Dan Bylsma
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Position | Right Wing |
| Shoots | Left |
| Height Weight |
6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 215 lb (98 kg/15 st 5 lb) |
| NHL Team | Retired |
| Pro clubs | Los Angeles Kings Mighty Ducks of Anaheim |
| Nationality | |
| Born | September 19, 1970 , Grand Haven, MI, U.S. |
| NHL Draft | 109th overall, 1989 Winnipeg Jets |
| Pro career | 1992 – 2004 |
Dan Bylsma (born 19 September 1970, in Grand Haven, Michigan) is a former National Hockey League forward. He was drafted in the sixth round of the 1989 NHL Entry Draft, by the Winnipeg Jets.
[edit] Early life
During his high-school days, Bylsma was a standout in many sports, including golf, baseball, and ice hockey. He played four years of college hockey for Bowling Green State University before being drafted by the Jets.
[edit] Playing career
Despite being drafted by the Jets, Bylsma never played a game for them, and was signed by the Los Angeles Kings in the summer of 1994. He would play parts of five seasons for the Kings, acting as a defensive forward. In his first season, when he played only four games for the Kings, he was captain of their International Hockey League affiliate, the Phoenix Roadrunners. He would also play for the Long Beach Ice Dogs, who were the Kings' IHL affiliate after the Roadrunners folded in 1997.
Signed by a free agent by the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim in the summer of 2000, Bylsma was a steadying influence on a rebuilding Anaheim team, and was made assistant captain. In his second season, he set a career high in points (17).
Bylsma struggled his entire career to stay in the NHL, mostly due to a lack of natural offensive ability (his primary roll in the NHL had always been penalty killing. Injuries took a toll in later years, and before being put on waivers in January 2004, Bylsma missed 31 games due to knee surgery. In August of 2005, Bylsma was announced as an assistant coach with the New York Islanders, effectively ending any opportunity of returning to the NHL as a player. He is currently an assistant coach for the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins of the American Hockey League.
[edit] Books and charity work
Bylsma, along with his father Jay, has written four books, two on what it takes to make the NHL, and two sports novels, one about baseball, the other basketball.
For 11 years Bylsma has run a hockey camp in Michigan, and he also runs a charity to assist youths with the expense of playing hockey.

