Glen Sather

Glen Sather (born September 2, 1943) in High River, Alberta, Canada) was a left wing in the World Hockey Association and National Hockey League. He played for the Boston Bruins, Pittsburgh Penguins, New York Rangers, Saint Louis Blues, Montreal Canadiens, Minnesota North Stars, and Edmonton Oilers (in their WHA incarnation).

Background and early career

Sather played 3 seasons starting in 1964 with the CPHL Memphis Wings and Oklahoma City Blazers, joining the Bruins at the end of the 1966-67 season and playing in 5 games. He earned the nickname "Slats" because of his gritty style of play.

Professional playing career

Sather played 10 full seasons in the NHL and another season in the WHA. He played 739 regular season games as a pro, scoring 99-146-245 and earned 801 penalties in minutes. In the playoffs he added 77 games played and scored 2-6-8 with 88PIM. His career as a player ended at the conclusion of the 1976-77 WHA season.

Post playing career

Sather became head coach of the NHL Oilers in 1979 and took them to the first round of the playoffs in their inaugural season. This was the start of a tremendous run for the Oilers, who became a genuine NHL dynasty with him as the coach and general manager. The team made the playoffs with Sather as head coach from 1979-80 until 1984-85. From 1985 until 1989, Sather split coaching duties with John Muckler, but retained the title of head coach. With Sather at the helm in various duties, the team won five Stanley Cups in seven years, after losing in the finals to the New York Islanders in 1983. In 2000, Sather left the Oilers organisation and joined the Rangers to become their President and General Manager, which position he currently (2005) holds. He also has coached the Rangers in 28 games (11-10-4-3) in that timespan.

Notable achievements

Glen Sather is the winningest coach in Oilers history, and under his leadership the team set several NHL records including most team goals for and holding several spots in the best winning seasons ever. With him as head coach, the Oilers won 791 games, lost 660, and tied 215. They won 3 President's Trophies for best league regular season record. Their playoff record was even more impressive, winning 133 games and losing 82 en route to five Stanley Cups in six Finals appearances. In 1985-86, Sather won the Jack Adams award as the league's best general manager. Teams he has coached for a full season have only finished out of the playoffs once and had winning records 8 out of 11 seasons. He currently stands ninth in coaching wins in NHL history. Outside of the NHL, Sather has been instrumental in building Canadian national teams for the World Cup of Hockey (1996), the Canada Cup (1994), and the World Hockey Championships (1994). Sather was admitted to the NHL Hall of Fame in 1997, and as of January 2005 is currently the NHL's longest-tenured general manager.

Sources/External references

Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen Sather, Glen

 

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