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Jarome Iginla—Edmonton's Top
Young Gun Flies South
There is more than a little irony in
Jarome Iginla’s young career. Born in Edmonton on Canada
Day, 1977, Iginla’s professional career has been shaped
by both the Dallas Stars and the Calgary Flames.
As a child, Iginla cheered for the Edmonton Oilers;
today, the Stars and Flames are the biggest rivals of
the his favourite childhood franchise
Alberta hockey fans first noticed
Iginla when he scored 34 goals in 36
games for the St. Albert Saints of the Alberta Major
Junior Hockey League.
After winning the 1994 and 1995 Memorial Cup
championships with the Kamloops Blazers of
the
Western Hockey League,
Iginla was drafted by the
Dallas Stars in 1995. The Stars decided it was best to
let Iginla mature with another year in major junior
hockey, and he responded with a season that proved to
scouts that he was ready for the National Hockey
League. That final in juniors,
he scored 63 goals in 63 games for the Blazers, and
would become a key factor in Team
Canada’s win at the 1996 World Junior Championships held
in Boston.
Halfway through the 1995-96
season, the Stars decided they wanted to add a
veteran presence to their lineup and initiated a trade
for Calgary Flames’ forward Joe Nieuwendyk. The Stars
sent Iginla to southern Alberta in exchange for a player who
was a proven 50-goal scorer.
For the Flames, the trade was a major
gamble; they had sacrificed one of their most popular
players in order to acquire Iginla. Right away Flames
fans found Iginla could play; he appeared in two playoff games in 1996,
registering a goal and an assist.
Iginla admitted that his arrival in
Calgary not only required a change of heart from he and
his family. They were once Oiler fans, and took nothing but cold
comfort from their hatred of the Flames during the 1980s
and the glory days of the
Battle of
Alberta.
"It’s great that I can still play so
close to home," Iginla said back in 1997. "My family and
friends can come and see me play. But I know it’s kind
of funny for them, the situation that they’re in. They
all still have a hard time cheering for the Flames
because they all live in Edmonton."
Since then, Iginla has shown that he
is one of the best Alberta-born players in the
National Hockey League today. In 2001-02, he won the Art
Ross Trophy for being the NHL’s top point producer (96
points) and the Rocket Richard Trophy for leading the
league in goals with 52. He also became an instant
national hero with a two-goal performance for Team
Canada in the gold medal game at the Salt Lake City 2002 Olympics.
When Iginla’s career is over, many
will remember him as one of the finest players to come
from Edmonton. But for now, he prefers to
stick it to his hometown as the undisputed leader of the
Calgary Flames.
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