Williams, Justin, 2016, page 1

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WIlliams_Panel_FNL Design & layout by Quench Design & Communications Inc. | Port Hope | www.quenchme.ca Justin Williams National Hockey League Justin Williams grew up in Cobourg but played minor hockey in Port Hope. He had his first taste of Junior hockey during the 1997-98 season when he showed great promise with the Junior C Colborne Colts. He scored 67 points in 36 games and later joined the Cobourg Cougars for 17 games. Williams was just sixteen when the Plymouth Whalers of the Ontario Hockey League chose him 125th overall in the 1998 OHL Priority Selection. That season he played in 47 games scoring just 12 points. But the next season he led the Whalers in scoring in both the regular season and the playo�s. They went to the OHL finals losing in 7 games to the Barrie Colts. The Philadelphia Flyers were Williams' first National Hockey League team, drafting him 28th overall in the 2000 NHL Entry Draft. He played 3 full seasons in Philadelphia before being traded during the 2003-04 season to the Carolina Hurricanes. During the 2004-05 NHL strike season, Williams played for Lulea in the Swedish Elite League. He returned to Carolina for the next four seasons, winning a Stanley Cup in 2006. During the 2008-09 season he was traded from Carolina to the Los Angeles Kings. For the next six seasons Williams became a fixture with the Kings as they made the playo�s five times, winning Stanley Cups in 2012 and again in 2014. That year Williams was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as the playo� MVP. He notched five points in the Kings' three Game Seven wins and established a new NHL record with 14 career points in Game Sevens. That won him the nickname "Mr. Game 7". Following the 2014-15 season, Williams left L.A. to move back to the east coast and play for the Washington Capitals as they sought players with playo� experience and leadership in their own quest for a Stanley Cup. Stanley Cups, Canadian Gold and Still Playing In the midst of his other successes, Williams joined Team Canada at the 2002 World Championships and helped Canada win gold in 2004 and 2007. Justin Williams now has a home in New Jersey, but in the summer of 2014 he paraded the Stanley Cup among large crowds through the streets of Cobourg. Justin Williams in Cobourg Photo courtesy of Philip Pritchard@keeperofthecup

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