Steve Martinson

{{Short description|American ice hockey player and coach (born 1959)}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}

{{Infobox ice hockey player

| image = Steve Martinson Express.jpg

| caption = Martinson coaching the Chicago Express during the 2011–12 season.

| image_size = 230px

| played_for = Detroit Red Wings
Montreal Canadiens
Minnesota North Stars

| position = Right wing

| shoots = Left

| height_ft = 6

| height_in = 1

| weight_lb = 200

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1959|6|21|mf=y}}

| birth_place = Minnetonka, Minnesota, U.S.

| draft = Undrafted

| career_start = 1981

| career_end = 1996

}}

Stephen Paul Martinson (born June 21, 1959) is an American former professional ice hockey player and coach. He played 49 games in the National Hockey League with the Detroit Red Wings, Montreal Canadiens, and Minnesota North Stars between 1987 and 1992. The rest of his playing career, which lasted from 1981 to 1996, was spent in various minor leagues. After retiring as a player he turned to coaching, and his 1,123 career professional coaching wins are the most ever for an American born ice hockey head coach.

Playing career

Martinson's college career includes playing the 1977–78 and 1978–79 seasons with the St. Cloud State Huskies. Between 1981 and 1986, he played in the International Hockey League and Central Hockey League for the Toledo Goaldiggers (IHL), Salt Lake Golden Eagles (IHL), Birmingham South Stars (CHL), and the Tulsa Oilers (CHL). While with the Tulsa Oilers in the 1983–84 season, the team suspended operations on February 16, 1984, playing only road games for the final six weeks of the season. Despite this adversity, the team went on to win the league's championship, the Adams Cup,{{cite web |url=http://www.thehockeynews.com/articles/14497-The-Tulsa-Oilers-were-true-road-warriors.html |title=The Hockey News: Special Features: The Tulsa Oilers were true road warriors |website=www.thehockeynews.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080322234546/http://www.thehockeynews.com/articles/14497-The-Tulsa-Oilers-were-true-road-warriors.html |archive-date=2008-03-22}}{{cite web |url=http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/leagues/seasons/teams/0000971984.html |title=Tulsa Oilers 1983-84 roster and statistics |website=hockeydb.com}} his only championship as a player.

After playing parts of the next four seasons in the American Hockey League, mostly with the Hershey Bears and Adirondack Red Wings, Martinson played his first National Hockey League game, with the Detroit Red Wings, in the 1987–88 season. Martinson went on to play fifty NHL games with the Red Wings, Montreal Canadiens, and Minnesota North Stars over parts of four seasons while mostly playing with those teams' AHL or IHL affiliates. He retired early into the 1994–95 season, although he made a few more on-ice appearances early into his coaching career with the Fresno Falcons and San Diego Gulls (WCHL).

Coaching career

Martinson's first head coaching job was with the San Diego Gulls of the West Coast Hockey League in 1995. Martinson was hired as the team's first head coach after playing for the former Gulls team that played in the IHL. He had immediate success in the newly formed league and the WCHL Gulls won the first three league championships, the Taylor Cup, in 1996, 1997, and 1998. He coached the Gulls for nine of the team's eleven seasons, winning two more Taylor Cups, in 2001 and 2003.

After one season of coaching the Gulls after the team joined the ECHL in 2003, Martinson left the organization to become the head coach of the Rockford IceHogs in the United Hockey League in 2004. He stayed with the IceHogs for three seasons, winning the league championship in 2007.

Martinson then left the IceHogs after the championship season to become the head coach of the Elmira Jackals in their first season in the ECHL in 2007. With the Jackals, his teams qualified for the playoffs every season following multiple years of no postseasons before he was hired.

In 2010, Martinson left the Jackals to become the inaugural head coach of the expansion Chicago Express in the ECHL. However, the Express did not take the ice until 2011 would end up only playing one season in 2011–12.{{cite web |url=http://www.chicagoexpresshockey.com/news/index.html?article_id=1 |title=chicagoexpresshockey.com: News |website=www.chicagoexpresshockey.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101029003123/http://chicagoexpresshockey.com/news/index.html?article_id=1 |archive-date=2010-10-29}}

After the Express folded in 2012, Martinson became the head coach of the Allen Americans in the Central Hockey League. His teams once again had immediate success winning the 2013 and 2014 Ray Miron President's Cup for the CHL's playoff championships. The Americans joined the ECHL in 2014 and continued to have success, winning the league championship Kelly Cup after their first two seasons, in 2015 and 2016. Martinson’s contract was not renewed by Allen following the 2021-22 season.

Over his multi-stop coaching career Martinson won a total of ten championships in four North American ice hockey leagues, including five with the Gulls (1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2003) in the West Coast Hockey League, four with the Americans in the Central Hockey League (2013, 2014) and the ECHL (2015, 2016), along with one with the IceHogs in the United Hockey League (2007).[http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php?pid=3441 Steve Martinson hockey statistics and profile at hockeydb.com], Hockeydb.com. (accessed 11 June 2015) Martinson is the first American-born coach to win 1,000 games as a head coach, having completed the 2021-22 season with 1,123 wins.

On June 27, 2024, Martinson was named as head coach of the Federal Prospects Hockey League expansion team, the Athens Rock Lobsters, in their inaugural season.

Post-coaching career

On October 21, 2023, Rockford IceHogs, now of the American Hockey League, announced Martinson would one of the first three inductees into the team's Ring of Honor.[https://icehogs.com/news/icehogs-name-corey-crawford-steve-martinson-j-f-rivard-to-inaugural-ring-of-honor-class IceHogs Name Corey Crawford, Steve Martinson, J.F. Rivard To Inaugural Ring Of Honor Class], icehogs.com. (accessed 25 October 2023) On October 25, 2023, the IceHogs then announced that Martinson would join the broadcast team for select games during the 2023-24 season.[https://icehogs.com/news/rockford-ring-of-honor-inductee-steve-martinson-to-join-icehogs-broadcast-team Rockford Ring Of Honor Inductee Steve Martinson To Join IceHogs Broadcast Team], icehogs.com. (accessed 25 October 2023)

Career statistics

=Regular season and playoffs=

border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:60em"
bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3" bgcolor="#ffffff"|

! rowspan="100" bgcolor="#ffffff"|

! colspan="5"|Regular season

! rowspan="100" bgcolor="#ffffff"|

! colspan="5"|Playoffs

bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! Season

! Team

! League

! GP !! G !! A !! Pts !! PIM

! GP !! G !! A !! Pts !! PIM

1977–78

| St. Cloud State University

| NCAA-II

| —

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1978–79

| St. Cloud State University

| NCAA-II

| —

| —

1979–80

| St. Cloud State University

| NCAA-II

| —

322153

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1980–81

| St. Cloud State University

| NCAA-II

| 31

19214057

| —

1981–82

| Toledo Goaldiggers

| IHL

| 35

121830128

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1982–83

| Toledo Goaldiggers

| IHL

| 32

91019111

| —

1982–83

| Birmingham South Stars

| CHL

| 43

459184

| 13

12380
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1983–84

| Tulsa Oilers

| CHL

| 42

369240

| 6

00043
1984–85

| Toledo Goaldiggers

| IHL

| 54

41014300

| 2

00021
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1985–86

| Hershey Bears

| AHL

| 69

369432

| 3

00056
1986–87

| Hershey Bears

| AHL

| 17

03385

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1986–87

| Adirondack Red Wings

| AHL

| 14

11278

| 11

202108
1987–88

| Detroit Red Wings

| NHL

| 10

11284

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1987–88

| Adirondack Red Wings

| AHL

| 32

6814146

| 6

12366
1988–89

| Montreal Canadiens

| NHL

| 25

10187

| 1

00010
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1988–89

| Sherbrooke Canadiens

| AHL

| 10

571261

| —

1989–90

| Montreal Canadiens

| NHL

| 13

00064

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1989–90

| Sherbrooke Canadiens

| AHL

| 37

62026113

| —

1990–91

| San Diego Gulls

| IHL

| 53

162440268

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1991–92

| Minnesota North Stars

| NHL

| 1

0009

| —

1991–92

| San Diego Gulls

| IHL

| 70

181533279

| 4

11215
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1992–93

| San Diego Gulls

| IHL

| 10

04455

| —

1994–95

| Houston Aeros

| IHL

| 6

01130

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1994–95

| Fresno Falcons

| SuHL

| 1

0002

| —

1995–96

| San Diego Gulls

| WCHL

| 1

0000

| —

bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3" | IHL totals

! 260 !! 59 !! 82 !! 141 !! 1171

! 6 !! 1 !! 1 !! 2 !! 36

bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3" | NHL totals

! 49 !! 2 !! 1 !! 3 !! 244

! 1 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 10

References

{{Reflist}}