Jussi Markkanen

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Jussi Markkanen
Markkanen with the Edmonton Oilers in 2007
Born (1975-05-08) May 8, 1975 (age 48)
Imatra, Finland
Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 182 lb (83 kg; 13 st 0 lb)
Position Goaltender
Caught Left
Played for RSL
Lada Togliatti
SM-liiga
SaiPa
Tappara
Jokerit
NHL
New York Rangers
Edmonton Oilers
KHL
HC CSKA Moscow
Nationalliga A
EV Zug
National team  Finland
NHL Draft 133rd overall, 2001
Edmonton Oilers
Playing career 2001–2018

Jussi Markkanen (born May 8 1975, Imatra, Finland) is a Finnish professional ice hockey executive and former goaltender. He is currently serving as general manager of SaiPa. Markkanen played extensively in various European professional leagues as well as the National Hockey League (NHL). He was selected in the fifth round of the 2001 NHL Entry Draft, 133rd overall, by the Edmonton Oilers, as an over-aged entrant.

Playing career[edit]

Markkanen played most of his NHL career in Edmonton, except for a single season stint with the New York Rangers. During the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Markkanen played in the Russian Super League, where he posted a dominant 31–9–9 record. In July 2007, Jokerit agreed to a one-year contract with Markkanen for the next SM-liiga season.

After an injury to Oilers starter Dwayne Roloson, Markkanen was selected by coach Craig MacTavish to finish the 2006 Stanley Cup finals as Edmonton's number one goaltender. Markkanen won the first Stanley Cup game of his career in Game 3 of the Finals against the Carolina Hurricanes on June 10, 2006, a game in which he earned the first star of the game. In Game 5 of the final, Markkanen and the Oilers beat Carolina 4–3 in overtime thanks to Fernando Pisani's short-handed breakaway goal. In Game 6, Markkanen stopped all 16 Hurricane shots for his first career playoff shutout. Carolina won the deciding Game 7, as Markkanen gave up two goals and the Hurricanes later secured the win with an empty net goal, defeating Edmonton 3–1 to win the Stanley Cup.

Post NHL[edit]

Jussi Markkanen in 2010 with EV Zug

After the great season in Edmonton, Markkanen did not regain the same form in the following season and after the 2006–07 NHL season, Markkanen was out of contract.

Markkanen was contracted by Finnish top-runners Jokerit, who replaced Scott Langkow with Markkanen. Markkanen's move was a bit controversial because he owns a part of SaiPa, which also plays in the Finnish SM-liiga with Jokerit.

Markkanen played well in the 2007-08 regular season, placing himself among the top goaltenders in the league. Markkanen however sustained a heavy injury during his first playoff game and missed the remainder of the playoffs.

After the end of the season, it was announced that Markkanen would return to the Russian Super League, where he played during the 2004–05 lockout-season for Lada Togliatti. Markkanen's new club was the famous Russian side CSKA Moscow, where he made 25 appearances during the 2008-09 campaign. He left on April 7, 2009 and signed with EV Zug of the Swiss Nationalliga A.[1] His first Zug stint ended at the conclusion of the 2012–13 season, when he opted to return to his native Finland.

From 2013 to February 2017, he played for SaiPa of the Finnish Liiga. In the 2013–14 season, he was presented with the Urpo Ylönen Trophy as the Liiga Goaltender of the Year. When his former club EV Zug came calling in February 2017, he signed with the Swiss team for the remainder of the 2016–17 season.[2]

Personal[edit]

He is married to his wife, Sanna. Their family suffered a tragedy on September 23, 2008 in Moscow, as one of their two sons, Olli-Matias, died after falling out of a fifth-story window while playing in the living room with his older brother, Juho. He was 4 years of age.[3]

Career statistics[edit]

Regular season and playoffs[edit]

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP W L T OTL MIN GA SO GAA SV% GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1991–92 SaiPa FIN.2 U20 6 3 3 0 360 25 0 4.17 2 120 11 0 5.50 .784
1992–93 SaiPa FIN.2 16 6 6 2 798 60 0 4.51 .842
1992–93 SaiPa FIN.2 U20 7 367 28 0 4.58 .856
1993–94 SaiPa FIN.2 U20
1993–94 SaiPa FIN.2 24 3.48 .887 6 2.93 .887
1994–95 SaiPa FIN.2 36 2.76 .914 10 6 4 621 33 0 3.19
1995–96 Tappara SM-l 23 11 8 2 1238 59 1 2.86 .901
1995–96 Tappara FIN.2 U20 5 298 21 0 4.23 .844
1996–97 SaiPa SM-l 41 9 24 7 2340 132 0 3.38 .895
1997–98 SaiPa SM-l 48 21 20 5 2870 138 4 2.88 .905 3 0 3 164 11 0 4.02 .878
1998–99 SaiPa SM-l 48 21 19 4 2633 105 4 2.39 .917 7 3 3 366 21 0 3.44 .878
1999–00 SaiPa SM-l 48 4 23 9 2794 150 2 3.24 .905
2000–01 Tappara SM-l 52 30 17 5 3076 107 9 2.09 .923 10 7 3 608 18 1 1.78 .933
2001–02 Hamilton Bulldogs AHL 4 2 2 0 239 9 0 2.26 .921
2001–02 Edmonton Oilers NHL 14 6 4 2 784 24 2 1.84 .929
2002–03 Edmonton Oilers NHL 22 7 8 3 1180 51 3 2.59 .904 1 0 0 14 1 0 4.28 .917
2003–04 New York Rangers NHL 26 8 12 1 1244 53 2 2.56 .913
2003–04 Edmonton Oilers NHL 7 2 2 2 394 12 0 1.83 .934
2004–05 Lada Togliatti RSL 54 31 9 9 3157 63 11 1.20 .941 10 627 15 1 1.44 .938
2005–06 Edmonton Oilers NHL 37 15 12 6 2016 105 0 3.12 .880 6 3 3 360 13 1 2.17 .905
2006–07 Edmonton Oilers NHL 22 5 9 1 992 52 0 3.14 .886
2007–08 Jokerit SM-l 50 26 11 12 2939 114 4 2.33 .925 1 0 0 20 1 0 3.00 .888
2008–09 CSKA Moscow KHL 18 10 6 2 981 38 1 2.32 .903 7 3 2 379 11 0 1.74 .934
2009–10 EV Zug NLA 47 30 17 2841 115 6 2.43 .927 13 6 7 781 51 0 3.92 .895
2010–11 EV Zug NLA 39 24 14 2304 103 3 2.68 .916 10 4 6 633 37 0 3.51 .888
2011–12 EV Zug NLA 43 28 15 2641 105 3 2.38 .924 9 4 5 546 29 0 3.18 .887
2012–13 EV Zug NLA 26 17 9 1509 72 1 2.86 .910 12 6 6 725 29 1 2.40 .921
2013–14 SaiPa Liiga 47 21 12 9 2686 91 5 2.03 .926 12 5 7 710 29 1 2.45 .908
2014–15 SaiPa Liiga 47 19 16 11 2733 91 6 2.00 .915 3 2 1 181 5 1 1.66 .950
2015–16 SaiPa Liiga 35 18 8 8 2082 68 3 1.96 .921
2016–17 SaiPa Liiga 26 8 12 5 1494 69 1 2.77 .898
2016–17 EV Zug NLA 1 5.12 .808
2017–18 SaiPa Liiga 9 2 4 2 480 29 1 3.63 .865
NLA totals 156 99 55 9295 395 13 2.55 44 20 24 2685 146 1 3.26
SM-l/Liiga totals 474 190 174 32 47 27,365 1153 40 2.53 36 17 17 2049 85 3 2.49
NHL totals 128 43 47 8 7 6610 297 7 2.70 .901 7 3 3 374 14 1 2.24 .906

International[edit]

Year Team Event GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1994 Finland WJC 3 180 9 3.00 .860
1995 Finland WJC 5 2 2 1 296 18 0 3.65 .890
2002 Finland OG DNP
2002 Finland WC 7 5 2 0 429 10 2 1.40 .937
2004 Finland WC 1 1 0 0 60 1 0 1.00 .909
Senior totals 8 6 2 0 489 11 2 1.35

Awards and honours[edit]

Award Year
SM-liiga Best Goaltender (Urpo Ylönen trophy) 2000-01[4] 2013-14[4]
SM-liiga All-star team 2000-01[4] 2013-14[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Ex-NHL-Goalie für den EV Zug- NLA - Eishockey - Sport - Blick.ch
  2. ^ "Zwei Finnen zum EVZ | EVZ". www.evz.ch. Archived from the original on 2017-02-11. Retrieved 2017-02-09.
  3. ^ Markkanen's loss of young son breaks Oilers' hearts Archived 2014-05-12 at the Wayback Machine - Date: 24 Sept, 2008 - Accessed 10 Jan, 2012
  4. ^ a b c d Jussi Markkanen at eurohockey.net

External links[edit]

Preceded by Winner of the Urpo Ylönen trophy
2000–01
Succeeded by