Ronald Michael Francis Jr. (born March 1, 1963) is a Canadian ice hockey sports executive and former player. He currently serves as the general manager of the Seattle Kraken. He spent most of his career as either a player or executive for the Hartford Whalers/Carolina Hurricanes organization, 23 years in total (sixteen as a player, seven as an executive).

Ron Francis
Hockey Hall of Fame, 2007
Francis in 2006
Born (1963-03-01) March 1, 1963 (age 61)
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada
Height6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight200 lb (91 kg; 14 st 4 lb)
PositionCentre
ShotLeft
Played forHartford Whalers
Pittsburgh Penguins
Carolina Hurricanes
Toronto Maple Leafs
National team Canada
NHL draft4th overall, 1981
Hartford Whalers
Playing career1981–2004

Drafted fourth overall in the 1981 NHL Entry Draft, Francis played 23 seasons in the NHL for the Hartford Whalers (1981–1991), Pittsburgh Penguins (1991-1998), Carolina Hurricanes (1998–2004), and Toronto Maple Leafs (2004). Upon retiring from professional ice hockey in 2004, Francis stood second all-time in career assists (1,249), behind only Wayne Gretzky; fifth in career points (1,798); third in games played (1,731); and 27th in career goals (549).

In 2011, Francis was hired as the director of hockey operations for the Hurricanes. In 2014, he was promoted to general manager. Two years before, Francis had become a minority owner of the team as part of the five-man investor group, Playmakers Management.[1][2] In March 2018, he was demoted from general manager president of hockey operations, before being fired on April 30, 2018.[3][4] On July 18, 2019, he was hired as the first general manager of the Seattle Kraken.[5]

In 2017, Francis was named one of the hundred greatest NHL players in history.[6]

Playing career

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As a youth, Francis played in the 1975 and 1976 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournaments with a minor ice hockey team from Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario.[7]

Francis was drafted by the Hartford Whalers in the first round, fourth overall, of the 1981 NHL Entry Draft. He was a model of consistency and durability, averaging more than a point a game in over 1,700 games in 23 seasons, and (not counting the lockout-shortened 1994–95 season) averaging just under 77 games played a season. His three Lady Byng Trophies attest to his gentlemanly conduct on and off the ice. Francis stands second all-time in career assists behind Wayne Gretzky with 1,249, fifth in career points (1,798), third in games played (1,731), and twenty-sixth in career goals (549).

Francis played almost ten seasons with the Whalers, serving as captain for almost six and setting nearly every offensive record in franchise history. He was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins on March 4, 1991, with Ulf Samuelsson and Grant Jennings, in exchange for Jeff Parker, Zarley Zalapski, and John Cullen. The trade became a coup for Pittsburgh, where he centred a formidable second line behind Mario Lemieux, as the Penguins won their first Stanley Cup less than three months later. The threat posed by the Francis-centered second line, formidable in its own right, often required opposing teams to throw their best defenseman against two lines, instead of zeroing in on Lemieux's line, thus creating more opportunities for both top lines. Francis was also known as one of the best face-off men in the NHL in this period, in both the offensive and defensive ends. In power-play and empty-net situations, his key face-off wins often led to Penguin goals.

Francis was indispensable the following year, as Pittsburgh repeated as champions, in leading the team during the absence of Lemieux in the 1992 playoffs – and in scoring the Cup-clinching goal against the Chicago Blackhawks. At the same time, the trade that brought him to Pittsburgh is considered to be one of the most one-sided trades in NHL history (though The Hockey News suggested that Hartford had gotten the better end of the trade at the time);[8] the players Hartford acquired never approached the numbers or impact Francis produced there or with Pittsburgh. Francis would spend seven seasons in Pittsburgh, captaining the team twice, and becoming the first Penguin to win the Selke Trophy in 1995.

Francis returned to his original organization as a free agent for 1998–99, signing with the Carolina Hurricanes (who had moved from Hartford the previous season). He spent the next 5.5 seasons padding his franchise records. He still ranks first all-time in Whalers/Hurricanes history in points, goals, assists and games played. At the time of his retirement, his 1,175 points were more than double those of then-runner up Kevin Dineen. He captained the Hurricanes to a surprise appearance in the 2002 Stanley Cup Finals and scored the winning goal for the Hurricanes in overtime of Game 1, before losing to the Detroit Red Wings in five games.

Francis finished his career with a brief stint with the Toronto Maple Leafs, traded there by the Hurricanes in March 2004 to allow him one last run at the Stanley Cup. He retired from the NHL before the 2005–06 season and assumed a position with the Raleigh Youth Hockey Association.

Management career

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In June 2011, Francis assumed the position of director of hockey operations with the Carolina Hurricanes before later being named general manager of the team in 2014. On March 7, 2018, Francis was named president of hockey operations by new Hurricanes' majority owner Thomas Dundon.[4] His Hurricanes contract was terminated on April 30, 2018.[3] On July 18, 2019, Francis was named the first general manager of the Seattle Kraken.

Personal life

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Francis was born in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada. He is second cousins with Mike Liut.

Francis is married to Mary Lou Robie, a native of Stamford, Connecticut, whom he met in Hartford during his tenure with the Whalers. They married in 1986 and have three children: Kaitlyn (b. 1991), Michael (b. 1993), and Connor (b. 1996). Francis is considered a popular sports figure in Hartford, Pittsburgh and Raleigh, and is also noted for his humanitarian and charity work. Francis also has the distinction of being the first ice hockey player inducted into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame.

Career statistics

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Regular season and playoffs

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Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1979–80Sault Ste. Marie North StarsMidget455792149111122
1980–81Sault Ste. Marie GreyhoundsOHL642643693319781534
1981–82Sault Ste. Marie GreyhoundsOHL2518304846
1981–82Hartford WhalersNHL5925436851
1982–83Hartford WhalersNHL7931599060
1983–84Hartford WhalersNHL7223608345
1984–85Hartford WhalersNHL8024578166
1985–86Hartford WhalersNHL5324537724101234
1986–87Hartford WhalersNHL753063934562246
1987–88Hartford WhalersNHL802550758762572
1988–89Hartford WhalersNHL692948773640220
1989–90Hartford WhalersNHL8032691017373368
1990–91Hartford WhalersNHL6721557651
1990–91Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL14291121247101724
1991–92Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL702133543021819276
1992–93Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL84247610068126111719
1993–94Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL822766936260226
1994–95Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL441148591812613194
1995–96Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL77279211956113694
1996–97Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL812763902051232
1997–98Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL812562872061562
1998–99Carolina HurricanesNHL822131523430110
1999–00Carolina HurricanesNHL7823507318
2000–01Carolina HurricanesNHL821550653230000
2001–02Carolina HurricanesNHL802750771823610166
2002–03Carolina HurricanesNHL8222355730
2003–04Carolina HurricanesNHL6810203014
2003–04Toronto Maple LeafsNHL1237100120442
NHL totals1,7315491,2491,798979171469714395

International

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YearTeamEventGPGAPtsPIM
1985CanadaWC102572
Senior totals102572

Awards and achievements

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Francis won two Stanley Cups, in 1990–91 and the following season, with the Pittsburgh Penguins. Statistically, his best season was 1995–96, when he recorded 119 points; that season, he led the NHL in assists, with 92. The previous season, he had not only led the League in assists with 48 over the lockout-shortened, half-season schedule, but became the first player to win both the Frank J. Selke Trophy and the Lady Byng Trophy in the same season.

Francis' Whalers number 10 jersey was raised at the Hartford Civic Center on January 6, 2006 (though not officially retired, the Whalers organization no longer existing in Hartford to retire it), along with Ulf Samuelsson's number 5 and Kevin Dineen's number 11. Additionally, his Hurricanes number 10 jersey was retired by the Carolina organization on January 28, 2006. He was also pictured in the Pittsburgh Penguins Ring of Honor that formerly circled the upper level of the Pittsburgh Civic Arena.

On June 28, 2007, Francis was selected to enter the Hockey Hall of Fame in his first year on the ballot. He was formally inducted on November 12, 2007.

Transactions

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See also

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References

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