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Wikipedia:WikiProject Ice Hockey/Player pages format

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This page provides a recommended format and other information for aticles about ice hockey players. All of the examples are taken from Scott Walker except for some goaltender specific stuff. Obviously, not all articles will conform to this standard (ex. Wayne Gretzky and Billy Boucher). However, it would be fabulous if all the hockey player pages had the same, "look and feel".

Article Sections

The first paragraph should be a very short introduction. Some people like to put the person's position in, that is perfectly acceptable and probably preferred. The team that the person plays for should not be listed here, rather it should be noted in the Playing Career section below. Do not say that the player "was" a hockey player unless he is deceased, rather say that he is a retired hockey player.

The following line is a good example of an Introduction:

Scott Walker (born July 19, 1973, in Cambridge, Ontario), is a Canadian professional ice hockey player. He plays right wing, but prior to the 1996-97 NHL season he played defense.

The next section should be in paragraph form and provide an overview of the player's career. It should note which draft the player was drafted in (or if the player was undrafted the article should note that fact). Drafts should be formated as: [[1999 NHL Entry Draft]] (most of the draft year articles have not been completed but this way the links will be there when they get finished).

When noting the year that player did something in the NHL, use the [[2001-02 NHL season]] tags.

The following is an example of a Playing Career section:

Playing career

Scott Walker was selected 124th overall, in the 1993 NHL Entry Draft. He was selected as the 4th choice of the Vancouver Canucks on June 26, 1993. Exactly five years later on June 26, 1998 he was chosen by the Predators in the expansion draft. He currently plays for the Nashville Predators.

Walker became the highest-scoring player in Nashville Predators history during the 2003-04 NHL season. At that time he was one of only three remaining original Predators on the Nashville roster (along with Greg Johnson and Tomas Vokoun).

He played 589 regular season NHL games over ten seasons before making it to post season play. That is the second longest wait in NHL history. Only Guy Charron played more games without making the playoffs. Charron retired in 1981 after 734 games, before he ever played a single post season game.

He has two career hat tricks. The first came December 26, 2000 against the Colorado Avalanche at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville. The first two goals were against David Aebischer and the third was into an empty net. His second hat trick came against the Phoenix Coyotes on December 22, 2002, also in Nashville. All three goals came against Brian Boucher.

He was the first person to ever score an NHL goal at Glendale Arena when on December 27, 2003 he got the puck past Sean Burke at 14:17 of the first period in the arena's first hockey game.

When Greg Johnson was sidlined with injuries, Walker served as the Predator's interim captain from January 12 - January 25, 2003.


After the playing career should come the awards section. This should be a bulleted list of any awards the player has earned. They don't necessarily have to be great awards (like the Norris Trophy or Lady Byng). Try to put them in chronological order if possible.

The following is an example of an Awards section:

Awards

  • Named to the OHL Second All-Star Team in 1993.
  • Member of the Owen Sound Platers' Mastercard All-Time Team.
  • NHL's Offensive Player of the Week for December 22-28, 2003.

The next section should be a bulleted list of any records the person holds. It is acceptable to list records the person no longer holds, as long is it is noted who took the record from them, and when the record was taken from them.

The records listed can be of any level of notoriety (obviously not everyone is Wayne Gretzky). They can be for a franchise, nation, or league. Be sure and note what type of record (team record, league record, etc.) the person holds.

The following is an example of a Records section:

Records

  • Nashville Predator's franchise record for points in a season (67)
  • Nashville Predator's franchise record for career points (231)
  • Nashville Predator's franchise record for career goals (91)
  • Nashville Predator's franchise record for PIM (429)
  • NHL record for games played before making the post season (589) -- (Guy Charron played 734 but he never appeared in the post season).

The next section should be a wikitable of the player's statistics. The look and feel of the table should be the same across all players. There can be more than one totals section, but be sure to include the NHL (or highest league played in) totals. Do not include statistics from international competition, these will be included in the International Comeptition section below.

Golie stats and Skater stats are necessarily different.

The following is an example of a Career Stats section for a skater:

Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1991-92 Owen Sound OHL 53 7 31 38 128 5 0 7 7 8
1992-93 Owen Sound OHL 57 23 68 91 110 8 1 5 6 16
1993-94 Hamilton AHL 77 10 29 39 272 4 0 1 1 25
1994-95 Syracuse AHL 74 14 38 52 334 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 Vancouver NHL 11 0 1 1 33 -- -- -- -- --
1995-96 Syracuse AHL 15 3 12 15 52 16 9 8 17 39
1995-96 Vancouver NHL 63 4 8 12 137 -- -- -- -- --
1996-97 Vancouver NHL 64 3 15 18 132 -- -- -- -- --
1997-98 Vancouver NHL 59 3 10 13 164 -- -- -- -- --
1998-99 Nashville NHL 71 15 25 40 103 -- -- -- -- --
1999-00 Nashville NHL 69 7 21 28 90 -- -- -- -- --
2000-01 Nashville NHL 74 25 29 54 66 -- -- -- -- --
2001-02 Nashville NHL 28 4 5 9 18 -- -- -- -- --
2002-03 Nashville NHL 60 15 18 33 58 -- -- -- -- --
2003-04 Nashville NHL 75 25 42 67 94 6 0 1 1 6
NHL Totals 574 101 174 275 895 6 0 1 1 6

Blank version

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
year team name league - - - - - - - - - -
1992-93 team league - - - - - - - - - -
NHL totals - - - - - - - - - -

The following is an example of a Career Stats section for a goalie (from Tomas Vokoun):

Career statistics

Regular season

   
Season Team League GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA
1993--94 Kladno Czech 1 0 0 0 20 2 0 6.00
1994--95 Kladno Czech 26 -- -- -- 1368 70 -- 3.07
1995--96 Wheeling ECHL 35 20 10 2 1912 117 0 3.67
1996--97 Montreal NHL 1 0 0 0 20 4 0 12.00
1996--97 Fredericton AHL 47 12 26 7 2645 154 2 3.49
1997--98 Fredericton AHL 31 13 13 2 1735 90 0 3.11
1998--99 Nashville NHL 37 12 18 4 1954 96 1 2.95
1998--99 Milwaukee IHL 9 3 2 4 539 22 1 2.45
1999--00 Nashville NHL 33 9 20 1 1879 87 1 2.78
1999--00 Milwaukee IHL 7 5 2 0 364 17 0 2.80
2000--01 Nashville NHL 37 13 17 5 2088 85 2 2.44
2001--02 Nashville NHL 29 5 14 4 1471 66 2 2.69
2002--03 Nashville NHL 69 25 31 11 3974 146 3 2.20
2003--04 Nashville NHL 73 34 29 10 4221 178 3 2.53
NHL CAREER TOTALS 279 98 129 35 15606 662 12 2.55

Post season

   
Season Team League GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA
1994--95 Kladno Czech 5 -- -- -- 240 19 -- 4.75
1995--96 Wheeling ECHL 7 4 3 -- 436 19 0 2.61
1995--96 Fredericton AHL 1 0 1 -- 59 4 0 4.09
1998--99 Milwaukee IHL 2 0 2 -- 149 8 0 3.22
2003--04 Nashville NHL 6 2 4 356 12 1 2.02
NHL Totals 6 2 4 356 12 1 2.02

The final section is the international play section. If the player does not have a lot of international play, this can be a simple bullet list and stats. Or if the player has significant interational play (ie. Ivan Hlinka) then the section could be significantly larger (or the content could be included in Playing Career above).

The following is an example of an International Play section:

International play

  • Played for Team Canada in the 1999 World Championships.
  • Team Canada assistant captain at the 2001 World Championships.

International statistics

Year Team Event GP G A Pts PIM
1999 Canada WC 10 2 3 5 16
2001 Canada WC 7 3 3 6 10

Categories Used for Players

Each player will typically have several categories to which they will belong. Each player should have a category for their nationality and for each team that he or she has ever been member. Also if the player played Major Junior in the CHL, they player should have a category for the league they played in and what junior teams they developed in.

for more information on ice hockey categorization see: Wikipedia:WikiProject Ice Hockey/Category structure.

The following is an example of the code for the categories:

[[Category:Canadian ice hockey players|Walker, Scott]]

[[Category:Nashville Predators players|Walker, Scott]]

[[Category:Vancouver Canucks players|Walker, Scott]]

[[Category:Owen Sound Attack alumni|Walker, Scott]]

[[Category:OHL alumni|Walker, Scott]]

If Player Articles are Not Formatted

If a player's article is not formatted according to this standard, then their name should be included at: Wikipedia:List of unformatted ice hockey players.

If you are looking for something to do, go to that list, pick a player and format the page.


Player Images

You can get and upload images to Wikipedia from the NHLPA Website. You're free to take and use any of the lo-res player pics that are available on the site, as they are distributed freely by the teams. Hi-resolution player pics, however, must be licensed from Getty Images, and therefore most likely cannot be on Wikipedia. So keep the NHLPA images below 200px.