BraveCanadian
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- Jun 30, 2010
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With their fourteenth round pick (417) in the 2012 ATD, the Guelph Platers have selected: C, John Madden
Career Highlights:
Stanley Cup Champion, 2000, 2003, 2010.
Stanley Cup Finalist, 2001.
Frank J. Selke Trophy Winner, 2000-01.
Vitals:
Born: May 4, 1973
Position: C
Height: 5-11
Weight: 190
Shoots: Left
Regular Season:
Madden, who modelled his game after Guy Carbonneau, has an extremely impressive Selke record, winning once and being top 5 three others: 1, 2, 2, 5, 10.
He is an elite penalty killer and a short handed threat: Top 10 in SH goals: 1, 8, 10.
Career Regular Season Stats:
GP|G|A|Pts|+/-|PIM|EV|PP|SH|GW
882|162|183|345|21|217|137|7|18|23
Playoffs:
Madden's play was a key contributor to the 2003 New Jersey Devils Stanley Cup winning run. In addition to his usual strong defensive play, Madden was tied for third in playoff points with 16.
Career Playoff Stats:
GP|G|A|Pts|+/-|PIM|EV|PP|SH|GW
134|21|22|43|1|26|15|2|4|4
Quotations and Perspective:
Career Highlights:
Stanley Cup Champion, 2000, 2003, 2010.
Stanley Cup Finalist, 2001.
Frank J. Selke Trophy Winner, 2000-01.
Vitals:
Born: May 4, 1973
Position: C
Height: 5-11
Weight: 190
Shoots: Left
Regular Season:
Madden, who modelled his game after Guy Carbonneau, has an extremely impressive Selke record, winning once and being top 5 three others: 1, 2, 2, 5, 10.
He is an elite penalty killer and a short handed threat: Top 10 in SH goals: 1, 8, 10.
Career Regular Season Stats:
882|162|183|345|21|217|137|7|18|23
Playoffs:
Madden's play was a key contributor to the 2003 New Jersey Devils Stanley Cup winning run. In addition to his usual strong defensive play, Madden was tied for third in playoff points with 16.
Career Playoff Stats:
134|21|22|43|1|26|15|2|4|4
Quotations and Perspective:
HOCKEY;Madden is everywhere said:Scott Stevens, the Devils' captain, was reading a newspaper article late in the season in which the leading contenders for the Selke Trophy were being discussed.
There was one glaring omission, Stevens said. John Madden, the Devils' 29-year-old checking center, was not mentioned as a candidate for the league's top defensive forward award.
''His name wasn't even brought up,'' Stevens said today, shaking his head. ''I was shocked. How could it not be?''
The ubiquitous Madden, who won the Selke in 2001, has been the most valuable skater for the Devils, who have raced to a three-games-to-none lead over the Boston Bruins in the first round of the playoffs.
Aside from the stellar play of Devils goaltender Martin Brodeur, the main reason the Bruins find themselves on the verge of elimination Tuesday night is their inability to get their best player, the top-line center Joe Thornton, away from Madden and Stevens, still the Devils' best defensive defenseman at age 39.
''The only way you're going to get them away from that line,'' said John O'Connell, the Boston general manager and coach, ''is to keep your best players off the ice. And we're not going to do that.''
Devils Coach Pat Burns was able to dictate the matchups, even though the Bruins had the prerogative of the last change here Sunday in Game 3. Burns repeatedly sent Madden out for important faceoffs. If O'Connell sent Thornton onto the ice, Madden stayed on the ice. If not, Madden returned to the bench, waited for Thornton to come out, then, with his linemates, changed on the fly.
''Pat's so good at that,'' said Thornton, who played for Burns when he was the Bruins' coach. ''He's coached a lot of teams. When he wants the matchups, he usually gets the matchups. And that hasn't changed in the series or here at home.''
At times, it seemed as if Madden and Stevens were surgically attached to Thornton, 23, who finished third in the league in scoring with 101 points but has only two assists against the Devils and no goals.
Instead, in Game 3, it was Madden who provided some offensive punch. A 19-goal scorer during the regular season, Madden scored a goal and assisted on two others Sunday afternoon. With 5 points in the Devils' first three games, Madden is tied with his teammate Jamie Langenbrunner for leading scorer in this season's playoffs.
But Madden said the points do not mean much to him.
''I'd be happy having zero points and three wins,'' he said.
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So far, Madden has been more than up to the challenge, although his sliced-up face and bruised body attest to the punishment he has taken during the series.
Burns and Joe Nieuwendyk compared Madden to Guy Carbonneau in the way Madden seems to anticipate the play. No faint praise. A mainstay of Stanley Cup champions in Montreal and Dallas, Carbonneau was considered the premier defensive forward of his day and won the Selke three times.
''John skates so well, I think that it makes up for any size deficiency he might have,'' said Nieuwendyk, who was a longtime teammate of Carbonneau's in Dallas.
''John is very much like Guy Carbonneau. Carbo would hate me for saying this, but I think John is more offensively gifted. And that's not taking anything away from Carbo, because Carbo was one of the great ones.''
The Defense Rests said:...
The real question mark for the Devils will be John Madden. Likely to be tabbed as the team's next captain, the gritty Madden is a perennial Selke Trophy winner and an absolute bulldog in all three zones.
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Nashville-Chicago Preview: Five keys to Success for the Blackhawks said:...
Madden has been a defensive spark plug all season for the Hawks. He brought his Selke-worthy defensive presence over from the New Jersey Devils and made all of the guys on the offensive side of the puck re-think their defensive priorities. Jonathan Toews and Kris Versteeg have both benefited greatly from his tutelage, and the Hawks brought him in for this exact reason: to help play defense against the best teams in the league in the playoffs.
Defensive Devil wants Cup again said:...
Martin Brodeur is the marquee name and the league's best goaltender. But Madden, 30, has mastered the gritty, grinding, defensive style that put New Jersey on the map. And the 5-foot-11, 190-pounder is a finalist for the Selke Trophy, which goes to the league's top defensive forward.
He also is as comfortable on the power play as the penalty kill, and his 15 points on six goals and nine assists are third on the team in the postseason.
A leader by example? Madden's left cheek was gashed by a skate 4:34 into Game 5 while he was buried at the bottom of a scrum he instigated by charging Ducks defenseman Sandis Ozolinsh.
Madden bled significantly as he skated off the ice. He was back before the end of the period, the 2-inch wound closed by 16 stitches, his eye puffy and discolored, but his feisty game intact.
"You feed off anybody like that," left wing Jay Pandolfo said. "Anything he does, we'll take notice of."
"He's a warrior," right wing Grant Marshall said. "He's one of the key guys who plays hard every night. He brings it every night."
...
Madden said that kind of work is more gratifying than scoring because it is what he trained for. He said he sculpted his game to fit what he believed the Devils lacked.
Madden's speed makes his forecheck effective. His tenacity takes away time and space from opponents and forces them into hasty decisions.
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