Alex DeBrincat

Hockey Player

Alex DeBrincat was born in Farmington Hills, Michigan, United States on December 18th, 1997 and is the Hockey Player. At the age of 26, Alex DeBrincat biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
December 18, 1997
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Farmington Hills, Michigan, United States
Age
26 years old
Zodiac Sign
Sagittarius
Profession
Ice Hockey Player
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Alex DeBrincat Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 26 years old, Alex DeBrincat has this physical status:

Height
173cm
Weight
81.6kg
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Alex DeBrincat Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Alex DeBrincat Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Not Available
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Alex DeBrincat Career

DeBrincat signed with the Erie Otters of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) as a free agent on April 28, 2014. At the time, he had planned to play junior ice hockey and then attend the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he had committed to play college ice hockey for the Minutemen, but he left Lake Forest to play for the Otters. Erie general manager Sherwood Bassin had scouted him during Lake Forest's 8–2 rout of the Soo Indians, in which DeBrincat scored three goals and recorded two assists.

DeBrincat scored his first OHL goal in his first game with the Otters, a 7–1 win over the Saginaw Spirit to open the 2014–15 season. After scoring 10 goals and 21 points in 10 games, DeBrincat was named the OHL Rookie of the Month for October 2014. He followed that with his first junior hockey hat-trick in a 5–2 win over the Sarnia Sting on November 7. He was named the OHL Rookie of the Month again in November with another nine goals and 17 points in 13 games. DeBrincat finished the regular season with a six-point game in Erie's 8–7 win over the Niagara IceDogs. In addition to securing the Otters' 50th win of the season, DeBrincat finished the season with 51 goals and 104 points, becoming the first rookie in franchise history to score 50 goals and 100 points. He added another nine goals and 16 points in 20 playoff games, but the Otters lost to the Oshawa Generals in the J. Ross Robertson Cup finals. At the end of the season, DeBrincat followed Connor McDavid as only the second Otter to win the Emms Family Award, given to the OHL Rookie of the Year, and in May, he was named the CHL Rookie of the Year. He was also named to the OHL All-Rookie First Team and the Second All-Star Team.

On October 1, 2015, DeBrincat scored five goals in the Niagara IceDogs' home opener for the 2015–16 season. The following week, he had a four-goal game against Niagara, giving the Otters a 7–2 win to stay unbeaten through five games. He was named the OHL Player of the Month after scoring 16 goals and 23 points in 12 games, and he followed the award with his third hat-trick of the season, this time against the Peterborough Petes. That January, DeBrincat was one of two Otters named to the CHL/NHL Top Prospects Game, playing on Team Cherry. DeBrincat scored his 50th goal of the season against the Owen Sound Attack on March 17, becoming the first player in franchise history to record consecutive 50-goal seasons and the first OHL player to do so since Tyler Toffoli in 2011 and 2012. Two days later, he picked up his 100th point with two assists in the Otters' 4–2 win over the London Knights. DeBrincat finished his sophomore OHL season with 51 goals and 101 points, and he was named to the 2015–16 OHL Third All-Star Team. Additionally, he was a highly-rated prospect going into the 2016 NHL Entry Draft: the NHL Central Scouting Bureau ranked DeBrincat 20th among all North American skaters in their midterm rankings and 21st in their final rankings. In June, he was drafted in the second round, 39th overall, by the Chicago Blackhawks of the NHL. He signed a three-year, entry-level contract with the team on November 7, 2016.

After missing the first three games of the 2016–17 season in Blackhawks training camp, DeBrincat returned to the Otters to pick up 15 points in six games. DeBrincat and his teammate Taylor Raddysh were named the OHL's Co-Players of the Month for November 2016 after they both scored 27 points in 12 games. He was the first player that season to reach the 30-goal mark, doing so through 28 games. DeBrincat was named the Player of the Month again in February after leading all players with 32 points in 12 games. The month also came with several milestones. He scored his 40th goal of the season and 142nd of his career on February 3 against Peterborough, becoming the Otters' all-time scoring leader. On February 11, his four points against the Saginaw Spirit helped him cross the 300-point marker for his career, and with three points against London the following week, he became the first OHL player to record 100 points during the 2016–17 season. On February 21, DeBrincat joined Dale McCourt as the only two players in OHL history to score 50 goals in three consecutive seasons. He finished the month with two goals against the Barrie Colts on February 27, putting him ahead of Rob Schremp as the OHL's all-time leading goal scorer from the United States. In the final game of the regular season, a 5–2 win over the Guelph Storm, DeBrincat scored his 65th goal, a single-season record for the Otters.

With 65 goals and 127 points in 63 games, DeBrincat won the 2017 Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy for the OHL's leading scorer, as well as the Jim Mahon Memorial Trophy for the top-scoring right winger in the league. He was an OHL First-Team All-Star and the recipient of the 2016–17 Red Tilson Trophy, given to the OHL's most outstanding player. He followed the OHL awards season by being named the CHL Player of the Year. Although Warren Foegele won the Wayne Gretzky 99 Award for the OHL playoffs' most valuable player, DeBrincat led the playoffs in scoring with 13 goals and 38 points in 22 games as the Otters won the J. Ross Robertson Cup for the second time in franchise history. The Otters lost the 2017 Memorial Cup finals to the Windsor Spitfires of the Western Hockey League, but DeBrincat was named to the Memorial Cup All-Star Team. DeBrincat finished his OHL career with 167 goals and 332 points in 191 regular season games, and an additional 30 goals and 73 points in 55 postseason games.

Prior to the start of the 2017–18 season, the Blackhawks traded Artemi Panarin to the Columbus Blue Jackets, a move that created an opening for DeBrincat on Chicago's opening night roster if he performed well in training camp. He earned preseason praise from coach Joel Quenneville, who said DeBrincat "seems to have a good approach to the game" and "fit in well with his teammates" following a 4–2 victory over the Detroit Red Wings. DeBrincat ultimately made the opening night roster, making his NHL debut on October 4, 2017, and playing on the third offensive line with Patrick Sharp and Artem Anisimov. He scored his first NHL goal on October 10, beating Carey Price of the Montreal Canadiens and helping the Blackhawks to a 3–1 victory. After a slow October in which he had one goal and four assists, DeBrincat, playing on the third line with Sharp and Ryan Hartman, scored 10 goals in November. On November 27, he scored a hat-trick in the Blackhawks' 7–3 rout of the Anaheim Ducks. He was the second-youngest player to score a hat-trick in franchise history, four days younger than Jeremy Roenick had been when he set the record. Promoted to the top line with Jonathan Toews and Anthony Duclair, DeBrincat broke a seven-game scoring drought on January 26 with his second hat-trick, this time against the Red Wings. He was the youngest player in franchise history to score two hat-tricks and the first rookie to do so since Steve Larmer during the 1982–83 season. Shortly after another 12-game goal drought, DeBrincat's third hat-trick came on March 18 against the St. Louis Blues. It was the first time that any Blackhawk rookie had three hat-tricks in one season and the first time that any United States-born rookie had done so since Tony Granato of the New York Rangers in 1988–89. Despite receiving less than 15 minutes of ice time per game, DeBrincat finished his rookie season with 28 goals and 52 points, and he became the youngest player to receive the Blackhawks Player of the Year Award at the team's end-of-season banquet. Those 28 goals came in streaks, however: in 82 games, DeBrincat had four droughts of at least seven games where he did not score. Despite DeBrincat's performance, the Blackhawks finished the season with a 33–39–10 record, last in the NHL Central Division and the franchise's worst since 2007–08.

DeBrincat started the 2018–19 season on a hot streak, with six points in his first five games. That November, the Blackhawks traded Nick Schmaltz to the Arizona Coyotes for Brendan Perlini and DeBrincat's OHL teammate Dylan Strome, who was immediately placed on DeBrincat's line. Partway through the season, coach Jeremy Colliton dropped DeBrincat from the second to the third line as part of his larger vision to have one prominent goal-scorer on three of the four lines. By the NHL All-Star Game break at the start of February, DeBrincat had 25 goals and 53 points in 51 games, including seven goals in 10 games in January. On February 18, 2019, DeBrincat had a five-point game, adding two assists to his fourth career hat-trick in the Blackhawks' 8–7 win over the Ottawa Senators. His two goals against the San Jose Sharks on March 29 made DeBrincat the second-youngest Blackhawk to reach 40-goals in a season. He was 21 years and 100 days old at the time, 35 days older than Jeremy Roenick when he reached the milestone in 1991. Playing in all 82 games for the second season in a row, DeBrincat surpassed his rookie season with 41 goals and 76 points at the end of the year.

On October 3, 2019, the Blackhawks signed DeBrincat to a three-year, $19.2 million contract extension. He entered the 2019–20 season in a scoring drought, with only five goals through his first 23 games, but contributed as a playmaker, his 13 assists in that span second only to Patrick Kane's 18. DeBrincat snapped his 12-game goalless streak on December 5 when he scored on Tuukka Rask in the third period of the Blackhawks' 4–3 overtime win against the Boston Bruins. By the time that the COVID-19 pandemic forced the NHL to suspend operations in March, DeBrincat had 18 goals and 45 points in 70 games, a significant decrease from the previous year. Shortly before the pandemic pause, Colliton told reporters, "He's had the chances, he's had as many opportunities this year, I think the puck hasn't gone in the net as often." He particularly struggled at even strength: between December 27 and February 10, all four of his goals came on the power play. DeBrincat made his NHL postseason debut when he joined the Blackhawks in the quarantine bubble for the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs, and he scored two goals and six points in nine games before the Vegas Golden Knights eliminated the Blackhawks in the Western Conference First Round.

The Blackhawks experienced a COVID-19 outbreak early in the 2020–21 season, and DeBrincat was placed in virus protocols on January 26, 2021. He returned on February 2 for the Blackhawks' 4–3 shootout loss to the Carolina Hurricanes, and he recorded four goals, two assists, and 17 shots on goal in his first three games back. DeBrincat and Kane were the Blackhawks' top offensive producers at the start of the COVID-shortened season, combining for 3.75 goals per game through the first third of the year. DeBrincat scored his 100th NHL goal on March 6, 2021, with a goal in the Blackhawks' 4–3 shootout win over the Tampa Bay Lightning. Outside of scoring, DeBrincat showed a significant increase in stealing the puck from opponents, a skill that he began practicing the season prior as a way to contribute during his goal droughts. He finished the season with 32 goals and 56 points in 52 games. That July, DeBrincat was one of 11 players the Blackhawks protected from being taken by the Seattle Kraken in the 2021 NHL Expansion Draft.

Prior to the 2021–22 season, the Blackhawks announced that DeBrincat would serve as an alternate captain for the team's home games, while Connor Murphy would serve in that capacity for away games. He continued playing with Kane, scoring nine goals through 16 games, including his first Gordie Howe hat trick in Chicago's game against Seattle on November 18. On January 13, 2022, DeBrincat, who had 23 goals and five multi-goal games at that point in the season, was named to his first NHL All-Star Game as the Blackhawks' representative. DeBrincat scored his 40th goal of the season on April 21, when the Blackhawks faced Karel Vejmelka and the Arizona Coyotes. Entering the game on a seven-game scoreless drought, DeBrincat became the eighth player to record multiple 40-goal seasons as a member of the Blackhawks. DeBrincat was the only member of the team to play in all 82 games during the 2021–22 season, and he finished with a career-tying 41 goals, as well as a career-high 37 assists and 78 points. He also showed improvement defensively, leading to a career-high 20:48 minutes of ice time per game. Across five seasons with the Blackhawks, DeBrincat recorded 160 goals and 307 points in 368 regular season games, as well as two goals and six points in nine postseason appearances.

Following their poor finish in the 2021-22 NHL season, the Blackhawks decided to tear down their roster and begin a rebuild in advance of the 2022 NHL Entry Draft. On July 7, 2022, the Blackhawks traded DeBrincat to the Ottawa Senators in exchange for the seventh and 39th overall picks in the 2022 draft, as well as a third-round pick in the 2023 NHL Entry Draft.

Source

With the remaining 12 players selected by fans, NHL has announced the initial 32 players for the 2023 All-Star Game

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 6, 2023
The NHL has revealed a list of the first 32 names to be chosen for the 2023 All-Star Game, which will be hosted in South Florida. One player from each squad has been chosen to compete in this year's festivities, which have traditionally featured a skills competition and games between divisions. During the next 12 days, the NHL also revealed that three new players (two skaters and a goalie) would be voted by a fan vote.
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