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1977
AMATEUR DRAFT
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1977 NHL DRAFT PICK
Pete Peeters
Selected in eighth round
No. 135 overall by Philadelphia Flyers

Born August 17, 1957
Position: Goaltender
Height: 6-1   Weight: 195
BEFORE THE DRAFT
Last Team: Medicine Hat (WCHL)                      
Birthplace: Edmonton, Alberta (Canada)
Hometown: Edmonton, Alberta
PRE-DRAFT STATISTICS
Year TeamLeague GPW-L-T GAASO SV%
1974-75 EdmontonAlb. Juv. 35n/a 3.250 n/a
1975-76 Medicine HatWCHL 3716-11-9 4.250 .877
1976-77 Medicine HatWCHL 6226-24-12 4.071 .877

PRE-DRAFT AWARDS AND HONORS
Miscellaneous:
Rated in The Hockey News draft preview issue as WCHL's No. 6 goaltender prospect for the 1977 NHL draft. ... Had been a competitive swimmer before shifting to hockey and did not play major-junior hockey until age 18.
NHL CAREER
Debut: December 17, 1978 (St. Louis at Philadelphia)
Numbers:  33 (Philadelphia); 1 (Boston); 1 (Washington)
Stanley Cup: Never won.  Playing Status: Retired September 1991
CAREER NHL STATISTICS
YearsTeams GP W-L-TGAA SOSV%
1978-1991 PHI, BOS, WAS489 246-155-513.08 21n/a
CAREER NHL PLAYOFF STATISTICS
YearsTeams GPW-L GAA SOSV%
1980-1989 PHI, BOS, WAS71 35-353.312 n/a

NHL AWARDS AND HONORS
Vezina Trophy:
1982-83 (Boston)
NHL All-Star First Team: 1982-83 (Boston)
All-Star Game: 1980, 1981 (Philadelphia), 1983, 1984 (Boston)
Stanley Cup Finals (Lost): 1980 (Philadelphia)
Boston TV38 Seventh Player Award: 1982-83
Boston Dufresne Award (Home Games MVP): 1982-83
Boston Gallery Gods Award (Best Defensive Player: 1982-83
NHL Records: Longest unbeaten streak by a rookie goaltender (27 games -- 22-0-5 -- in 1979-80)
Philadelphia Records: Longest unbeaten streak by a goaltender (27 games in 1979-80), best single-season winning percentage (.808)
NHL GAA Leader: 1982-83 (Boston) (2.36), 1987-88 (Wash.) (2.78)
NHL Shutouts Leader: 1982-83 (Boston) (8 shutouts)
NHL Wins Leader: 1982-83 (Boston) (40 wins)
NHL Playoffs Goalie-Games Played Leader: 1983 (Boston) (17)
NHL Playoffs Minutes Leader: 1983 (Boston) (1,024 minutes)
Coaching Career: Named Minnesota goaltending coach in January 1992 and remained in that position through 1991-92 season. ... Named Winnipeg goaltending coach on Jan. 13, 1994, relocated with franchise to Phoenix on July 1, 1996, and remained in that position until July 3, 1997. ... Named Edmonton goaltending coach on Feb. 22, 2001, and remained in that position through 2006-07 season.
Miscellaneous: Nearly rejected his first call-up to the NHL because he was expecting his family to visit him in Maine over the 1978 Christmas holiday and didn't want to miss their visit. ... Beat St. Louis 4-1 in his first NHL game/start, making 16 saves for Philadelphia and losing a shutout with 59 seconds left in the game. ...  Played on Philadelphia team that set NHL record with 35-game unbeaten streak from Oct. 14, 1979, to Jan. 6, 1980. Did not lose a game during the 1979-80 season until Feb. 19, 1980. ... Had run-in with Philadelphia reporter during the 1981-82 season in which he was accused of physically abusing the reporter. The incident was a factor in his being traded the following summer. ... Wore No. 33 in Boston's 1982 training camp. ... Set Boston record (since broken) for minutes played by a goaltender in one playoff year with 1,024 in 1983. ... Missed part of 1982-83 season with groin injury. ... Had 31-game unbeaten streak (26-0-5) for Boston in 1982-83. ... Named NHL Player of the Week three times during 1982-83 season. ... Named NHL Player of the Month for November 1982 and January 1983. ... Was runner-up to Wayne Gretzky for 1982-83 Hart Trophy. ... Missed parts of 1983-84 season with concussion, an injury suffered when his head it the crossbar during Boston's Nov. 3, 1983, game vs. St. Louis, and with whiplash, an injury suffered during Boston's March 1, 1984, game vs. Los Angeles. ... Hampered during 1983-84 season by flu and infected sinuses. ... Was ejected from Boston's March 4, 1984, game at Hartford for his role in a scuffle at the end of the second period of a game in which he was his team's backup goalie. ... Led all NHL goaltenders with 36 penalty minutes for Boston in 1983-84. ... Allowed Mario Lemieux's first NHL goal during Boston's Oct. 11, 1984, game vs. Pittsburgh. ... Named NHL Player of Week for week of Oct. 22-28, 1984. ... Missed part of 1984-85 season with re-aggravation of ankle injury suffered during 1984 Canada Cup tournament. ... Missed part of 1985-86 season with pulled stomach muscle, an injury suffered during Washington's Jan. 28, 1986, game at Detroit. ... Named NHL Co-Player of the Week (with Bob Sauve) for week ending Jan. 24, 1988. ... Named NHL Player of the Week for week ending Feb. 14, 1988. ... Missed part of 1987-88 season with leg injuries. ... Set Washington record (since broken) for wins in a playoff year with seven in 1988. ... Named NHL Player of the Week for week ending Jan. 8, 1989. ... Missed end of 1990-91 season with sprained left knee. ... Released by Philadelphia, which bought out the final year of his contract on September 26, 1991. He chose to retire rather than find another team.
The Phantom Trade: Peeters was traded by Philadelphia with Keith Acton to Winnipeg in exchange for future considerations on Sept. 28, 1989. Five days later, on Oct. 3, 1989, Winnipeg returned Peeters and Acton to Philadelphia in exchange for Toronto's 1991 fifth-round pick (Juha Ylonen) and an agreement to cancel the future considerations owed from a July 21, 1989, trade in which Winnipeg sent Shawn Cronin to Philadelphia. The Acton-Peeters deal was made to protect Philadelphia from losing either player in the 1989 NHL Waiver Draft. Neither Peeters nor Acton ever reported to Winnipeg during the five days between the two trades because Winnipeg general manager Mike Smith told them it wasn't necessary. At the time of the second trade, Winnipeg was given the option to take a 1990 sixth-round pick or 1991 fifth-round pick. The controversial trade prompted an investigation by the NHL, but Flyers general manager Bob Clarke argued that there was no prearranged deal in place. The trade was allowed to stand because the NHL was unable to prove that the first trade had included any plans for the second trade. However, both Philadelphia and Winnipeg were fined $10,000 for breaking a league rule that prevents teams from loaning players.
NON-NHL CAREER
Post-Draft Teams: Milwaukee (IHL); Maine (AHL); Binghamton (AHL); Hershey (AHL)
Canada Cup: 1984 (first place)
NON-NHL AWARDS AND HONORS
AHL Calder Cup:
1978, 1979 (Maine)
AHL Holmes Award (Lowest Team GAA): 1978-79 (Maine) (shared with Robbie Moore)
AHL All-Star Second Team: 1978-79 (Maine)
AHL Goals-Against Average Leader: 1978-79 (Maine) (2.90 GAA)
AHL Shutouts Leader: 1978-79 (Maine) (2 shutouts)
AHL Playoffs GAA Leader: 1978 (Maine) (2.67), 1979 (Maine) (2.74)
AHL Playoffs Shutouts Leader: 1978 (Maine) (1 shutout)
AHL Playoffs Wins Leader: 1978 (Maine) (8 wins)
1977-78, 1978-79: Played on AHL regular-season champion (Maine).
Miscellaneous: Injured left ankle during Team Canada's final Canada Cup tournament practice on Sept. 17, 1984, but managed to start final game the following night. ... Played goal in Canada's 3-2 OT victory over the Soviet Union in 1984 Canada Cup tournament on Sept. 13, 1984. The game is widely considered one of the greatest games ever played. ... Worked on family farm near Edmonton during off-seasons of his playing days and after his retirement. He and his wife raise cattle and alpacas on the farm. ... Played in Heroes of Hockey Game during 1999 NHL  All-Star Weekend in Tampa, Fla. ... Played in Celebrity Challenge Game during 2002 NHL All-Star Weekend in Los Angeles.
Personal: Full name is Peter H. Peeters. ... Son of Dutch immigrants. ... Father of major-junior goaltender Trevor Peeters.
HOW HE GOT AWAY
TRADE: Philadelphia traded Peeters to Boston in exchange for Brad McCrimmon on June 8, 1982. Seven years later, Philadelphia got Peeters back when the Flyers signed him as an unrestricted free agent on June 16, 1989.

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SNAPSHOT '77
Total Selected: 185
Forwards: 104
Defense: 57
Goaltenders: 24
Major Junior: 123
College Players: 51
Canadian: 141
Euro-Canadian: 2
USA Citizens: 37
U.S.-Born: 36
European: 5
Reached NHL: 97
Won Stanley Cup: 8
Hall of Fame: 2
All-Star Game: 13
Year-end All-Star: 5
Olympians: 9
Picks Traded: 37
 
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