L'ancien attaquant des Sénateurs d'Ottawa Kyle Turris a choisi d'accrocher ses patins.
Avec l’Express, Turris occupera les fonctions de conseiller spécial et d’entraîneur du développement des joueurs. Il a passé six saisons complètes à Ottawa, amassant 274 points en 407 rencontres. C’est avec les Sénateurs qu’il a connu ses meilleurs moments, quand il a été acquis par l’équipe ontarienne en 2011.
The veteran forward is retiring from the NHL and joining the Coquitlam Express of the British Columbia Hockey League as a special advisor to the general manager ...
“The Express organization played a key role in my personal and professional growth,” Turris said. “I am really excited to have Kyle joining the team on the management side of things and with the players,” Express GM Tali Campbell said in a statement. Kyle Turris is going home.
Drafted by the Phoenix Coyotes 3rd overall in 2007, Turris, now 33, played 776 NHL games between the Coyotes, Ottawa Senators, Nashville Predators and most ...
In year two, he was named the BCHL’s MVP and the CJHL’s player of the year scoring 66 goals and 121 points in 53 games. His best seasons came with the Senators wherein he scored 117 goals and 274 points in 407 games. He was named the BCHL’s rookie of the year in his first season helping the Express win a league title, and the Jr.
Turris, 33, played just 23 games with the Edmonton Oilers last season, scoring a single goal and registering four points. His offensive touch had disappeared ...
The dynamic forward scored 66 goals and 121 points in 53 games during his final season in the BCHL, before heading to the University of Wisconsin for a year and then entering the NHL. His offensive touch had disappeared over the last few years, leading the Nashville Predators to execute a buyout of the last four years of his contract in 2020. The Express organization played a key role in my personal and professional growth.
Former NHL forward Kyle Turris is joining the BCHL's Coquitlam Express as a special advisor to the GM and development coach.
Currently a free agent, it's unclear as to whether the 33-year-old is indeed stepping away from the NHL for good now that he's set to join the Express for this coming season. A veteran of 776 games, Turris was once a useful top-six centre at the height of his powers, scoring 168 career goals and 257 assists for 425 points while playing for the Oilers, Arizona Coyotes, Ottawa Senators, and Nashville Predators. “I am excited about having the opportunity to work with Tali and Patrick as they help each player develop individually, while pursuing the Fred Page Cup as a team.”
Il rejoindra son ancienne équipe junior en Colombie-Britannique à titre de conseiller au directeur général et entraîneur au développement des joueurs.
En 2017, il était une pièce maîtresse d’une énorme transaction impliquant Matt Duchene et les Predators de Nashville. Il avait ensuite pris le chemin d’Ottawa, alors que les Sénateurs étaient allés le chercher dans une transaction contre le défenseur David Rundblad et un choix de repêchage. Il travaillera à titre de conseiller au directeur général et entraîneur au développement des joueurs.
Turris retires with 425 points in 776 games across 14 seasons with the Coyotes, Senators, Predators, and Oilers.
Turris also led the Express to a league title and Jr. Turris will join the Coquitlam Express of the BCHL as a special advisor to general manager Tali Campbell, as well as a player development coach. “I am excited about having the opportunity to work with Tali and Patrick as they help each player develop individually while pursuing the Fred Page Cup as a team.”
Veteran NHL forward Kyle Turris has officially retired from professional hockey at just 33 years old and has joined the BCHL's Coquitlam Express front ...
Turris on a great career and all the best of luck in your new career as a hockey executive. Turris was shipped to the Predators in a three way trade that saw the Sens end up with Duchene and the Avs end up with Sam Girard, Vlad Kamenev, Andrew Hammond and picks that ended up netting 4th overall pick Bowen Byram. Turris, of course, is local to the Coquitlam, BC area and played for the Express during his junior hockey days.
Kyle Turris apportera son expérience à Coquitlam ... Après avoir disputé 13 saisons en NHL, dont la dernière avec les Oilers d'Edmonton, le récent retraité Kyle ...
L'ancien choix de Coyotes de l'Arizona deviendra conseiller spécial du directeur-général et entraîneur du développement des joueurs pour l'Express de Coquitlam. Il s'agit d'un retour aux sources pour Turris qui est né près de cette ville et qui a porté les couleurs du club lorsqu'il évoluait dans la ville voisine de Burnaby. Après avoir disputé 13 saisons en NHL, dont la dernière avec les Oilers d'Edmonton, le récent retraité Kyle Turris a accepté un poste en BCHL.
Coquitlam Express. After playing 13 seasons in the NHL, his last with the Edmonton Oilers, the recently retired Kyle Turris has accepted a position in BCHL.
Kyle Turris has retired from the NHL after 14 seasons and was named special advisor to the general manager and player development coach for the Coquitlam ...
"I am really excited to have Kyle joining the team on the management side of things and with the players," Campbell said. When Turris played for Burnaby, he was named BCHL Coastal Conference rookie of the year in 2005-06. "The Express organization played a key role in my personal and professional growth," Turris said.
On Ottawa's playoff hopes, Kyle Turris' retirement, and more!
The kind of player many NHL teams including the Senators are in the market for, and the Knights used him as a sweetener to offload a forward who had 88 points in his last 87 games. Three of those goals came off of the stick of Turris, and I’m proud to say I was in attendance for the best one (and as always, shout-out to Jim O’Brien for making that first-rounder worth it with a single drop pass!). Forward Kyle Turris has retired from the NHL at 33 years of age, and it’s hard to imagine a player who was more clutch during his time as an Ottawa Senator. Matt Murray wasn’t the worst goalie last year, but he was owed $15M over the next two seasons, and all the Sens had to give up to move 75% of his salary was a 3rd and a 7th. We could see them approach the same territory we saw the [San Jose Sharks](https://www.fearthefin.com) swim into back in 2019-20. [Calgary Flames](https://www.matchsticksandgasoline.com) signed forward Nazem Kadri, who had 87 points in 71 games with the [Colorado Avalanche](https://www.milehighhockey.com) last season, to a seven-year deal worth $7M annually. When I first saw that trade I assumed that Coghlan was an ECHL-level player who was just taking up space on the roster, but no — he’s a 24-year-old right-shot who had 13 points in 59 NHL games last year. The Flames gave up a lot to move Monahan’s salary, but his production had dipped and injuries also contributed to him not being the player he once was. Most of their core is on the wrong side of 30, and they’ll be without Tom Wilson and Nicklas Backstrom to start the year. Adding Kadri while moving a first-round pick to shed Sean Monahan’s contract, along with bringing in Jonathan Huberdeau and future Senator Mackenzie Weegar, is about as good a job of salvaging a potentially bad situation as you could hope for. Among this week’s Five Thoughts, we’ll check in on a few other teams that have made headlines (for both good and not-so-good reasons) with their work this summer: The biggest items of note are Jacob Chychrun’s name keeps coming up in trade rumors, and