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・ Corey Harris
・ Corey Harris (American football, born 1969)
・ Corey Harris (American football, born 1976)
・ Corey Harris (disambiguation)
・ Corey Harrison
・ Corey Hart
・ Corey Hart (album)
・ Corey Hart (baseball)
・ Corey Hart (singer)
・ Corey Hawkins
・ Corey Hawkins (actor)
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・ Corey Hertzog
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Corey Hirsch
・ Corey Holcomb
・ Corey Holliday
・ Corey Holmes
・ Corey Hooper
・ Corey Hosford
・ Corey House
・ Corey Hughes
・ Corey Hulsey
・ Corey Hébert
・ Corey I. Sanders
・ Corey Ivy
・ Corey J. Hodges
・ Corey Jackson
・ Corey Jenkins


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Corey Hirsch : ウィキペディア英語版
Corey Hirsch


Corey Hirsch (born July 1,1972 in Medicine Hat, Alberta) is a retired Canadian ice hockey goaltender. He spent the majority of his National Hockey League career with the Vancouver Canucks. He is the former goaltending coach for the St. Louis Blues, having previously served the Toronto Maple Leafs along with Francois Allaire.
==Playing career==
Hirsch played major junior hockey with the Kamloops Blazers of the Western Hockey League for four seasons. He was named to the WHL Second All-Star Team in his second season with Kamloops and was subsequently chosen 169th overall in the 1991 NHL Entry Draft by the New York Rangers.
Upon being drafted, Hirsch led the league in shutouts, with 5, and goals against average with 2.72 in 1991–92, he was named CHL Goaltender of the Year and the Del Wilson Trophy as the WHL Goaltender of the Year. As the Blazers captured the President's Cup (now the Ed Chynoweth Cup) in 1992, they advanced to the Memorial Cup and defeated the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds 5–4 in the final. Hirsch was additionally awarded the Hap Emms Memorial Trophy as the tournament's top goaltender.
In 1992–93, his first professional season, he played for the Binghamton Rangers, New York's AHL affiliate, and won the Aldege "Baz" Bastien Memorial Award as the league's top goalie. At 2.79, he was also awarded the Harry "Hap" Holmes Memorial Award for the lowest goals-against-average (shared with goaltending teammate Boris Rousson).
Hirsch started his first NHL game that season, a 2–2 tie against the Detroit Red Wings on January 19, 1993. He recorded his first win on his next start, an 8–3 victory over the Los Angeles Kings on January 23.
In 1994, Hirsch was the goalie for the Canadian Olympic team that lost to Sweden in the gold medal game.
Hirsch remained with Binghamton for three seasons until New York traded him to the Vancouver Canucks on April 7, 1995, in exchange for forward Nathan LaFayette.〔
Hirsch split goaltending duties with Kirk McLean in 1995–96 and was named to the All-Rookie Team after posting a 2.93 goals against average, .903 save percentage and a winning 17–14–6 record. He also finished fifth in Calder Memorial Trophy voting (won by Daniel Alfredsson). During the season, he recorded his first career NHL shutout on January 15, 1996, a 6–0 win against the Boston Bruins.〔
On July 2, 1999, he was waived by the Canucks〔 and for the next few seasons, would bounce around the league between the Nashville Predators, Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, Washington Capitals, and Dallas Stars. Playing for minor league affiliates, he only appeared in a handful of NHL games for the remainder of his career. In 2002–03, he recorded AHL career highs with a 2.64 goals against average and a .921 save percentage in 35 games with the Utah Grizzlies.
Before retiring, Hirsch played three seasons overseas in the Swedish Elitserien, and the German Deutsche Eishockey Liga.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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