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This article is about the ice hockey player. For other people with this name, see Scott Walker (disambiguation).
Scott Walker (born July 19, 1973, in Cambridge, Ontario), is a Canadian professional ice hockey player. He plays right wing for the Carolina Hurricanes, but prior to the 1996–97 NHL season he played defence.
[edit] Playing careerScott Walker first played junior hockey for Kitchener of the OHA Junior 'B' league in 1989–90, moving to his hometown Cambridge team later that season. In 1991, he moved up to the Owen Sound Platers of the Ontario Hockey League for two seasons. His play with the Platers led the Vancouver Canucks to select him in the fifth round, 124th overall, in the 1993 NHL Entry Draft. He first joined the Canucks's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate Hamilton in 1993–94, moving to Syracuse with the team for the 1994–95 season. Walker made his NHL debut with the Canucks in 1994, splitting the 1994–95 season with Syracuse before becoming a full-time NHL player in 1995–96. He played three full seasons with the Canucks before being left unprotected in the 1998 NHL Expansion Draft. He was selected by the Nashville Predators. Walker played seven seasons with Predators before being traded to the Carolina Hurricanes in July 2006. 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). When Greg Johnson was sidelined with injuries, Walker served as the Predators' interim captain from January 12 - January 25, 2003. On June 20, 2007, the Hurricanes announced that Walker signed a new three-year contract at $2.5 million per season. [edit] 2009 PlayoffsOn May 11, 2009, Walker was fined $2500 for punching Bruins defenceman Aaron Ward in with 2:47 left in Game 5 of the second round series between the 2 teams. On the play, Ward and Matt Cullen got into a shoving match before Walker came in, dropped his gloves & hit Ward in his orbital bone. Walker was given a major for fighting, a two-minute instigator penalty & a game misconduct while Ward and Cullen received minors for roughing.[1][2] There was controversy since he did not also receive a suspension where NHL Rule 47.22 states that "A player or goalkeeper who is deemed to be the instigator of an altercation in the final five (5) minutes of regulation time or at anytime in overtime, shall automatically be suspended for one game."[3]. The suspension is always subject to a review by NHL officials, and it was deemed not to have warranted a suspension. Walker scored the game-winning goal versus the Bruins with 1:14 left in the first OT period of Game 7. With the win the Carolina Hurricanes advanced to the Eastern Conference Final for the 3rd time in 7 seasons, to face the Pittsburgh Penguins, where they were defeated in 4 games. [4][5] [edit] Career notesHe played 589 regular season NHL games over ten seasons before making it to post season play. That was the second longest wait in NHL history. Guy Charron retired in 1981 after 734 games, before he ever played a single playoff game. More recently, Olli Jokinen also bested Walker's wait, finally playing in his first playoff game in 2009 after 799 career regular season games. 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 Jobing.com 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. [edit] Awards
[edit] Career statistics
[edit] Transactions
[edit] International play
[edit] International statistics
[edit] External links[edit] ReferencesCategories: 1973 births | Canadian ice hockey right wingers | Carolina Hurricanes players | Hamilton Canucks players | Ice hockey personnel from Ontario | Living people | Nashville Predators players | Owen Sound Platers alumni | People from Cambridge, Ontario | Syracuse Crunch players | Vancouver Canucks draft picks | Vancouver Canucks players | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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