Jaromir Jagr

Jaromir Jagr (born February 15, 1972 in Kladno, Czechoslovakia) is one of the top ice hockey players in the NHL.

Career overview

Jagr currently plays with the New York Rangers. He still resides in the Czech Republic during the off-season. His father, also named Jaromir Jagr, is prosperous and owns a chain of hotels. The younger Jagr showed his athletic aptitude early; he began skating at age three and was always one of the best players as he worked his way up through the Czech hockey leagues. At the age of 16, he was playing at the highest level of competition in Czechoslovakia. Jagr was the first Czechoslovakian player to be drafted by the NHL without first having to defect to the west. He was taken by the Pittsburgh Penguins with #5 pick in the 1990 NHL Entry Draft and played with them for the next ten years. He was a supporting player with the powerhouse Penguins that won back-to-back Stanley Cups in 1991 and 1992. Early in his career with the Penguins, Jagr - then sporting long hair - was often promoted as a teen idol, whom teenaged girls found adorable, and teenage boys admired his athletic talent. Jagr possessed a sense of humor about the marketing buzz around him. Before he had a grasp of the English language, he could be heard reading the daily weather forecast on Pittsburgh radio station WDVE in his broken, thickly accented English. He and team mate (and fellow countryman) Jan Hrdina were promoted as the "Czechmates", a play on the term "checkmate" from chess. Some Penguins fans thought that the letters in his first name could be scrambled to form "Mario Jr", a reference to elder team mate Mario Lemieux. It was in the later years that he truly broke out and became the most dominant right wing in the league. From 1994-95 to 2000-01 on a decent Penguins team, Jagr won six NHL scoring titles including four in a row from 1997-98 to 2000-01, and in the 1995-96 season scored 149 points. In 1998 he led the Czech Republic's team to a gold medal at the Nagano Olympics. With the return of Mario Lemieux from retirement, the Penguins had two superstars, but friction developed between the two. Also the struggling, small-market Penguins could no longer hope to meet Jagr's massive salary demands. Thus in 2001 they traded him to the Washington Capitals for three young prospects. The Capitals made Jagr one of the most highly paid players in the NHL with an $11 million per year deal. Jagr, however, failed to perform. In the 2001-2002 season Washington failed to make the playoffs and Jagr appeared to being playing at a level far below that which had been expected. In 2002-2003 Washington managed to finish 6th overall in the Eastern Conference, but lost to the upstart Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round of the playoffs. (Tampa Bay would win the Stanley Cup in the next 2003-04 NHL Season.) While in Washington, Jagr did not experience as much popularity as fellow forward Peter Bondra. Disgruntled, the Washington ownership spent much of 2003 trying to trade Jagr, but a year before a new Collective Bargaining Agreement is to be signed, few teams were willing to risk $11 million on Jagr. Eventually he was traded to New York for Anson Carter and an agreement that Washington would pay four million dollars per year of Jagr's salary. Jagr also agreed to a million dollar a year pay cut to allow the trade to go ahead. In 2004 he moved from Kladno in the Czech Republic to the “Avangard” ice-hockey team at Omsk in Russia. Jagr wears the number 68 in honor of the Prague Spring rebellion of 1968 in which both of his grandfathers were killed.

Awards

Records

  • Most assists by a rookie in Stanley Cup Finals (1991) - 5.
  • Most regular season points by a right wing (1995-1996) - 149.
  • Most regular season assists by a right wing (1995-1996) - 87.
  • Most regular season points by a European-born player (1995-1996) - 149.

External link

Preceded by:
Ron Francis
Pittsburgh Penguins Captains Succeeded by:
Mario Lemieux
Jagr, Jaromir Jagr, Jaromir Jagr, Jaromir Jagr, Jaromir Jagr, Jaromir

 

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