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Barry McKinlay
Born (1967-08-08) August 8, 1967 (age 56)
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Height 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight 192 lb (87 kg; 13 st 10 lb)
Position Defence
Shot Right
Played for AHL
Prince Edward Island Senators
CoHL/ UHL
Thunder Bay Thunder Cats
Thunder Bay Senators
Rockford IceHogs
WPHL
Rockford IceHogs
CHL
Lubbock Cotton Kings
BISL
Bracknell Bees
NHL Draft 206th overall, 1987
Montreal Canadiens
Playing career 1991–2004

Barry McKinlay (born August 8, 1967) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey defenceman.

Early life and education

McKinlay in 1967 in Edmonton, Alberta. He McKinley attended the University of Illinois at Chicago, where he played NCAA college hockey with the UIC Flames men's ice hockey team, earning him a Second Team All-CCHA spot.

Career

McKinlay was selected by the Montreal Canadiens in the 10th round (206th overall) of the 1987 NHL Entry Draft.

McKinlay did not play any regular season NHL games National Hockey League, but went on to play 13 seasons of professional hockey, mostly in the Colonial Hockey League/United Hockey League, where he played 640 regular season and playoff games. McKinlay is one of seven defencemen in history to score 100 points in a professional hockey season (126) in 1997–98. He was a three-time UHL Defenceman of the year, and a four-time 1st Team All-Star.

McKinlay played the 2000–01 season with the Tupelo T-Rex of the Western Professional Hockey League (WPHL) where he was recognized by his peers as having the hardest shot in the WPHL, and was selected as the league's second best offensive defenceman (behind Mark DeSantis). [1] Won the Hardest shot competition at the WPHL All-Star game (103.9 mph).

Career statistics

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1984–85 St. Albert Saints AJHL
1985–86 St. Albert Saints AJHL 52 21 51 72 102
1986–87 University of Illinois Chicago NCAA 33 9 14 23 35
1987–88 University of Illinois Chicago NCAA 38 15 31 46 81
1991–92 Thunder Bay Thunder Hawks CoHL 48 17 28 45 25 13 2 6 8 8
1992–93 Thunder Bay Thunder Hawks CoHL 55 17 39 56 47 11 2 3 5 11
1993–94 Prince Edward Island Senators AHL 17 2 5 7 6
1993–94 Thunder Bay Senators CoHL 40 14 43 57 53 9 3 6 9 11
1994–95 Prince Edward Island Senators AHL 8 1 5 6 0
1994–95 Thunder Bay Senators CoHL 65 26 54 80 100 11 4 13 17 4
1995–96 Thunder Bay Senators CoHL 54 10 43 53 87 19 1 18 19 30
1996–97 Thunder Bay Thunder Cats CoHL 65 32 58 90 82 11 6 10 16 16
1997–98 Thunder Bay Thunder Cats UHL 74 36 90 126 40 5 3 4 7 2
1998–99 Bracknell Bees BISL 11 6 6 12 4
1998–99 Thunder Bay Thunder Cats UHL 34 15 27 42 24 13 5 4 9 8
1999–00 Rockford IceHogs UHL 37 11 23 34 26
2000–01 Tupelo T-Rex WPHL 59 21 47 68 20 10 3 6 9 12
2001–02 Lubbock Cotton Kings CHL 64 15 43 58 45
2002–03 Lubbock Cotton Kings CHL 55 15 20 35 55
2003–04 Port Huron Beacons UHL 68 10 35 45 66 8 1 3 4 6
AHL totals 25 3 10 13 6
CHL totals 119 30 63 93 100
UHL (CoHL) totals 540 188 440 628 550 100 27 67 94 96

Awards and honours

Award Year
All- CCHA Second Team 1987-88 [2]

References

  1. ^ WPHL announces "Best of the Best"
  2. ^ "CCHA All-Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved May 19, 2013.

External links