Aaron Rome

Canadian ice hockey player (born 1983)


title: "Aaron Rome" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1983-births", "anaheim-ducks-players", "canadian-ice-hockey-defencemen", "cincinnati-mighty-ducks-players", "columbus-blue-jackets-players", "dallas-stars-players", "canadian-expatriate-ice-hockey-players-in-the-united-states", "ice-hockey-people-from-manitoba", "kootenay-ice-players", "living-people", "los-angeles-kings-draft-picks", "manitoba-moose-players", "moose-jaw-warriors-players", "norfolk-admirals-players", "portland-pirates-players", "saskatoon-blades-players", "swift-current-broncos-players", "syracuse-crunch-players", "texas-stars-players", "vancouver-canucks-players", "stanley-cup-champions", "21st-century-canadian-sportsmen"] description: "Canadian ice hockey player (born 1983)" topic_path: "science/astronomy" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Rome" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Canadian ice hockey player (born 1983) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox ice hockey player"]

FieldValue
imageAaron Rome Canucks practice 2012a.jpg
captionRome with the Vancouver Canucks in March 2012
image_size230px
played_forAnaheim Ducks
Columbus Blue Jackets
Vancouver Canucks
Dallas Stars
positionDefence
shootsLeft
height_ft6
height_in1
weight_lb218
birth_date
birth_placeNesbitt, Manitoba, Canada
draft104th overall
draft_year2002
draft_teamLos Angeles Kings
career_start2004
career_end2015
::

| image = Aaron Rome Canucks practice 2012a.jpg | caption = Rome with the Vancouver Canucks in March 2012 | image_size = 230px | played_for = Anaheim Ducks Columbus Blue Jackets Vancouver Canucks Dallas Stars | position = Defence | shoots = Left | height_ft = 6 | height_in = 1 | weight_lb = 218 | birth_date = | birth_place = Nesbitt, Manitoba, Canada | draft = 104th overall | draft_year = 2002 | draft_team = Los Angeles Kings | career_start = 2004 | career_end = 2015 Aaron Rome (born September 27, 1983) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey defenceman. He is currently serving as a skills coach with the Brandon Wheat Kings in the Western Hockey League (WHL). Rome was selected in the fourth round (104th overall) of the 2002 NHL Entry Draft by the Los Angeles Kings.

Unsigned by the Kings, he joined the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim organization in 2004, earning most of his playing time with their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliates. In 2007, he played one game with the Ducks during their Stanley Cup-winning playoff season. The following season, he was traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets, playing two seasons in the organization between the NHL and AHL. Becoming an unrestricted free agent in July 2009, he signed with the Vancouver Canucks and established himself as a regular in the team's lineup.

He is perhaps best known for severely concussing Nathan Horton with a late hit in Game 3 of the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals, sparking Boston's comeback and eventual championship. After three seasons with the Canucks he signed a three-year contract with the Dallas Stars as a free agent. After two seasons, playing in a combined 52 games, the Stars used a compliance buyout to terminate the final year of his contract.

Playing career

Junior

Rome played junior hockey in the Western Hockey League (WHL) from 1999 to 2004. After debuting in one game for the Saskatoon Blades in 1998–99, he registered 6 assists over 47 games in the following season. During his rookie WHL season, he played alongside older brother Reagan Rome as defensive partners for a short span (Reagan played five games for Saskatoon in 1999–2000 before moving to the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League).

Returning to Swift Current following his draft for the 2002–03 season, he recorded a junior career-high 12 goals and 56 points, ranking eighth among league defencemen in scoring. Late in the 2003–04 season, he was traded to his fourth WHL team, the Moose Jaw Warriors, where he joined his younger brother, Ashton Rome (also a defenceman). he was named to the WHL East Second All-Star Team.

Anaheim Ducks

Unsigned by the Kings two years after his NHL draft, he became a free agent in the 2004 off-season. On June 7, 2004, he was signed by the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. He began his professional career with Anaheim's minor league affiliate, the Cincinnati Mighty Ducks of the American Hockey League (AHL) in 2004–05. During that season, he had a second opportunity to play with his brother, Reagan Rome, as the latter was called up from Cincinnati's ECHL affiliate, the Reading Royals, for two games. Playing 74 games in his rookie AHL season, he scored 2 goals and 16 points. He helped Cincinnati to the second round of the 2005 playoffs, adding 3 goals and 6 points over 12 post-season games.

The following season, Anaheim's AHL affiliate was changed to the Portland Pirates and Rome began a two-and-a-half season stint with his new club. He improved to 24 points over 64 games in his second AHL season. During the 2006-07 season, Rome was called up to Anaheim and appeared in his first NHL game on January 2, 2007, a 2–1 loss against the Detroit Red Wings. Completing the season with Portland, he tallied 25 points, including an AHL career-high 8 goals. He was recalled once more for the Ducks' 2007 playoff run, appearing in one post-season game. The Ducks went on to win the Stanley Cup that year. As Rome did not play in the Stanley Cup Finals, he did not qualify to have his name engraved on the trophy. Anaheim did, however, award him a Stanley Cup ring, as well as the customary day spent with the trophy in the off-season.

Columbus Blue Jackets

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/92/Aaron_Rome_Blue_Jackets.jpg" caption="Rome with [[Columbus Blue Jackets]] in April 2008"] ::

After beginning the 2007–08 season with the Pirates, Rome was traded from the Ducks to the Columbus Blue Jackets, along with Clay Wilson, for Geoff Platt, on November 15, 2007. Rome was assigned to the Blue Jackets' AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch, immediately following the trade. After appearing in 41 games with Syracuse, scoring 3 goals and 24 points, he was called up to Columbus on February 26, 2008.

After his first Blue Jackets training camp in September 2008, Rome was placed on waivers. After clearing, he was assigned to start the season with Syracuse. He remained with the Crunch until February 2009, when he was recalled by the Blue Jackets for the remainder of the 2008–09 season. He played eight games with the Blue Jackets, registering one assist. Over 48 games in the AHL, he notched 7 goals and 28 points. Rome remained with the Blue Jackets for the franchise's first playoff season in 2009, competing in one game. Columbus was eliminated in the first round by Detroit.

Vancouver Canucks

Rome became an unrestricted free agent in the subsequent off-season and was signed by the Vancouver Canucks on July 1, 2009, to a one-way, one-year contract worth $550,000. He played the majority of the season with the Canucks, notching 4 assists in 49 games, while also appearing in 7 games with Vancouver's affiliate, the Manitoba Moose; he scored 6 goals and 7 points in the AHL. During a three-game stint with the Canucks that season, he played forward for the first time in his career. He appeared in one playoff game for the Canucks in 2010, missing nine games due to injury.

In the off-season, Rome re-signed with Vancouver to a two-year, $1.5 million contract. He scored for the first time as a Canuck on March 29, 2011, an empty netter in a 3–1 win against the Nashville Predators. It was his first goal in 109 games. Rome finished the 2010–11 season with an NHL career-high 56 games with a goal and four assists as the Canucks won their first Presidents’ Trophy in team history. In the 2011 playoffs, he scored his first NHL post-season goal against Antti Niemi of the San Jose Sharks in Game 2 of the third round – a 7–3 win, giving the Canucks a 2–0 series lead. The following game, he was injured off a boarding hit from Sharks forward Jamie McGinn. Rome was sidelined from the rest of the game; McGinn received a five-minute penalty on the play, but did not receive further discipline from the league. Rome would miss the final two games of the series due to a concussion and in his absence, the Canucks would go on to clinch their spot in the Stanley Cup Finals. In game three of the finals against the Boston Bruins, Rome checked Bruin forward Nathan Horton to the ice with a late hit to the head. Horton sustained a severe concussion and was taken off the ice on a stretcher. Rome was ejected from the game after being assessed a five-minute major penalty for interference and a game misconduct. After a disciplinary hearing the next morning, Rome was assessed a four-game suspension and missed the remainder of the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals. The NHL determined that Rome hit Horton over a second after Horton delivered a pass to a teammate. The NHL considered a hit to be late if it takes place more than half a second after a player loses possession. The Canucks were outscored 23–8 in the seven-game series loss to the Bruins.

Rome began the 2011–12 season sidelined after suffering a broken hand during training camp. He returned to the Canucks lineup for his season debut on November 6, 2011, against the Chicago Blackhawks, after missing the first 14 games of the season, Rome recorded a goal on Blackhawks' goaltender Corey Crawford and the Canucks would eventually go on to win the game 6–2. Later in the month, he missed three games with a thumb injury.

Dallas Stars

On July 1, 2012, Rome signed a three-year deal with an annual average salary of $1.5 million with the Dallas Stars. He played 27 games with Dallas during the shortened 2012–13 NHL season, registering 5 assists and 18 penalty minutes.

On October 14, 2013, Rome was activated from injured reserve and was assigned to the Texas Stars of the AHL for conditioning. During the 2013–14 season, Rome played 7 games in the AHL with the Texas Stars, and 25 games with the Dallas Stars, scoring no goals and just one assist with the NHL club. On June 16, 2014, Rome was placed on unconditional waivers by the Dallas Stars, and the following day (after he cleared waivers) Dallas confirmed their use of a compliance buyout, allowing the team to save salary cap space by removing the final year of his three-year, $4.5 million contract, from the team's salary calculations.

As a free agent, Rome was unable to secure an NHL contract, and instead accepted an invitation to attend the Detroit Red Wings training camp on a try-out for the 2014–15 season. At the completion of the Red Wings pre-season, Rome was released and later signed to a professional try-out contract with the Norfolk Admirals of the AHL on October 22, 2014. After two games with the Admirals, Rome was released from his try-out contract.

Personal life

Rome was born and raised in Nesbitt, Manitoba, a small community of fewer than 30 people. and has played in the ECHL and AHL. Eldest brother Ryan Rome competed in the United (UHL) and Central Hockey Leagues (CHL), while Reagan Rome has played in the ECHL, AHL and in Europe.

Rome and his wife Adrianne have a son, Grayson and a daughter Logan. They spend their off-seasons in Brandon, Manitoba.

Career statistics

::data[format=table]

Regular seasonPlayoffsSeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIMAHL totals335339713068930471166NHL totals226622281851911237
1998–99Saskatoon BladesWHL10000
1999–00Saskatoon BladesWHL470662210000
2000–01Saskatoon BladesWHL30002
2000–01Kootenay IceWHL53281043111346
2001–02Swift Current BroncosWHL70724311681014523
2002–03Swift Current BroncosWHL61124456201410120
2003–04Swift Current BroncosWHL4172633122
2003–04Moose Jaw WarriorsWHL283161988806617
2004–05Cincinnati Mighty DucksAHL75214161301233633
2005–06Portland PiratesAHL6451924871814533
2006–07Portland PiratesAHL7681725139
2006–07Anaheim DucksNHL1000010000
2007–08Portland PiratesAHL1423531
2007–08Syracuse CrunchAHL4132124126
2007–08Columbus Blue JacketsNHL1711233
2008–09Syracuse CrunchAHL4872128153
2008–09Columbus Blue JacketsNHL8011010110
2009–10Manitoba MooseAHL761715
2009–10Vancouver CanucksNHL490442410000
2010–11Vancouver CanucksNHL56145531410137
2011–12Vancouver CanucksNHL4346104610000
2012–13Dallas StarsNHL2705518
2013–14Texas StarsAHL80118
2013–14Dallas StarsNHL250111110000
2014–15Norfolk AdmiralsAHL20000
::
  • Statistics taken from Aaron Rome's NHL profile

Awards

::data[format=table]

AwardYear
WHL East Second All-Star Team2003–04
Stanley Cup (with the Anaheim Ducks)2007
::

Notes

References

References

  1. (2017-09-06). "Wheat Kings add to Hockey Staff". [[Brandon Wheat Kings]].
  2. (2008-06-24). "Prospect Aaron Rome". HockeysFuture.com.
  3. "2002-03 Season - Defencemen". [[Western Hockey League]].
  4. "2003-04 Season - Defencemen". [[Western Hockey League]].
  5. (2007-01-02). "Ducks vs. Red Wings". [[Anaheim Ducks]].
  6. "The Stanley Cup". [[National Hockey League]].
  7. (2010-06-15). "Canucks sign defenceman Aarom Rome". [[CTV News]]}}{{dead link.
  8. (2007-11-15). "Columbus acquires defensemen Aaron Rome and Clay Wilson from Anaheim for Geoff Platt". [[Syracuse Crunch]].
  9. "Aaron Rome". [[The Sports Network]].
  10. (2008-04-03). "Red Wings clinch Presidents' Trophy". [[The Sports Network]].
  11. (2008-10-07). "Blue Jackets: Methot wins eighth spot on defense". [[Dispatch Printing Company]].
  12. "Collective Bargaining Agreement Between National Hockey League and National Hockey League Players Association". [[National Hockey League]].
  13. (2006-12-03). "Major-league dreams are anything but cheap". [[Morris Communications]].
  14. (2009-07-01). "Sedins agree to Canucks GM's terms". [[Postmedia Network]] }}{{dead link.
  15. (2009-12-02). "Rome welcomes stint in the AHL". [[Sun Media Corporation]].
  16. (2010-06-15). "Canucks Sign Defenceman Rome to Two-Year Contract". [[The Sports Network]].
  17. (2011-03-29). "Canucks clinch No. 1 seed with victory over Predators". [[The Sports Network]].
  18. (2011-05-18). "Canucks 7, Sharks 3". [[Vancouver Canucks]].
  19. (2011-05-21). "No supplemental discipline for McGinn". [[National Hockey League]].
  20. (2011-06-07). "Vancouver's Rome suspended for four games for late hit - 2011 Stanley Cup Final - Canucks v Bruins". NHL.
  21. Whamsby, Tim. (2011-06-07). "Canucks' Rome suspended 4 games for Horton hit". [[CBC Sports]].
  22. Larry Brown. (June 6, 2011). "Mark Recchi Sticks Finger in Maxim Lapierre's Mouth to Mock the Mock Bite". Larry Brown Sports.
  23. (2013-10-14). "Stars make roster moves". [[Dallas Stars]].
  24. (June 17, 2014). "Stars use compliance buyout on defenseman Rome".
  25. (2014-10-22). "Three added to Admirals roster for road trip". [[Norfolk Admirals (AHL).
  26. "Ryan Rome". Hockeydb.com.
  27. "Reagan Rome". Hockeydb.com.
  28. "Aaron Rome". [[Vancouver Canucks]].
  29. "Aaron Rome". [[National Hockey League]].

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1983-birthsanaheim-ducks-playerscanadian-ice-hockey-defencemencincinnati-mighty-ducks-playerscolumbus-blue-jackets-playersdallas-stars-playerscanadian-expatriate-ice-hockey-players-in-the-united-statesice-hockey-people-from-manitobakootenay-ice-playersliving-peoplelos-angeles-kings-draft-picksmanitoba-moose-playersmoose-jaw-warriors-playersnorfolk-admirals-playersportland-pirates-playerssaskatoon-blades-playersswift-current-broncos-playerssyracuse-crunch-playerstexas-stars-playersvancouver-canucks-playersstanley-cup-champions21st-century-canadian-sportsmen