Jim Corsi
Born (1954-06-19) June 19, 1954
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Height 5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Weight 178 lb (81 kg; 12 st 10 lb)
Position Goaltender
Caught Left
Played for Quebec Nordiques
Edmonton Oilers
HC Gherdëina
SG Cortina
HC Bolzano
Varese HC
National team  Italy
NHL Draft Undrafted
Playing career 19761992

James Corsi (born June 19, 1954) is a Canadian-Italian former professional ice hockey goaltender and the current goaltending coach for the Columbus Blue Jackets. He was previously the goaltender coach of the St. Louis Blues and the Buffalo Sabres.[1] Before beginning his hockey career, Corsi also played soccer at the professional level as a forward in the North American Soccer League for the Montreal Olympique.[2] The following season he played in the National Soccer League with the Quebec Selects.[3]

Playing career

Corsi played in the World Hockey Association for the Quebec Nordiques and the National Hockey League for the Edmonton Oilers. He has dual Italian and Canadian citizenship. He became the goaltender of the nazionale (Italian national ice hockey team) and spent the majority of his career with Varese. He also played for HC Gherdëina, SG Cortina and HC Bolzano during his time in Italy's Serie A league. Corsi played on the Italian team at the 1982 World Championship that stunned a Team Canada that had Wayne Gretzky on it by tying Canada 3-3 and went on to beat the US at the same tournament relegating them to the B-Pool for 1983.

Post-playing career

Corsi is also known as being the namesake for the development of the Corsi rating. This indicator is essentially a plus-minus statistic that measures shot attempts (usually only counting those at even strength). A player receives a plus for any shot attempt (on net, missed, or blocked) that his team directs at the opponent's net, and a minus for any shot attempt against his own net. This indicator is widely used in most NHL teams as it has shown a strong correlation to player and team success. The person credited with popularizing the statistic, Vic Ferrari, attributed the stat to then-Sabres general manager Darcy Regier, but named it after Corsi because he thought Corsi's name had a better ring to it (he was inadvertently correct since Corsi did create the statistic).[4] Corsi himself has stated he is flattered to be associated with the statistic.[5]

He was relieved of his duties with the St. Louis Blues on February 1, 2017.[6]

Teams

Soccer

Hockey

Coaching

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GPWLTMINGASOGAASV% GPWLMINGASOGAASV%
1973–74 Loyola College CIAU 11 6603012.73
1974–75 Loyala College CIAU 40235910922.72
1975–76 Concordia University CIAU 20190112003621.80
1976–77 Maine Nordiques NAHL 54298818113.57.896 12757144613.87
1977–78 Quebec Nordiques WHA 23107010898204.52.873
1978–79 Quebec Nordiques WHA 4016201229112633.30.899 20166706.36
1978–79 Binghamton Dusters AHL 4120211701.99
1979–80 Edmonton Oilers NHL 26814313608303.66.874
1979–80 Houston Apollos CHL 178529595703.57.880
1979–80 Oklahoma City Stars CHL 115606452812.60.916
1980–81 SG Cortina ITA
1981–82 HC Gherdëina ITA
1982–83 HC Gherdëina ITA
1983–84 HC Bolzano ITA 1816111080603.33 6423602804.67
1984–85 AS Varese Hockey ITA
1985–86 AS Varese Hockey ITA
1986–87 AS Varese Hockey ITA 36 213410312.90
1987–88 AS Varese Hockey ITA 36
1988–89 AS Varese Hockey ITA 42252011602.76 5300811.60
1989–90 AS Varese Hockey ITA
1990–91 AS Varese Hockey ITA 44261016503.79
1991–92 AS Varese Hockey AL 18 10
WHA totals 6326271338020833.69.890 20166706.36
NHL totals 26814313608303.66.874

International

Year Team Event GPWLTMINGASOGAASV%
1981 Italy WC B 76014201802.57.932
1982 Italy WC 71513903805.84.879
1983 Italy WC 101815685005.28.876
1985 Italy WC B 75024202203.14.904
1986 Italy WC B 74304201612.29.918
1987 Italy WC B 72414202904.14.885
1989 Italy WC B 75114201622.29.871
1990 Italy WC B 52212991402.81.897
Senior totals 5726238335720333.63

References

  1. Corsi hired as Blues goaltending coach
  2. "NASL-James Corsi".
  3. Ororato, Andre (May 21, 1974). "Corsi's goal produces tie for soccer Selects". Montreal Gazette. p. 38.
  4. McKenzie, Bob. The story of how Corsi got its name. TSN. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
  5. McKenzie, Bob. The story of how Corsi got its name. TSN. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
  6. "Armstrong said Goalie Coach Jim Corsi was also relieved of his duties". @StLouisBlues. February 1, 2017.
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