Shane Doan

Player

Birthday October 10, 1976

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Halkirk, Alberta, Canada

Age 47 years old

Nationality Canada

Height 185 cm

Weight 223 lb (101 kg; 15 st 13 lb)

#52444 Most Popular

1976

Shane Albert Doan (born October 10, 1976) is a Canadian ice hockey executive and former player currently serving as an assistant to Brad Treliving for the Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League (NHL).

1992

Doan began his career in the Western Hockey League (WHL) with the Kamloops Blazers in 1992, and spent three seasons with the team.

1994

He won the Memorial Cup with the Blazers in 1994 and 1995.

He had his most successful season with the team during the 1994–95 season, when he recorded 94 points, helping the team win the Memorial Cup for a second straight year, and was also awarded the Stafford Smythe Memorial Trophy as the tournament's MVP.

Doan loved his time in Kamloops, and returns there in summer months.

1995

Doan spent the entirety of his 21-season NHL career with the Coyotes franchise, beginning with the original Winnipeg Jets in 1995 before playing in Arizona for two decades.

Doan was drafted by the Winnipeg Jets in the first round, seventh overall, in the 1995 NHL Entry Draft.

He was the Jets' final first-round pick to play in the NHL prior to the franchise moving to Phoenix.

He immediately made the transition from major junior to the NHL in 1995–96 and tallied 17 points in his rookie season with the Jets.

He scored his first NHL goal against Ed Belfour of the Chicago Blackhawks, and later scored the overtime goal to win the game 6–5.

1996

Perhaps Doan's most memorable moment as a Jet was his seventh and final goal as a Jet, which came on April 12, 1996, during the team's last regular season home game, where he scored the game-winning goal against the Los Angeles Kings in the second period to make the score 4–2 for Winnipeg.

The game would finish 5–3 and the win clinched a playoff spot for the Jets.

In the playoffs, the Jets were matched up against the first seeded Detroit Red Wings and lost in six games.

1999

After the Jets relocated to Phoenix and became the Coyotes the following season, Doan's points total did not improve greatly until the 1999–2000 season, when he scored 26 goals (the first of nine consecutive 20-goal seasons for Doan).

2003

Doan led the Phoenix Coyotes in scoring in every season between 2003 and 2011.

He was also the longest-serving NHL captain until his retirement, serving in that capacity for the Coyotes from 2003 to 2017.

After the departure of team captain Teppo Numminen, Doan assumed the captaincy in 2003–04 and scored which were then career-highs in all statistical categories with 27 goals, 41 assists and 68 points.

2004

He helped Canada win the World Cup championship in 2004 and was also a member of Canada's 2006 Winter Olympic team.

During the season, Doan was selected to play in his first NHL All-Star Game in 2004.

He then hit the 30-goal mark for the first time in his career the following season to go with 36 assists and 66 points.

2005

On December 13, 2005, during a game against the Montreal Canadiens, he was involved in a controversy concerning discriminatory remarks made towards French-speaking referees.

Liberal MP Denis Coderre then asked to remove Doan from the Canadian team taking part in the Olympic Games.

Wayne Gretzky, being the owner and head coach of the Coyotes as well as the director of the Olympic committee, decided to leave his protégé in training.

2006

In January 2006, Doan, who denied having made the remarks toward the referees, sued Coderre for defamation, then in April 2007 Coderre sued Doan in return, also for defamation.

2007

Late in the 2006–07 season, Doan agreed to a five-year, $22.75 million contract extension with the Coyotes on February 14, 2007.

He responded the following season with his best season to date when he led the Coyotes in scoring in 2007–08 with 28 goals and a career-high 50 assists for 78 points.

2008

In 2008–09, Doan was selected to the 2009 NHL All-Star Game and won the inaugural elimination shootout segment of the skills competition, outlasting Marc Savard of the Boston Bruins in the seventh round.

He completed that season with his second-straight 70-point season and a career-high 31 goals.

2010

In August 2010, the two parties decided to settle the matter amicably at which Doan admitted these comments were made by a Coyotes player on the ice.

On October 18, 2010, Doan was suspended for three games for a hit on Dan Sexton of the Anaheim Ducks the night previous.

The NHL's disciplinarian, Colin Campbell, ruled that the hit was "a late hit from the blind side to the head of an unsuspecting opponent", violating the NHL's ban on blindside hits to the head.

It was the first suspension of Doan's career.

2011

Doan had a successful and memorable 2011–12 season for the Coyotes, leading his team to their most successful regular season to date, as the Coyotes finished third in the Western Conference and won their first division title.

2012

Doan never won the Stanley Cup, coming closest when his Phoenix Coyotes lost to the Los Angeles Kings in the 2012 Western Conference Final.

In international competition, Doan represented Canada and won five medals (two gold, three silver) at the World Championships.

Also that season, he scored 50 points (22 goals and 28 assists) and his first NHL hat-trick, on January 7, 2012, at 19:59 of the third period in the 1,161st game of his NHL career.

2015

In December 2015, Doan became the Coyotes franchise's all-time leading goal scorer.

2017

He was the last remaining player active in the NHL from the original Winnipeg Jets franchise before he announced his retirement in the summer of 2017.

2019

The Coyotes retired Doan's jersey number prior to a game against the current Winnipeg Jets on February 24, 2019.

He subsequently joined the Coyotes front office on January 11, 2021.