Jason Doig

Jason Doig
Born (1977-01-29) January 29, 1977
Montreal, QC, CAN
Height 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight 230 lb (100 kg; 16 st 6 lb)
Position Defence
Shot Right
Played for Winnipeg Jets (1995–1996)
Phoenix Coyotes (19971999)
New York Rangers (19992001)
Washington Capitals (20022004)
NHL Draft 34th overall, 1995
Winnipeg Jets
Playing career 19952008

Jason Nicholas Doig (born January 29, 1977 in Montreal, Quebec) is a retired National Hockey League player born in Canada but of Jamaican Canadian descent.

Early life

His parents, Michael and Paula Doig, immigrated to Canada from Jamaica prior to his birth for educational purposes, obtaining their degrees from Concordia University and McGill University, respectively. Doig grew up in Dollard-des-Ormeaux, a suburb of Montreal, where he attended St. Charles Elementary School, West Island College high school and Vanier College. Aside from hockey, he played soccer at a very high level with the West Island Lakers soccer club and was invited to play for Team Quebec.

Playing career

The Montreal, Quebec native impressed in his youth with the North Shore hockey team in the QAHA then with Lac St-Louis Lions of the Quebec Midget AAA Hockey League before making his Quebec Major Junior Hockey League debut with the St-Jean Lynx in 1993-94. That same year, Jason lead Team Quebec to a gold medal in dazzling fashion at World Under-17 Hockey Challenge where he scored the tying and game-winning goal in the final game against Team USA. The following year he represented Team Canada at the World Under-18 Tournament in Mexico City - taking home the gold medal. He was chosen 34th overall by the Winnipeg Jets in the 1995 NHL Entry Draft after scoring 55 points and registering 259 penalty minutes with the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League's Laval Titan's and played in the Canadian Hockey League all-star game. In 1996 he was returned to the QMJHL where he led the Granby Predateurs to the President's Cup - winning the coveted Guy Lafleur Trophy as the playoff MVP and then on to a Memorial Cup Championship where he was named as a first team all-star. That same year he was named team Captain for the West Team at QMJHL all-star game. The next year Jason was a member of Team Canada when it won the gold medal at the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Switzerland.

Doig played for the Winnipeg Jets as an 18-year-old in 1995-96 and remained with the franchise when it relocated to Arizona in 1996-97 and became the Phoenix Coyotes. He then joined the New York Rangers in a trade prior to the deadline in March, 1999. The 6'3" blueliner played for the Blueshirts and saw action with the American Hockey League's Hartford Wolf Pack where he won a Calder Cup in 2000. The hulking blueliner played two seasons in the New York Rangers organization before he was dealt to the Ottawa Senators where he played only one season with the team's AHL affiliate, Grand Rapids Griffins.

Following his brief stint with the Ottawa Senators organization, Doig was acquired by the Washington Capitals in 2002-03 where he became a solid blueliner with the club while spending the early part of the season with the team's AHL affiliate, the Portland Pirates.

Following a season away from hockey due to the NHL lock out, Doig was signed as a free agent by the Vancouver Canucks and sent to compete with the club's AHL affiliate, the Manitoba Moose.

In the 2006–2007 season he played for Traktor Chelyabinsk in Russian Super League and finished the season in the Swiss National League A with the Langnau SCL Tigers. In that same year, Jason represented Team Canada once again at the Spengler Cup in Davos, Switzerland where the team won the Silver Medal. In the 2007–2008 season, he played in Switzerland with EHC Basel. He then signed a contract for the remainder of the season with the Norwegian top division team Stavanger Oilers. After Stavanger was eliminated from the Norwegian playoffs, Doig announced that he would retire.

Personal life

Since retiring in 2007, Mr. Doig became a Principal with Los Angeles based investment bank, Park Lane - a boutique firm with a niche focus on sports related transaction - where he specialized on the hockey side of the business. While at Park Lane, Mr. Doig founded TreeVestors, a boutique investment firm specializing in the development, origination and financing of social and environmentally sustainable carbon forestry projects. Currently, Mr. Doig is a Regional Sales Coordinator with Aflac, a Fortune 200 company specialized in supplemental employee benefits. Doig lives in Los Angeles, California with his three children, Kyla, Jagger and Asa.

Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM +/- GP G A Pts PIM
1990-91North Shore SelectsQAHA3130336353
1991-92North Shore SelectsQAHA2911112220
1992-93Lac St-Louis LionsQAAA35111627407551016
1993-94St-Jean LynxQMJHL63817256550222
1993-94CanadaU-1851128
1994-95Laval TitanQMJHL55124254259204131739
1995-96Laval TitanQMJHL536920
1995-96Granby PredateursQMJHL24430349120102232110
1995-96Winnipeg JetsNHL1511228-2
1995-96Springfield FalconsAHL500028
1995-96Granby PredateursM-Cup432510
1996-97Granby PredateursQMJHL39143347197504427
1996-97CanadaWJC-A702237
1996-97Las Vegas ThunderIHL601119
1996-97Springfield FalconsAHL503321714537
1997-98Phoenix CoyotesNHL401112-4
1997-98Springfield FalconsAHL46225271532030002
1998-99Phoenix CoyotesNHL9011102
1998-99Springfield FalconsAHL3235867-2
1998-99Hartford Wolf PackAHL814540-2711239
1999-00New York RangersNHL701122-2
1999-00Hartford Wolf PackAHL27311147052115620
2000-01New York RangersNHL300000
2000-01Hartford Wolf PackAHL5242024178650114
2001-02Grand Rapids GriffinsAHL571171810313500018
2002-03Washington CapitalsNHL55358108-360116
2002-03Portland PiratesAHL21145662
2003-04Washington CapitalsNHL652911105-12
2004-05
2005-06Manitoba MooseAHL1804424
2006-07Traktor ChelyabinskRussia1302230
2006-07SCL Tigers LangnauSwiss833639
2007-08EHC BaselSwiss1905597

Championships and Medals

Honors and Awards

External links

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.