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・ Jiří Hodač
・ Jiří Holeček
・ Jiří Holík
・ Jiří Holý
・ Jiří Homola
・ Jiří Horák
・ Jiří Horáček (physicist)
・ Jiří Hoskovec
・ Jiří Hradil
・ Jiří Hradil (canoeist)
・ Jiří Hrdina
・ Jiří Hrneček
・ Jiří Hudec
・ Jiří Hudec (composer)
・ Jiří Hudeček
Jiří Hudler
・ Jiří Hunkes
・ Jiří Huška
・ Jiří Hájek
・ Jiří Hájíček
・ Jiří Hála
・ Jiří Háva
・ Jiří Hřebec
・ Jiří Ignác Linek
・ Jiří Janoušek
・ Jiří Janoščin
・ Jiří Janák
・ Jiří Jarošík
・ Jiří Javorský
・ Jiří Jebavý


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Jiří Hudler : ウィキペディア英語版
Jiří Hudler

Jiří Hudler (; ; born January 4, 1984) is a Czech professional ice hockey player and alternate captain for the Calgary Flames of the National Hockey League (NHL). After beginning his career in the Czech Extraliga with HC Vsetín, Hudler was drafted by the Detroit Red Wings in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft and won the Stanley Cup with the club in 2008. Hudler also played for Dynamo Moscow in the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) for one season before the team was merged to form UHC Dynamo.
== Playing career ==
Hudler spent his youth in the elite Czech Extraliga with HC Vsetín, beginning in the 1999–2000 season. After recording a point-per-game season with the club in 2001–02, he was drafted by the Detroit Red Wings with their first pick in the second round, 58th overall, of the 2002 NHL Entry Draft. He remained in the Extraliga the following season, including a brief stint with Ak Bars Kazan of the Russian Superleague (RSL), before moving to North America for the 2003–04 season. Although he competed in 12 games for the Red Wings that season, he played the majority of the campaign with the Grand Rapids Griffins of the American Hockey League (AHL), Detroit's top minor league affiliate, scoring 49 points in 57 games in his rookie AHL season. Due to the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Hudler remained in the AHL the following season while also returning to play with Vsetín for seven games. Although NHL play resumed in 2005–06, he played his third season with the Griffins, breaking out with 36 goals and 96 points in 76 games to be named to the AHL Second All-Star Team. His 60 assists established a single-season Griffins team-record.
Hudler finally broke through onto the Red Wings roster in 2006–07 and scored 25 points in 76 games to be chosen team rookie of the year by the Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association. No one in the NHL scored more goals in fewer average minutes per game (10:02) than Hudler. Hudler played sporadically in the 2007 playoffs, however, often splitting time with Kyle Calder. He chipped in two assists in six games. Former Wings teammate and fellow Czech Robert Lang took Hudler under his wing when Hudler joined the team. Hudler spent time living in Lang's home when he first arrived in the United States, and Lang even went so far as to call Hudler "a third son." Following his rookie NHL season, Hudler spent time during the off-season training with fellow NHLers Chris Chelios, Mathieu Schneider and Rob Blake in Southern California. As a result, he said that he felt faster and stronger.
Playing in his second full season with the Red Wings, Hudler improved to 42 points. On June 4, 2008, he won the Stanley Cup as a member of the Red Wings, scoring five goals and adding nine assists during Detroit's successful playoff run, including the game-winning goal in Game 4 of the Finals against the Pittsburgh Penguins. He continued to improve in 2008–09, notching 23 goals and 57 points. However, facing the Penguins once again in the Finals, Hudler and the Red Wings failed to defend their championship, losing in seven games.
Becoming a restricted free agent in the off-season, Hudler filed for arbitration with the Red Wings. However, soon thereafter, he signed a contract with Dynamo Moscow of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) for $10 million over two years on July 8, 2009, while his arbitration case with the Red Wings was later settled at $5.75 million over the same term. In response to Hudler's signing with Dynamo Moscow, USA Hockey filed an appeal to the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) that Hudler was still under contract with the Red Wings. Pending the IIHF's investigation, Hudler was not granted a transfer card, which would have either prevented him from playing in the KHL or caused the league sanctions. The IIHF later approved Hudler's KHL contract on September 9, 2009, revealing that although Hudler's agent had filed for the arbitration case on his client's behalf, Hudler had not actually signed for the case himself, deeming the arbitration case invalid. Furthermore, the IIHF ruled that USA Hockey had failed to submit their appeal within the stipulated deadlines.
After one season with Dynamo Moscow, Hudler was released by the team on April 18, 2010, just four days before Dynamo was merged into UHC Dynamo. Eight days later, Hudler returned to the same Red Wings team he had left following his 2009 arbitration case, for two years at $2.875 million, the same contract he would have received in arbitration in 2009. In spite of reaching a settlement with the team, he was ineligible to return for the 2010 playoffs, as he was not an active roster player before the NHL trade deadline.〔(Report: Detroit “fuming” over Radulov return )〕 Hudler would return for the 2010-11 season.
On July 2, 2012, Hudler signed a four-year, $16 million contract with the Calgary Flames. The contract will pay him $4 million per year. In the 2014–15 season, Hudler NHL career-highs in points, scoring 76 points in 78 games, helping the Flames reach the playoffs for the first time in six years. He was also nominated for the Lady Byng Trophy, awarded to the NHL's most sportsmanlike player, a trophy he won on June 24th.

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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