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1982
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1982 NHL DRAFT PICK
Vladimir Ruzicka
Selected in fourth round
No. 73 overall by Toronto Maple Leafs

Born June 6, 1963
Position: Center
Height: 6-3   Weight: 210
BEFORE THE DRAFT
Last Team: Litvinov (Czechoslovakia)                  
Birthplace: Most, Czechoslovakia
Hometown: Most, Czech Republic
PRE-DRAFT STATISTICS
Year TeamLeague GPG ATP PIM
1978-79 LitvinovCzech. Jr. ---- ---- --
1979-80 LitvinovCzech. Jr. ---- ---- --
  LitvinovCzech. 91 12 0
1980-81 LitvinovCzech. 4112 1325 10
1981-82 LitvinovCzech. 4427 2249 50

PRE-DRAFT AWARDS AND HONORS
World Jr. Championships:
1981 (fourth place), 1982 (silver medal)
European Junior Championships: 1979 (gold), 1981 (silver)
World Junior Championships All-Star First Team: 1982
European Junior Championships All-Star First Team: 1981
World Junior Championships Goals Leader: 1982 (8 goals, tie)
Miscellaneous: Not selected in 1981 NHL draft despite being eligible.
NHL CAREER
Debut: January 17, 1990 (Winnipeg at Edmonton)
Numbers:  29 (Edmonton); 38 (Boston); 38 (Ottawa)
Stanley Cup: Never won.  Playing Status: Retired January 4, 2000
CAREER NHL STATISTICS
Years TeamsGP GA TPPIM
1990-1994 Edmonton, Boston, Ott. 23382 85167 129
CAREER NHL PLAYOFF STATISTICS
Years TeamsGP GA TPPIM
1992-1993 Boston30 414 182

NHL AWARDS AND HONORS
Boston Dufresne Trophy (Home Games MVP):
1991-92
Boston Seventh Player Award (Unsung Hero): 1991-92
Boston Gallery Gods Trophy: 1991-92
Boston Goals Leader: 1991-92 (39 goals)
1989-90: Played 25 regular-season games for Edmonton team that went on to win Stanley Cup, but did not appear in any postseason games and was ineligible to have his name engraved on Cup.
Miscellaneous:  Drew bench minor penalty in first game for coming onto ice at end of second period to congratulate Edmonton goalie Bill Ranford on his performance. The practice was common in Europe, but Ruzicka did not know that it was not allowed under NHL rules and he could only do such a thing at the end of a game, not end of a period. ... Played on line with Esa Tikkanen and Jari Kurri for Edmonton in 1989-90. ... Was Edmonton's Three-Stars leader for March/April 1990. ... Held out of 1990 playoffs by Edmonton, which considered him a defensive liability. ... Became expendable for Edmonton at start of 1990-91 season because Oilers had too many centers on roster. As a result Edmonton traded Ruzicka to Boston for Greg Hawgood on Oct. 22, 1990. ... Became first Czech to play for Boston Bruins when he appeared in Oct. 25, 1990, game vs. Vancouver. ... Missed remainder of 1990-91 regular season with tendinitis in left ankle, resulting from an injury suffered in Boston's Dec. 28, 1990, game at Winnipeg and then re-aggravated during Boston's Dec. 29, 1990 game at Minnesota. The injury required surgery on Feb. 12, 1991, and Ruzicka did not return to action until Game 2 of Boston's first-round playoff series vs. Hartford on April 5, 1991. ... Missed part of 1992-93 season with strained groin, suffered during Boston's Nov. 30, 1992, game at Quebec. He did not return until Boston's Jan. 5, 1993, game at Pittsburgh. ... Missed parts of 1992-93 season with ankle injury, suffered in March 1993, and with groin injury, suffered in April 1993. ... Released by Boston in July 1993 and signed a one-year, $425,000 contract with Ottawa as unrestricted free agent on Aug. 12, 1993. ... Played left wing for Ottawa in 1993-94. ... Missed part of 1993-94 season with hip injury, suffered in Ottawa's Oct. 16, 1993, game at Tampa Bay, and with back injury, suffered during Ottawa's Dec. 27, 1993, game vs. Boston. He did not return from the back injury until Ottawa's Jan. 25, 1994, game at Pittsburgh.
Coming to North America: Ruzicka made a big splash during the 1989-90 NHL season when he signed a four-year contract with Edmonton on Dec. 21, 1989. His entry into the NHL had only become possible after Czechoslovakian hockey authorities agreed to release him on Jan. 9, 1990 -- reflecting  the fact that years of totalitarian communist rule were coming to an end. At the time, Ruzicka was only 26 years old and considered the best player in all of Czechoslovakia. Edmonton general manager Glen Sather had paved the way for the release by visiting Prague in 1989-90 to negotiate a deal to bring Ruzicka to North America. Sather had hoped to get Ruzicka for the entire 1989-90 season, but at the last minute, a Czech official had vetoed the deal. That same Czech official later changed his mind in December, enabling Ruzicka to leave Czechoslovakia in the middle of the season -- the first time a player of his quality had ever been allowed to leave in midseason. Ruzicka finally joined Edmonton on Jan. 10, 1990, and practiced with team for first time on Jan. 14, 1990.
Ruzicka Leaves the NHL: Although he showed flashes of brilliance during his five NHL seasons, Ruzicka was burdened by the reputation of being an unmotivated, lazy player who rarely played to his potential. Things finally came to a head for the talented Czech star at Ottawa's practice on Feb. 9, 1994. Senators coach Rick Bowness had been complaining about Ruzicka's lack of effort all season, and during the Feb. 9 practice, he became convinced that Ruzicka was simply going through the motions in his drills. Bowness threw Ruzicka out of the practice after  20 minutes, screaming four-letter words and smashing his stick on the ice as he did so. After the tirade, it was clear Ruzicka and Bowness could no longer coexist, even though Bowness insisted the practice wasn't the final straw and allowed Ruzicka to play in the next game against Tampa Bay. But the damage was done. Ruzicka had already talked about leaving the Senators to finish the season in Europe. After the Tampa Bay game, Ruzicka criticized Bowness to reporters, saying he could no longer communicate with  his coach and referring to the whole situation as "crap." He also said Bowness didn't give him enough playing time. Ironically, Ruzicka had only come to Ottawa as a free agent because of his desire to play for Bowness, who had been his coach in Boston when Ruzicka had the best season of his career. Ruzicka said Bowness was a completely different person from the coach he remembered. The ugly situation came to a close on Feb. 17, when Ruzicka cleared waivers and left to play in Switzerland. The Swiss club team Zug took Ruzicka off Ottawa' hands by agreeing to pick up the balance of his guaranteed contract upon his release.
NON-NHL CAREER
Post-Draft Teams: Litvinov, Trencin (Czechoslovakia); Zug (Switz.); Prague Slavia (Czech Republic)
Olympics: 1984 (silver medal), 1988 (sixth place), 1998 (Czech Rep.) (gold medal), 2002 (Czech Rep.)(seventh place) (as assistant coach)
Canada Cup: 1984 (fifth place), 1987 (fourth place)
World Championships: 1983 (silver), 1985 (gold), 1986 (fifth), 1987 (bronze), 1989 (bronze), 2003 (fourth) (Czech Rep.) (assistant coach)
World Junior Championships: 1983 (silver medal)
NON-NHL AWARDS AND HONORS
Czech Republic Championship:
2003 (Prague Slavia) (as coach)
World Championships All-Star First Team: 1985
World Junior Championships All-Star First Team: 1983
Czechoslovakia Player of Year: 1985-86 (Litvinov), 1987-88 (Trencin)
Czechoslovakia All-Star First Team: 1987-88, 1988-89 (Trencin)
Czechoslovakia Captain: 1989-90
Czech Republic Olympic Captain: 1998
Litvinov Captain: 1989-90
Prague Slavia Captain: 1995-96 season until January 2000
Prague Slavia Records: Most points in one season (65 in 1995-96)
Czechoslovakia Points Leader: 1983-84 (Litvinov) (54 points), 1985-86 (Litvinov) (73 points), 1988-89 (Trencin) (84 points)
Czechoslovakia Goals Leader: 1983-84 (Litvinov) (31), 1985-86 (Litvinov) (41), 1987-88 (Trencin) (38), 1988-89 (Trencin) (46)
Czech Republic Points Leader: 1995-96 (Prague Slavia) (65 points)
Czech Republic Assists Leader: 1995-96 (Prage Slavia) (44 assists)
World Junior Championships Points Leader: 1983 (20 points)
World Junior Championships Goals Leader: 1983 (12 goals)
World Junior Championships Assists Leader: 1983 (8 assists)
Coaching Career: Named Prague Slavia (Czech Republic) head coach in March 2000 and remained in position through 2003-04 season. ... Named Czech Republic national team head coach on Aug. 17, 2004, following the death of former coach Ivan Hlinka in an automobile accident.
Management Career: Named Prague Slavia (Czech Rep.) general manager in March 2000 and held position through 2003-04 season.
Miscellaneous: Set World Junior Championships single-tournament records (since broken) for points (20) and goals (12) in 1983. ... Set World Junior Championships records (since broken) for career points (35) and goals (25). ... Was captain of Czechoslovakian national team when he entered NHL. ... Joined Zug for 1994 Switzerland playoffs.
Personal: Nicknamed "Rosie."
HOW HE GOT AWAY
TRADE: Toronto traded Ruzicka to Edmonton in exchange for future considerations (1990 fourth-round pick -- Greg Walters) in June 1989.

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SNAPSHOT '82
Total Selected: 252
Forwards: 152
Defense: 82
Goaltenders: 18
Major Junior: 129
Tier II/Jr. B: 27/4
College Players: 20
High School: 37
Canadian: 152
Euro-Canadian: 3
USA Citizens: 62
U.S.-Born: 62
European: 35
Reached NHL: 109
Stanley Cup: 18
Hall of Fame: 0
All-Star Game: 14
Year-end All-Star: 4
Olympians: 37
Picks Traded: 50
 
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