Žigmund Pálffy

Žigmund "Ziggy" Pálffy (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈʐiɡmunt ˈpaːlfi]; born 5 May 1972) is a Slovak former[1] professional ice hockey player. Along with his English nickname, he was nicknamed "Žigo" in Slovak.

Žigmund Pálffy
Pálffy with HK Skalica in 2010
Born (1972-05-05) 5 May 1972 (age 52)
Skalica, Czechoslovakia
Height5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Weight180 lb (82 kg; 12 st 12 lb)
PositionRight Wing
ShotLeft
Played forHK Nitra
Dukla Trenčín
New York Islanders
HK Skalica
Los Angeles Kings
Slavia Praha
Pittsburgh Penguins
National team Czechoslovakia and
 Slovakia
NHL draft26th overall, 1991
New York Islanders
Playing career1990–2013

One of the most talented wingers, Pálffy played in the NHL for 12 years with the New York Islanders, Los Angeles Kings, and Pittsburgh Penguins between 1993 and 2006. He announced his retirement in January 2006, and his comeback from retirement in the summer of 2007. Pálffy signed a contract to play for his boyhood club HK 36 Skalica in the 2007–08 season and continued to do so until the end of his career. He also retracted his decision from 2005 never to play for the Slovak national team again by participating at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, where he was also the flagbearer. In July 2013, he announced his definite retirement. Pálffy was inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame in 2019.

Playing career

New York Islanders

After a solid season in his native Czechoslovakia and an impressive stint with the Czechoslovakia national team in the 1991 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Pálffy was drafted by the New York Islanders in the second round of the 1991 NHL Draft, 26th overall. After two more years in Slovakia, Pálffy came to North America for the 1993–94 season. He spent the majority of the 1993–94 season in the International Hockey League (IHL) with the Salt Lake Golden Eagles, while also making his NHL debut with the Islanders, appearing in five games, though he did not earn a single point. The following season, 1994–95, he split the year between the Islanders and the Denver Grizzlies of the IHL.

The 1995–96 NHL season saw Pálffy break out as an offensive scorer. In his first game of 1995–96, his team went down one goal but Pálffy would score two goals to lead New York to a 2–1 win over the Florida Panthers. He also scored 87 points in 81 games and quickly became the star of the Islanders franchise. The following two seasons were much the same for Pálffy, scoring 90 and 87 points respectively. During the 1998–99 season, Pálffy was limited to only 50 games but still played solidly, scoring 50 points.

Los Angeles Kings

After the season, the Islanders, facing financial woes, traded him and Bryan Smolinski to the Los Angeles Kings in a deal that saw Olli Jokinen, Josh Green, Mathieu Biron and a first-round draft pick go to the Islanders.

With the Kings, Pálffy continued his strong play, often being paired with fellow Slovak Jozef Stümpel and Canadian superstar Luc Robitaille. Injuries, specifically his shoulder, began to limit Pálffy's playing time. During the 2003–04 season, Pálffy's nagging shoulder kept him out of action for the majority of the season.

Pittsburgh Penguins and first retirement

After the 2003–04 season, the Kings tried to re-sign Pálffy, but when Pálffy had a phone call with Pittsburgh Penguins owner Mario Lemieux and gave him his word that he would sign with the Penguins, that ended all negotiations with the Kings. Shortly after the 2004–05 NHL lockout, he signed with the Penguins for three years and US$13.5 million.

After playing 42 games with the Penguins during the 2005–06 season, Pálffy abruptly retired from professional hockey. On January 18, 2006, then-Penguins general manager Craig Patrick told reporters Pálffy told him he was retiring due to a lingering shoulder injury. Pálffy completed his career with 329 goals and 384 assists for 713 points in 684 games over 12 NHL seasons.

HK 36 Skalica and second retirement

Pálffy announced his comeback from retirement in the summer of 2007, and signed a contract to play for his hometown club of HK 36 Skalica for the entire 2007–08 season. He became the most productive player of the regular season in the Slovak Extraliga, where he led four seasons in points.

In July 2013, before the start of the 2013–14 season, Pálffy formally announced his retirement from professional hockey. He said he was old enough and did not feel like playing and traveling with the team after so many years, but also that he was going to miss the game of hockey since he lived for it for almost 40 years.[2]

International play

Žigmund Pálffy

Pálffy at the 2010 Winter Olympics.
Medal record
Representing  Czechoslovakia
Ice hockey
World Junior Championships
1991 Saskatoon
Representing  Slovakia
World Championships
2002 Gothenburg
2003 Helsinki

Pálffy has represented Slovakia and Czechoslovakia in international competitions, winning a gold medal with Slovakia in the 2002 after he had assisted on Peter Bondra's tournament-winning goal 100 seconds to go in the third period. Following the 2005 World Championships in Austria, Pálffy announced his retirement from the Slovak national team.

Five years later, Pálffy broke his retirement and was named to the Slovak national team for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and recorded three assists with the team for a total of three points in seven games.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1990–91AC/HC NitraTCH5034165018
1991–92ASVŠ Dukla TrenčínTCH4541337436
1992–93ASVŠ Dukla TrenčínTCH43384179
1993–94New York IslandersNHL50000
1993–94Salt Lake Golden EaglesIHL5725325783
1994–95New York IslandersNHL33107176
1994–95Denver GrizzliesIHL3320234340
1995–96New York IslandersNHL8143448756
1996–97New York IslandersNHL8048429043
1996–97HC Dukla TrenčínSlovak1000
1997–98New York IslandersNHL8245428734
1998–99New York IslandersNHL5022285034
1998–99HK 36 SkalicaSlovak9118196
1999–2000Los Angeles KingsNHL642739663242020
2000–01Los Angeles KingsNHL7338518920133588
2001–02Los Angeles KingsNHL633227592674590
2002–03Los Angeles KingsNHL7637488547
2003–04Los Angeles KingsNHL3516254112
2004–05HK 36 SkalicaSlovak8103136
2004–05HC Slavia PrahaCzech412119403075272
2005–06Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL4211314212
2007–08HK 36 SkalicaSlovak4630457593137172426
2008–09HK 36 SkalicaSlovak53524799461712152712
2009–10HK 36 SkalicaSlovak36173653286661218
2011–12HK 36 SkalicaSlovak482657837663476
2012–13HK 36 SkalicaSlovak3926477310373582
NHL totals68432938471332224910198
Slovak totals2401722434153584931477864

International statistics

YearTeamEventResult GPGAPtsPIM
1991CzechoslovakiaWJC 776132
1991CzechoslovakiaCC6th51012
1992CzechoslovakiaWJC5th63146
1994SlovakiaOly6th837108
1996SlovakiaWC10th520210
1996SlovakiaWCH31232
1999SlovakiaWC7th655106
2002SlovakiaOly13th10000
2002SlovakiaWC 31672
2003SlovakiaWC 9781518
2005SlovakiaWC5th754910
2010SlovakiaOly4th70338
Junior totals13107178
Senior totals5425356066

Awards and honours

AwardYear
Czechoslovak Extraliga
TCH Champion1992
Leading Scorer1992, 1993
Most Goals1992
Most Assists1993
Rookie of the Year1991
NHL
All-Star1997, 1998, 2001, 2002
Slovak Extraliga
All-Star Team2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013
Leading Scorer2008, 2009, 2012, 2013
Most Goals2009
Most Assists2012
International
World Championship points leader2003
Winter Olympics points leader and assists1994
IIHF Hall of Fame2019[3][4]
IIHF All-Time Slovakia Team2020

Transactions

See also

References

Olympic Games
Preceded by Flagbearer for  Slovakia
Vancouver 2010
Succeeded by