Jeff Glass

For the Canadian hurdler, see Jeff Glass (athlete). For the theatre artist, see Jeff Glassman.
Jeff Glass
Born (1985-11-19) November 19, 1985
Calgary, AB, CAN
Height 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight 206 lb (93 kg; 14 st 10 lb)
Position Goaltender
Catches Left
team
Former teams
Free Agent
Binghamton Senators
Barys Astana
Sibir Novosibirsk
Spartak Moscow
CSKA Moscow
Lada Togliatti
HC Dinamo Minsk
NHL Draft 89th overall, 2004
Ottawa Senators
Playing career 2005present
Medal record
Ice hockey
Representing  Canada
Spengler Cup
2015 Davos
World Junior Championships
2005 United States

Jeff Glass (born November 19, 1985) is a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender. He is currently on a professional tryout contract with the Toronto Marlies of the American Hockey League (AHL). Glass was selected by the Ottawa Senators in the 3rd round (89th overall) of the 2004 NHL Entry Draft. He joined their minor league affiliate and played several years with the organization before leaving as a free agent to join Barys Astana in 2009.

Playing career

Glass spent his junior career with the Kootenay Ice of the Western Hockey League (WHL), spending three seasons with the team from 2002–2005. At the conclusion of the 2004–05 season, Glass won the Del Wilson Trophy as the WHL's top goaltender, was named to the WHL First All-Star team, and was named CHL Goaltender of the Year as the best goaltender in Canadian major-junior hockey. That year, Glass was also named starting goaltender for Canada at the 2005 World Junior Championships in North Dakota. Glass went 5-0 with a 1.40 goals against average (GAA), backstopping Canada to its first gold medal at the tournament since 1997.[1]

Glass was drafted by the Ottawa Senators in the third round, 89th overall, of the 2004 NHL Entry Draft. After his stellar 2004–05 campaign, he signed a three-year entry level contract with the Senators. He spent the majority of the 2005–06 season with the Senators' ECHL affiliate, the Charlotte Checkers, before securing a full-time job with the Senators' top minor-league affiliate, the American Hockey League's Binghamton Senators, in 2006-07. For the next three seasons Glass shared time in Binghamton with Kelly Guard and Brian Elliott, compiling a record of 42-67-9.

After the 2008–09 season, Glass became a free agent and on 30 August 2009, he signed an undisclosed deal with the KHL's Barys Astana.[2] Glass had a stellar 2009–10 campaign with Astana, posting a 19-11-4 record with a 2.87 GAA and .918 save percentage. Astana lost its first round playoff series to the eventual Gagarin Cup champions, Ak Bars Kazan.[3]

Glass signed with HC Spartak Moscow before the 2013–14 season, however due to team financial problems he was sold to HC CSKA Moscow in January 2014. On July 9, 2014, Glass signed as a free agent to a one-year contract with HC Lada Togliatti.[4]

He signed with another KHL team for the 2015-16 campaign, joining HC Dinamo Minsk of Belarus. In December 2015, he represented Team Canada at the Spengler Cup and helped capture the title.

On August 26, 2016, Glass having returned to North America after 7 seasons in the KHL, signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs on a professional try-out contract to attend training camp. On September 27, 2016, he was re-assigned by the Maple Leafs to attend affiliate, the Toronto Marlies training camp in the AHL.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP W L T/OT MIN GA SO GAA SV% GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
2002–03 Kootenay Ice WHL 35 15 16 3 1884 77 4 2.45 .909 9 4 5 643 23 0 2.15 .921
2003–04 Kootenay Ice WHL 57 26 20 6 3263 128 5 2.35 .911 4 0 4 239 14 0 3.51 .878
2004–05 Kootenay Ice WHL 51 34 11 5 3061 90 8 1.76 .932 16 10 6 1027 39 0 2.28 .916
2005–06 Charlotte Checkers ECHL 39 19 15 4 2221 119 2 3.22 .907
2005–06 Binghamton Senators AHL 6 1 4 0 312 20 0 3.85 .883 3 1 2 178 11 0 3.71 .875
2006–07 Binghamton Senators AHL 43 9 24 2 2174 149 1 4.11 .888
2007–08 Binghamton Senators AHL 45 15 20 4 2313 111 2 2.88 .913
2008–09 Binghamton Senators AHL 41 17 19 3 2219 119 0 3.22 .903
2009–10 Barys Astana KHL 41 19 11 4 2113 101 1 2.87 .918 3 0 3 223 10 0 2.69 .929
2010–11 Barys Astana KHL 23 7 9 4 1240 61 1 2.95 .911 2 0 2 119 6 0 3.02 .910
2011–12 Barys Astana KHL 28 12 12 2 1546 83 1 3.22 .904
2012–13 Sibir Novosibirsk KHL 38 16 11 8 2198 74 4 2.02 .933 7 3 4 407 12 2 1.77 .941
2013–14 Spartak Moscow KHL 35 12 19 6 2098 81 4 2.32 .919
2013–14 CSKA Moscow KHL 6 2 2 2 366 8 1 1.31 .944 4 0 4 212 11 0 3.11 .904
2014–15 Tolyatti Lada KHL 14 1 9 0 676 39 0 3.46 .885
2015–16 HC Dinamo Minsk KHL 31 12 14 4 1756 81 4 2.77 .910
KHL totals 173 68 64 26 9562 432 12 2.60 .917 16 3 13 961 39 2 2.43 .926
AHL totals 135 42 67 9 7018 399 3 3.41 .900 29 14 15 1909 76 0 2.39 .913

References

  1. "WJHC History (Gold) - 2005". TSN. Retrieved 2010-12-14.
  2. "List of NHL Players to KHL". KHL.net. Retrieved 2010-12-14.
  3. "Gagarin Cup stays in Kazan". IIHF. 2010-05-01. Retrieved 2010-12-14.
  4. "Lada has signed Canadian goalie Jeff Glass from CSKA" (in Russian). HC Lada Togliatti. 2014-07-09. Retrieved 2014-07-09.
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