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1978
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1978 NHL DRAFT PICK
Chris Nilan
Selected in 19th round
No. 231 overall by Montreal Canadiens

Born February 9, 1958
Position: Right Wing
Height: 6-0   Weight: 180
BEFORE THE DRAFT
Last Team: Northeastern (ECAC)                       
Birthplace: Boston, Massachusetts (USA)
Hometown: West Roxbury, Massachusetts
PRE-DRAFT STATISTICS
Year TeamLeague GPG ATP PIM
1975-76 Catholic MemorialMass. H.S. ---- ---- --
1976-77 Northeastern JVECAC ---- ---- --
1977-78 Northeastern JVECAC ---- ---- --

PRE-DRAFT AWARDS AND HONORS
Miscellaneous:
Spent part of 1977-78 season with Tri-Valley Squires of New England Junior Hockey League. ... Attended Catholic Memorial High School in West Roxbury, Mass., before entering Northeastern University. ... Grew up idolizing Bobby Orr and dreaming of playing for the Boston Bruins.
NHL CAREER
Debut: February 26, 1980 (Montreal at Atlanta)
Numbers:  30 (Montreal); 30 (N.Y. Rangers); 30 (Boston)
Stanley Cup: 1986.  Playing Status: Retired September 1992
CAREER NHL STATISTICS
Years TeamsGP GATP PIM
1980-1992 Montreal, NYR, Boston688 110115 2253,043
CAREER NHL PLAYOFF STATISTICS
Years TeamsGP GA TPPIM
1980-1992 Montreal, NYR, Boston111 89 17541

NHL AWARDS AND HONORS
All-Star Game:
1991 (Boston) (injured, did not play)
NHL Records: Most penalties in one game (10 for Boston vs. Hartford on March 31, 1991 -- six minors, two majors, one misconduct and one game misconduct), most penalty minutes in playoff year (141 in 1986)
Montreal Records: Most career penalty minutes (2,248), most penalty minutes in one game (39 vs. Washington on Feb. 14, 1981), most career penalty minutes, regular season and playoffs combined (2,670), most penalty minutes in one season (358 in 1984-85), most penalty minutes in one regular season and playoffs, combined (439 in 1984-85), most career playoff penalty minutes (422), most penalty minutes in one playoff year (141 in 1986), most penalty minutes in one playoff series (79 vs. Quebec in 1985)
N.Y. Rangers Records: Most penalty minutes in one game (35 at Chicago on Oct. 8, 1989)
Boston Records: Most penalties in one game (10 vs. Hartford on March 31, 1991 -- six minors, two majors, one misconduct and one game misconduct)
NHL Penalty-Minutes Leader: 1983-84 (Montreal) (338 PIM), 1984-85 (Montreal) (358 PIM)
NHL Playoffs Penalty-Minutes Leader: 1984 (Montreal) (81 PIM), 1986 (Montreal) (141 PIM)
Montreal Penalty-Minutes Leader: 1980-81 (262), 1981-82 (204), 1982-83 (213), 1983-84 (338), 1984-85 (358), 1985-86 (274), 1986-87 (266), 1987-88 (209)
Montreal Playoffs Penalty-Minutes Leader: 1984 (81), 1985 (81), 1986 (141), 1987 (75)
Boston Penalty-Minutes Leader: 1990-91 (277), 1991-92 (186)
Boston Playoffs Penalty-Minutes Leader: 1991 (62)
Coaching Career: Named New Jersey assistant coach on Aug. 3, 1995, and remained in that position until May 1996.
Miscellaneous: Played on line with Guy Carbonneau and Bob Gainey for Montreal in 1980-81. ... Suspended three games by NHL during 1981-82 season for throwing puck at Paul Baxter while sitting in penalty box during Montreal's Nov. 21, 1981, game vs. Pittsburgh. ... Took over as Montreal's all-time penalty-minutes leader when he broke Maurice Richard's former record of 1,285 penalty minutes during Montreal's Jan. 22, 1985, game at Hartford. ... Suspended eight games by NHL during 1985-86 season for intentionally injuring Rick Middleton during Montreal's Oct. 13, 1985, game at Boston. ... Suspended three games by NHL during 1986-87 season for altercation with Ken Linseman during Montreal's Nov. 20, 1986, game at Boston. ... Missed parts of 1986-87 season with left knee injury, suffered in February 1987, and with hip injury, suffered in March 1987. ... Missed part of 1987-88 season with knee injury suffered during N.Y. Rangers' Feb. 2, 1988, game vs. N.Y. Islanders. ... Missed most of 1988-89 season with strained ligament of front pelvic bone, an injury suffered during N.Y. Rangers' Dec. 6, 1988, game at Vancouver and re-aggravated during N.Y. Rangers Dec. 21, 1988, game vs. Buffalo. Did not return to action until March 20. ... Missed most of 1989-90 season with fractured right forearm, an injury suffered during N.Y. Rangers' Nov. 4, 1989, game at Montreal. Did not return to action until Jan. 27, 1990. ... Missed part of 1989-90 season with sprained left knee, an injury suffered during N.Y. Rangers' Feb. 14, 1990, game vs. Pittsburgh. Did not return to action until April 1, 1990. ... Missed end of 1990 playoffs with broken ulnar bone in right arm, an injury suffered when he was checked by Ken Baumgartner during N.Y. Rangers' April 11, 1990, game vs. N.Y. Islanders. ... Missed part of 1990-91 season with knee injury suffered during Boston's Oct. 4, 1990, season-opener vs. Philadelphia. ... Missed part of 1990-91 season with broken left ankle, an injury suffered while playing one-on-one basketball after Boston's Jan. 6, 1991, practice. The injury required surgery on Feb. 8, 1991, and Nilan did not return to action until March 24, 1991. He also missed a chance to play in his first All-Star Game, after he was named to the team by Wales Conference head coach. His selection was controversial, since critics accused Milbury of favority Boston players. ... Retired with No. 2 ranking behind Tiger Williams on the NHL career combined regular-season and playoff penalty-minutes list.
NON-NHL CAREER
Post-Draft Teams: Northeastern (ECAC); Nova Scotia (AHL)
Canada Cup: 1984 (fourth place) (did not play), 1987 (fifth place)
NON-NHL AWARDS AND HONORS
ECHL Coach of Year:
1997-98 (Chesapeake)
AHL Penalty-Minutes Leader: 1979-80 (Nova Scotia) (304 PIM)
Coaching Career: Named Chesapeake (ECHL) head coach prior to inaugural 1997-98 season and held position through 1998-99 season.
Education: Majored in criminal law at Northeastern.
Miscellaneous: Had game-winning goal for Team USA in 5-2 Canada Cup victory over Sweden on Aug. 31, 1987.  ... Suspended five games by ECHL in 1997-98 for failing to leave a game after getting two bench penalties and a game misconduct while coaching Chesapeake on Nov. 29, 1997. His team forfeited the game. ... Was active in charitable causes during his playing days in Montreal, organizing Chris Nilan Golf Classic to raise money for Montreal Children's Hospital. ... Returned to Boston area and went into the insurance business after retirement. Spent three years as community relations consultant for John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance before entering coaching in 1995. ... Hired by Rhode Island Secretary of State Edward S. Inman III as an executive assistant in April 2001. Matt Brown, who ran against Inman in 2002, accused Nilan of never showing up for work and claimed Inman was wasting tax money by paying him. Nilan eventually quit the job. ... Found himself caught up in the middle of Boston's Catholic Church sex scandal in 2002, when his friend, Monsignor Frederick J. Ryan, admitted to him that he had molested three boys in the 1970s and 1980s. Ryan, who performed Nilan's wedding ceremony, had been chaplain at Catholic Memorial High School when Nilan was a student there. Nilan was also friendly with Ryan's victims. Nilan confronted Ryan to learn the truth, and would later be a witness in legal proceedings against the priest. ... Became active in Oldtimers' charity hockey after his retirement.
Personal: Nicknamed "Knuckles." ... Full name is Christopher John Nilan. ... Son of former U.S. Army Special Forces member Henry Nilan, a career military man.
HOW HE GOT AWAY
TRADE: Montreal traded Nilan to N.Y. Rangers in exchange for the option to switch 1989 first-round picks on January 27, 1988. Montreal exercised its option and selected Lindsay Vallis, while N.Y. Rangers selected Steven Rice. Four years later, Montreal got Nilan back when it claimed him off waivers from Boston on February 12, 1992.

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SNAPSHOT '78
Total Selected: 234
Forwards: 143
Defense: 67
Goaltenders: 24
Major Junior: 127
College Players: 80
Canadian: 170
Euro-Canadian: 0
USA Citizens: 47
U.S.-Born: 47
European: 17
Reached NHL: 95
Won Stanley Cup: 16
Hall of Fame: 1
All-Star Game: 18
Year-end All-Star: 1
Olympians: 16
Picks Traded: 46
 
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