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NHL supplemental draft

Defunct sport event


Defunct sport event

The NHL supplemental draft was a draft that was established by the National Hockey League as an offshoot of the NHL entry draft between 1986 and 1994. The supplemental draft was used by teams to select collegiate ice hockey players who were not eligible for the standard entry draft. It was created in response to the bidding wars between NHL teams to sign college hockey stars like Adam Oates and Ray Staszak, both of whom signed multi-year contracts with the Detroit Red Wings worth over one million dollars in 1985. The first draft was held on September 17, 1986, a month after the NHL Players' Association approved a new contract with the league allowing the owners to hold a two-round supplemental draft before the entry draft. In 1992, the supplemental draft was scaled back to a single round and limited to non-playoff teams from the previous season and first-year expansion teams. The supplemental draft was discontinued by the 1995 collective bargaining agreement.

Unlike the entry draft, most players selected never played in the NHL, although a few "diamonds in the rough" went on to NHL careers. Steve Rucchin played the most regular season games (735) among selections and was a team captain for the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. John Cullen scored the most points (550) and was one of two selections to play in the NHL All-Star Game. The other, Bob Kudelski, is one of eight other selections who enjoyed NHL careers of at least 200 games with Cory Cross, Shawn Chambers, Todd Krygier, Jamie Baker, Steve Martins, Dave Snuggerud, and Steve Guolla rounding out the list.

Eligible players

The eligibility rules for selecting players was as follows:

  1. They were 21-years-old or older by December 31 of the draft year.
  2. They had never been claimed in the NHL entry draft.
  3. They had never previously played professional hockey.
  4. They played at least one season of college hockey.

The first two supplemental drafts featured seven invalid claims, six of them (including Ian Kidd, who would have otherwise been the first ever supplemental draft selection) because the player entered college after age 20. The other invalid claim was of a player who hadn’t turned 21 yet.

List of NHL supplemental drafts

DraftDateRoundsTotal drafted
[1986](1986-nhl-supplemental-draft)September 17, 1986223
[1987](1987-nhl-supplemental-draft)June 13, 1987221
[1988](1988-nhl-supplemental-draft)June 10, 1988226
[1989](1989-nhl-supplemental-draft)June 16, 1989226
[1990](1990-nhl-supplemental-draft)June 15, 1990226
[1991](1991-nhl-supplemental-draft)June 21, 1991228
[1992](1992-nhl-supplemental-draft)June 19, 199218
[1993](1993-nhl-supplemental-draft)June 25, 1993110
[1994](1994-nhl-supplemental-draft)June 28, 1994110

References

References

  1. "Bring back the NHL Supplemental Draft?". HFBoards - NHL Message Board and Forum for National Hockey League.
  2. (October 14, 1985). "GO FOR THE DOUGH, BOYS". [[Sports Illustrated]].
  3. (September 18, 1986). "Three players each from the University of Denver and...". [[United Press International.
  4. (August 12, 1986). "The NHL union Tuesday said players approved by a...". [[United Press International.
  5. (April 2, 1992). "Players Stage First NHL Strike : Hockey". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  6. (January 12, 1995). "Text of final contract offer from NHL to players’ union". [[Montreal Gazette]].
  7. (September 8, 2003). "Rucchin named captain of Mighty Ducks".
  8. "NHL and WHA Draft History at Hockeydb.com".
  9. (June 26, 1987). "NHL supplemental draft". [[New York Daily News]].
  10. (June 29, 1994). "CAPITALS CHOOSE SON". [[Sun-Sentinel]].
  11. (September 19, 1986). "Kings draft Yale star". [[The Salinas Californian.
  12. "1986 NHL Supplemental Draft -- Round 1 Selections". Hockey Draft Central.
  13. "1986 NHL Supplemental Draft -- Round 2 Selections". Hockey Draft Central.
  14. "1987 NHL Supplemental Draft -- Round 2 Selections". Hockey Draft Central.
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