Nov 24, 2014
Pat Quinn Timeline
TSN.ca Staff
1943 - Born in Hamilton, Ontario
1958 - While attending St. Michael's College School in Toronto, played two seasons for the Hamilton Tiger Cubs of the Ontario Hockey Association
1962 - Accepted a scholarship to Michigan Tech, but was ruled inelgible to play in the NCAA because his rights belonged to the Detroit Red Wings
- Played one season for Red Wings' junior affiliate-Edmonton Oil Kings, where he won the Memorial Cup
1963 - Turned pro and bounced around various minor leagues for five seasons, including the Eastern Hockey League (Knoxville Knights), Central Professional Hockey League (Tula Oilers, Memphis Wings and Houston Apollos) and the Western Hockey League (Seattle Totems)
1968 - Signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs and notched two goals and seven assists in 40 games in his rookie season
1969 - In an April 2 10-0 playoff loss to the Boston Bruins, infamously laid out Bobby Orr with a thundering open-ice check that left Orr concussed and incited a bench-clearing brawl
1970 - After two seasons with the Leafs, claimed by the Vancouver Canucks in NHL Expansion Draft
1972 - After two seasons with the Canucks, claimed by the Atlanta Flames in NHL Expansion Draft and later named captain
- Graduates from York University with BA in economics
1977 - Retires from NHL with 18 goals and and 113 assists in 606 career games
- Named assistant coach of Philadelphia Flyers under Fred Shero
1978 - Takes over as head coach of Flyers after half-season as head coach of AHL-affiliate Maine Mariners
1980 - In first full season as coach, leads Flyers to a 35-game unbeaten run
- Flyers lose Stanley Cup final in six games to New York Islanders
- Claims Jack Adams Award given to NHL's coach of the year
1981 - Signs five-year extension with Flyers
1982 - Fired by Flyers after only one season into new contract
- Enrolled in law school at Philadelphia-area Wiedener University
1984 - Returns to NHL as head coach of Los Angeles Kings
- Leads Kings back to playoffs following two-year absence with 23-point improvement to prior season
- Completes law degree at University of San Diego
1986 - Signs deal with to become president and general manager of Vancouver Canucks while still under contract with Kings
- Though Quinn argues that Kings missed a deadline on his contract that allowed him to negotiate with other clubs, NHL President John Ziegler suspends Quinn for the remainder of the season and prevents him from taking over control of Canucks until the following June
- On top of the suspension, Ziegler bans Quinn from coaching anywhere in the NHL until 1990
1988 - Drafts Trevor Linden second overall out of the Saskatoon Blades in NHL Entry Draft
1989 - Drafts Pavel Bure 113th overall out of CSKA Moscow
1991 - Takes over as head coach of Canucks with 26 games remaining in regular season
1992 - Wins second Jack Adams Award after leading Canucks to Smythe Division title
1993 - Canucks repeat as Smythe Division winners
1994 - Canucks are defeated by the New York Rangers in seven games of the Stanley Cup Final
- Leaves Canucks' bench to concentrate on front office duties
1997 - After sale of team to group front by John McCaw, Quinn is fired by Canucks
1998 - Named head coach of Toronto Maple Leafs and leads Leafs to Eastern Conference finals in first season in charge
1999 - Takes over as general manager of team
2002 - Coaches Team Canada to first gold medal in 50 years at Salt Lake City Winter Olympics
- Leads Leafs to Eastern Conference finals, losing to Carolina Hurricanes in six games
2003 - Relinquishes general manager role to John Ferguson, Jr.
2004 - Coaches Canada to victory at World Cup of Hockey with a perfect 6-0 mark
2005 - Hamilton's Parkdale Arena renamed Pat Quinn Arena
2006 - Quinn's Canada is eliminated by Russia in quarterfinals of 2006 Torino Winter Olympics
- Leafs miss the playoffs for the first time under Quinn, who is fired by team at season's end
- Receives honorary degree from McMaster University
- Coaches Canadian entry at 2006 Spengler Cup, where team is defeated 3-2 in final by HC Davos
2008 - Coaches Canada to gold medal at World U18 Championships
2009 - With a team including PK Subban, John Tavares and Alex Pietrangelo, coaches Canada to an undefeated World Junior Championships run and a gold medal
- Returns to NHL as coach of Edmonton Oilers, but is fired after one season with league-worst record
2012 - Named to the Order of Canada
2013 - Takes over as chairman of Hockey Hall of Fame