind in Ottawa. This caused Hašek to miss
a number of practices with the Czech
National team. At the Winter Olympics, he injured his right adductor muscle while
making a save in the first qualifying match against Germany, forcing
him to leave the game after only 9 minutes and 25 seconds.[35]
Hašek's injury caused him to miss the rest of the regular season
and post-season, despite several rumours that he would return in
time for the
playoffs. He said that if he were to be re-signed, he would
play for a base salary of $500,000 with bonuses.[36]
After the Senators were eliminated in the second round, they
opted not to re-sign Hašek, despite Hašek's willingness to take a
pay cut. On July 31, 2006, at the age of 41, Hašek joined the Red
Wings for the third time. He signed a one-year $750,000 US
contract, with added bonuses if the team succeeded in the playoffs.
He posted 38 wins and a 2.05 GAA while leading the Red Wings to the
number one seed in the Western Conference. He also
broke his own personal record by going 181 minutes and 17 seconds
without allowing a goal.[37]
Midway through the regular season, the team announced that to avoid
injury and preserve Hašek for the playoffs, he would not play on
consecutive nights.[38] He
played his first consecutive nights of the season on April 21 and
22 against the Calgary Flames in games 5 and 6 of the
Western Conference Quarterfinals. Hašek won both games, clinching
the series for Detroit. In the next round against the San Jose
Sharks, the Red Wings were on the road and down two games to
one, but Hašek held the Sharks to three goals in the next three
games. His 28-save shutout in game six tied him for sixth place on
the all-time NHL playoff shutouts list and sent the Red Wings to
the Western Conference finals against the Anaheim Ducks. However, Hašek and the Red
Wings lost in six games to the Ducks, who eventually defeated the
Ottawa Senators for the Stanley Cup.
Hašek contemplated retirement in the 2007 offseason, but on July
5, 2007, he signed a one-year contract with Detroit worth $2
million with up to $2 million in bonuses,[39]
reportedly turning down $5 million for salary cap room for the rest
of the Red Wings' roster.[40]
During the 2007–08 season, he was replaced by
backup Chris
Osgood. When Hašek recovered and got back into his stride,
Detroit chose to alternate goaltenders in tandem instead of
designating either as the backup. Detroit coach Mike Babcock
announced Hašek to start in the 2008 playoffs. Through the first two games
against the Nashville Predators, the Red Wings
were victorious, but after a lackluster performance in the next
two, Osgood was declared as the number one goaltender for the
playoffs.[41]
Despite expressing disappointment at losing his starting position,
Hašek maintained his professionalism in practice and continued to
support his teammates, with Darren McCarty citing close relationship
between Hašek and Osgood.[42]
Eventually the Red Wings beat the Pittsburgh Penguins in six games
for the Stanley Cup.
On June 9, 2008, Hašek announced his retirement from the NHL,
only five days after winning his second Stanley Cup with the Detroit Red
Wings. He says he lacks the motivation for another year in the
NHL. With Osgood, the two were awarded the William Jennings Trophy
for least goals against on a team in the season. Hašek is expected
to be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in his first
year of eligibility.[42]
However, in April 2009, Hašek once again came out of retirement and
signed a one-year contract with HC Moeller
Pardubice, the club where he started his long career.
International
play
Hašek in goal for the Czech Republic during the gold medal
game
Hašek's most memorable international performance came in the 1998 Winter
Olympics, where he led the Czech
national team to the gold medal. He allowed six goals in total,
with only two of them coming in the medal round. Against Team
Canada in the semifinals, Hašek stopped Theoren Fleury, Ray Bourque, Joe Nieuwendyk, Eric Lindros and Brendan
Shanahan in a dramatic shootout win. He then shut out the Russian team 1–0
in the final game, stopping 20 shots. He was later announced as the
best goaltender in the Olympics. After he won the gold, he was
quoted as saying:[43]
“ |
"When the game ended, I
just threw my stick. I was so happy. When I saw the flag go up, I
saw my whole career flash before my eyes from the first time my
parents took me to a game until now." |
” |
His play made him one of the most popular figures in the Czech
Republic, so much so that residents chanted "Hašek to the castle!"
in the streets. In response to this, Hašek called the country's
president Václav
Havel and jokingly told him that his job was not in
jeopardy.[44] He
also helped to inspire an opera (titled Nagano) about the
Czech team's gold medal victory,[45] and
in 2003, Petr Pravec
and Lenka Šarounová named an asteroid (8217
Dominikhašek) in his honour.[46]
In the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, Hašek played for just nine minutes
and twenty-five seconds, until he injured his right adductor muscle.[47]
Despite his absence, the Czechs managed to earn the bronze medal
with backup goaltender Tomáš Vokoun, which Hašek received as
well.
Style of
play
Hašek displaying his flexibility in warm-ups before a 2006 game.
Hašek's flexibility is credited as one of his strengths.
Hašek has an unorthodox goaltending style.[7][48] He is
extraordinarily flexible and was jokingly described in a MasterCard commercial as
having "a Slinky for a
spine".[49]
In order to cover the bottom of the net, where most goals are
scored, Hašek drops down on almost every shot. His
"flopping" style is derived from him flailing in the crease, using
every part of his body, including his head, to stop the puck. Hašek
occasionally drops his stick and covers the puck with his stick
hand, whereas most goaltenders would use the glove hand
instead.[7]
In response to the speculation he receives from his style, Hašek
explained:[11]
“ |
They say I am
unorthodox, I flop around the ice like some kind of fish. I say,
who cares as long as I stop the puck? |
” |
Hašek's unique style has attracted fans to games.[50]
Because of his flexibility, Hašek can make difficult saves that
other goalies cannot[11]—an
opposing coach once referred to them as "miracle saves".[50]
These types of saves include toe-stops, snagging pucks from behind
his back, and a desperation maneuver known as the "Hašek roll".[11][51]
Hašek is also known for his strict regimen of conditioning.[52]
During the off-season between May and September 2006, he lost a
considerable amount of weight to increase his flexibility. Hašek
was one of the last goaltenders to wear a helmet-and-cage combo
rather than a contemporary hybrid goalie mask.
Personal
life
Hašek and his wife Alena have a son named Michal (born 1989) and
a daughter named Dominika (born 1994). He divides much of his free
time playing squash and inline hockey, where he plays defense.
When he was younger, Hašek played competitive soccer as a
midfielder, and was a junior tennis champion in Eastern Bohemia.[53] His
brother Martin is also a competitive athlete and
played for the Czech Republic soccer team AC Sparta Praha before retiring and
eventually deciding to coach. Cousin Ivan Hašek also played professional soccer.
Hobby-wise, Hašek claims that he has been a fan of professional
wrestling since his Buffalo days, and says that he mostly follows
his favorite wrestlers, Stone Cold Steve Austin and Don "The Rock" Muraco.
And he and his son can be see many times through out the night at
WrestleMania
23. Being front row at Ford Field.[54]
Because of his formal education, Hašek stands out among Czech
sportsmen. He earned a university degree after studying
history and the Czech language in the Faculty of
Education at the University of Hradec
Králové, which qualified him to be a teacher, and led him to
teach high school classes.[55]
Hašek also has a brand of sportswear named Dominator
Clothing, which was launched shortly after the Nagano Olympics
in 1998 and is popular among Dominik's fans in the Czech Republic.
It also had two locations in Michigan for a short time.[56] In
May 2001, Hašek founded the Dominik Hašek Youth Hockey
League/Hašek's Heroes, and donated over $1 million to
help underprivileged children in Buffalo play hockey.[57] In
1998, he also organized a charity hockey game in Prague, and
donated the profits to hospitals in the Czech Republic.[58]
Hašek is known to appreciate humor to keep team spirits up, and
often jokes about his resemblance to Cosmo Kramer of Seinfeld.[59] In
the late 1990s, he was featured in a Mastercard commercial
that praised his flexibility.[49]
On November 26, 2006, Mark Parisi's comic panel off
the mark featured a comic about Hašek's childhood.[60]
Throughout his long career, Hašek has been represented by agent
Ritch Winter.[21]
Inline hockey game
incident
During an inline hockey game on May 18, 2003, Hašek was accused
of assaulting another player. He was playing as a defender for
Bonfire Střída when he crosschecked Martin Šíla. The prosecutor in
the case, Lenka Strnadová, ruled two months later that there was no
evidence that Hašek intended bodily harm and recommended the case
be treated as a misdemeanor, punishable only by fine ($95 USD
maximum), rather than a felony where jail time would have been
possible.[61]
Hašek's lawyer Pavel Jelínek announced in a statement that media
reports about the incident were exaggerated, with Šíla not having
sustained any documented injuries. In October 2003, the country's
top prosecutor overruled Strnadová, saying her ruling was unlawful
because the case had not been properly investigated. The Pardubice
prosecution then investigated the case again, and reached the same
decision as Strnadová.[62]
Legacy
Milestones
Hašek earned his 300th National Hockey League win on October 15,
2005, in a 5–1 home victory with the Ottawa Senators over the
Boston Bruins. He stopped 34 of 35 shots and was holding a shutout
until Bruins forward Pat Leahy jammed a loose puck
under him three minutes into the third period. He became the
twenty-second goaltender to reach the milestone.[7]
He is the oldest goaltender in NHL history to post a 30-win season,
and in 1997, he became the first goaltender to win the Lester B.
Pearson Award for most outstanding player in the league. He is also
the only goaltender to win the Hart Trophy twice for most valuable
player, and was only one Vezina Trophy away from tying Jacques
Plante's record of seven. Hašek's personal best shutout streak is
181 minutes, 17 seconds.
Records
In nine seasons with the Buffalo Sabres, Hašek acquired over 25
franchise records, including most all-time games played, wins,
shutouts and lowest goals against average.[21]
He also holds the Sabres' record for most shutouts in a single
season with 13 in 1997–98, and lowest goals against average in a
single season with a total of 1.87 in 1998–99. During the Detroit
Red Wings' championship run in 2002, Hašek set franchise records
for most games played, minutes played, wins and shutouts in a
playoff year. He holds several notable NHL records:
- General
- Before retirement
- 3rd place – Most shutouts of all active players
- 4th place – Most wins of all active players
- All-time
- 1st place – Highest career save percent (.922)
- 1st place – Most games played by a European
born goaltender (694)
- 6th place – Most shutouts (81)
- 8th place – Lowest goals against average (2.20)
- 10th place – Most wins (389)
- Regular season
- First European goalie to lead the NHL in GAA (1993–94)
- First goalie since 1974 to have a GAA below 2.00 (1993–94)
- Most shutouts in one month (six in 97–98)
- Playoffs
- Before retirement
- 3rd place – Most shutouts of all active players (15)
- 4th place – Most wins of all active players (61)
- All-time
- 2nd place – Most shutouts in one season (6)
- 3rd place – Most shutouts (15)
- 10th place – Most wins (61)
Career
statistics
Bolded numbers indicate season leader
Regular
season
|
|
Season |
Team |
League |
GP |
W |
L |
T† |
MIN |
GA |
SA |
SO |
GAA |
SV% |
1980-81 |
HC
Pardubice |
CSEx |
9 |
-- |
-- |
-- |
598 |
24 |
-- |
-- |
2.98 |
-- |
1981–82 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
12 |
— |
— |
— |
661 |
34 |
— |
— |
3.09 |
— |
1982–83 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
42 |
— |
— |
— |
2,358 |
105 |
— |
— |
2.67 |
— |
1983–84 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
40 |
— |
— |
— |
2,304 |
108 |
— |
— |
2.81 |
— |
1984–85 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
42 |
— |
— |
— |
2,419 |
131 |
— |
— |
3.25 |
— |
1985–86 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
45 |
— |
— |
— |
2,689 |
138 |
— |
— |
3.08 |
— |
1986–87 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
43 |
— |
— |
— |
2,515 |
103 |
— |
— |
2.46 |
— |
1987–88 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
31 |
— |
— |
— |
1,862 |
93 |
— |
— |
3.00 |
— |
1988–89 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
42 |
— |
— |
— |
2,507 |
114 |
— |
— |
2.73 |
— |
1989–90 |
Dukla Jihlava |
CSEx |
40 |
— |
— |
— |
2,251 |
80 |
— |
— |
2.13 |
— |
1990–91 |
Indianapolis Ice |
IHL |
33 |
20 |
11 |
1 |
1,903 |
80 |
— |
5 |
2.46 |
— |
1990–91 |
Chicago Blackhawks |
NHL |
5 |
3 |
0 |
1 |
195 |
8 |
93 |
0 |
2.46 |
.914 |
1991–92 |
Indianapolis Ice |
IHL |
20 |
7 |
10 |
3 |
1,162 |
69 |
— |
1 |
3.56 |
— |
1991–92 |
Chicago Blackhawks |
NHL |
20 |
10 |
4 |
1 |
1,014 |
44 |
413 |
1 |
2.60 |
.893 |
1992–93 |
Buffalo
Sabres |
NHL |
28 |
11 |
10 |
4 |
1,429 |
75 |
720 |
0 |
3.15 |
.896 |
1993–94 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
58 |
30 |
20 |
6 |
3,358 |
109 |
1,552 |
7 |
1.95 |
.930 |
1994–95 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
41 |
19 |
14 |
7 |
2416 |
85 |
1,221 |
5 |
2.11 |
.930 |
1995–96 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
59 |
22 |
30 |
6 |
3,417 |
161 |
2,011 |
2 |
2.83 |
.920 |
1996–97 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
67 |
37 |
20 |
10 |
4,037 |
153 |
2,177 |
5 |
2.27 |
.930 |
1997–98 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
72 |
33 |
23 |
13 |
4,220 |
147 |
2,149 |
13 |
2.09 |
.932 |
1998–99 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
64 |
30 |
18 |
14 |
3,817 |
119 |
1,877 |
9 |
1.87 |
.937 |
1999–2000 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
35 |
15 |
11 |
6 |
2,066 |
76 |
937 |
3 |
2.21 |
.919 |
2000–01 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
67 |
37 |
24 |
4 |
3,904 |
137 |
1,726 |
11 |
2.11 |
.921 |
2001–02 |
Detroit
Red Wings |
NHL |
65 |
41 |
15 |
8 |
3,872 |
140 |
1,654 |
5 |
2.17 |
.915 |
2002–03 |
Did not play |
— |
Retired |
2003–04 |
Detroit Red Wings |
NHL |
14 |
8 |
3 |
2 |
816 |
30 |
324 |
2 |
2.20 |
.907 |
2004–05 |
Did not play |
— |
See 2004–05 NHL lockout |
2005–06 |
Ottawa
Senators |
NHL |
43 |
28 |
10 |
4 |
2,583 |
90 |
1,202 |
5 |
2.09 |
.925 |
2006–07 |
Detroit Red Wings |
NHL |
56 |
38 |
11 |
6 |
3,341 |
114 |
1,309 |
8 |
2.05 |
.913 |
2007–08 |
Detroit Red Wings |
NHL |
41 |
27 |
10 |
3 |
2,350 |
84 |
855 |
5 |
2.14 |
.902 |
2008-09 |
Did not play |
— |
Retired |
2009-10 |
HC Pardubice |
CSEx |
3 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
195 |
8 |
111 |
0 |
2.46 |
.928 |
CSEx totals |
351 |
— |
— |
— |
20,487 |
944 |
— |
— |
2.76 |
— |
IHL totals |
53 |
27 |
21 |
4 |
3,065 |
149 |
— |
6 |
2.92 |
— |
NHL totals |
735 |
389 |
223 |
82 |
42,826 |
1,572 |
20,220 |
81 |
2.20 |
.922 |
- † Note: As of the 2005–06 season, ties have been
replaced by an overtime or shootout loss.
Playoffs
|
|
Season |
Team |
League |
GP |
W |
L |
MIN |
GA |
SA |
SO |
GAA |
SV% |
1990–91 |
Chicago Blackhawks |
NHL |
3 |
0 |
0 |
69 |
3 |
39 |
0 |
2.60 |
.923 |
1990–91 |
Indianapolis Ice |
IHL |
1 |
1 |
0 |
60 |
3 |
— |
— |
3.00 |
— |
1991–92 |
Chicago Blackhawks |
NHL |
3 |
0 |
2 |
158 |
8 |
70 |
0 |
3.03 |
.886 |
1992–93 |
Buffalo
Sabres |
NHL |
1 |
1 |
0 |
45 |
1 |
24 |
0 |
1.33 |
.958 |
1993–94 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
7 |
3 |
4 |
384 |
13 |
261 |
2 |
1.61 |
.950 |
1994–95 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
5 |
1 |
4 |
309 |
18 |
131 |
0 |
3.49 |
.863 |
1996–97 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
3 |
1 |
1 |
153 |
5 |
68 |
0 |
1.96 |
.926 |
1997–98 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
15 |
10 |
5 |
948 |
32 |
514 |
1 |
2.02 |
.938 |
1998–99 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
19 |
13 |
6 |
1,217 |
36 |
587 |
2 |
1.77 |
.939 |
1999–2000 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
5 |
1 |
4 |
301 |
12 |
147 |
0 |
2.39 |
.918 |
2000–01 |
Buffalo Sabres |
NHL |
13 |
7 |
6 |
833 |
29 |
347 |
1 |
2.08 |
.916 |
2001–02 |
Detroit
Red Wings |
NHL |
23 |
16 |
7 |
1,455 |
45 |
562 |
6 |
1.85 |
.920 |
2006–07 |
Detroit Red Wings |
NHL |
18 |
10 |
8 |
1,139 |
34 |
444 |
2 |
1.79 |
.923 |
2007–08 |
Detroit Red Wings |
NHL |
4 |
2 |
2 |
202 |
10 |
89 |
0 |
2.91 |
.888 |
NHL Playoff Totals |
119 |
65 |
49 |
7,316 |
246 |
3,283 |
14 |
2.02 |
.925 |
International
Bolded numbers indicate tournament leader
|
|
Year |
Team |
Event |
GP |
W |
L |
T |
MIN |
GA |
SV |
SO |
GAA |
SV% |
1983 |
Czechoslovakia |
IHWC |
2 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
120 |
5 |
— |
1 |
2.50 |
— |
1984 |
Czechoslovakia |
CC |
4 |
0 |
3 |
1 |
188 |
12 |
— |
08 |
4.00 |
— |
1984 |
Czechoslovakia |
WJC |
7 |
4 |
0 |
2 |
380 |
10 |
— |
0 |
1.89 |
— |
1986 |
Czechoslovakia |
IHWC |
9 |
5 |
3 |
1 |
538 |
19 |
— |
0 |
2.12 |
— |
1987 |
Czechoslovakia |
IHWC |
9 |
5 |
2 |
2 |
520 |
19 |
— |
1 |
2.19 |
— |
1987 |
Czechoslovakia |
CC |
6 |
2 |
3 |
1 |
360 |
20 |
— |
0 |
3.33 |
— |
1988 |
Czechoslovakia |
Oly |
5 |
3 |
2 |
0 |
217 |
18 |
— |
0 |
4.98 |
— |
1989 |
Czechoslovakia |
IHWC |
10 |
4 |
4 |
2 |
600 |
21 |
— |
2 |
2.10 |
— |
1990 |
Czechoslovakia |
IHWC |
8 |
5 |
3 |
0 |
480 |
20 |
— |
1 |
2.50 |
— |
1991 |
Czechoslovakia |
CC |
5 |
1 |
4 |
0 |
300 |
18 |
— |
0 |
3.60 |
— |
1998 |
Czech
Republic |
Oly |
6 |
5 |
1 |
0 |
369 |
6 |
155 |
2 |
0.97 |
.961 |
2002 |
Czech Republic |
Oly |
4 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
239 |
8 |
105 |
0 |
2.01 |
.948 |
2006 |
Czech Republic |
Oly |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
9 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0.00 |
1.000 |
Senior Totals |
69 |
32 |
28 |
8 |
3940 |
166 |
— |
7 |
2.40 |
— |
Olympic Totals |
16 |
9 |
5 |
1 |
834.25 |
14 |
261 |
2 |
2.00 |
.946 |
Awards
NHL
Award |
Year(s) awarded |
Hart Memorial Trophy |
1997, 1998[63] |
Lester B. Pearson Award |
1997, 1998[64] |
Vezina
Trophy |
1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001[65] |
William M. Jennings
Trophy |
1994, 2001, 2008[66] |
NHL First
All-Star Team |
1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001 |
NHL
All-Rookie Team |
1991–92 |
All-Star Game |
1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 (did not play due to injury), 2002 |
Nominations
Czechoslovak and Czech
awards
International
Transactions
- June 8, 1983 – Drafted by Chicago in the 10th round, 199th
overall
- August 7, 1992 – Traded to Buffalo for Stephane Beauregard and
a fourth round pick (Éric Dazé)
- March 19, 1998 – Agreed with Buffalo on a three-year,
twenty-six million dollar contract
- June 30, 2001 – Traded to Detroit for Vyacheslav Kozlov, a
first round pick in 2002 (Jim Slater) and future
considerations
- June 25, 2002 – Announced retirement from professional
hockey
- July 8, 2003 – Returned to Detroit as an active player
- July 6, 2004 – Signed as a free agent by Ottawa
- July 27, 2005 – Contract option exercised by Ottawa for 2005–06 season
- July 31, 2006 – Signed as a free agent by Detroit
- July 5, 2007 – Signed as a free agent by Detroit
- June 9, 2008 – Again announced retirement from professional
hockey
See also
References
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Persondata |
NAME |
Hašek, Dominik |
ALTERNATIVE
NAMES |
Hasek, Dominik (English) |
SHORT
DESCRIPTION |
NHL goaltender |
DATE OF BIRTH |
January 29, 1965 |
PLACE OF
BIRTH |
Pardubice, Czechoslovakia |
DATE OF DEATH |
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PLACE OF
DEATH |
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