Nazem kadri age

Nazem Kadri

Canadian ice hockey player (born 1990)

Ice hockey player

Nazem Kadri (born October 6, 1990) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player and alternate captain for the Calgary Flames of the National Hockey League (NHL). Kadri won the Stanley Cup with the Colorado Avalanche in 2022, becoming the first Muslim player to hoist the trophy.[2][3]

Kadri was drafted by the Toronto Maple Leafs seventh overall in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft. He played his junior career in the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), first with the Kitchener Rangers and then the London Knights. He won the J. Ross Robertson Cup with Kitchener and was part of the Rangers team that lost to the Spokane Chiefs in the final of the 2008 Memorial Cup. Kadri has also represented Canada internationally at the 2010 World Junior Championships, where the team received the silver medal after losing the final to the United States 6–5.

From the beginning of the 2012–13 season to March 21, 2016, Kadri led the NHL in the number of penalties drawn with 164, 46 more than the second-placed player, Dusti

Nazem Kadri on Becoming a Brown Muslim Hockey Star in a Very White Sport

I shuffled in my skates, searching for balance. Another cold and crowded day, but I was on the ice again—and on the ice I was happy. Skating brought the promise of warmth. It meant hands clutching a cup of steaming hot chocolate and the heat of my father beside me.

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We’d often visit the outdoor rink at Victoria Park in downtown London, Ontario; it was one of my favorite places to be. And it was a free skate, which meant a chance to practice the art my father and I had watched on television.

I pictured myself raising a silver trophy high above my head, just as those grown men had.

In London, most hockey fans support either the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Detroit Red Wings, or the Buffalo Sabres, the city having a nearly equal proximity to each team.

But we loved the Montreal Canadiens.

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I pictured myself raising a silver trophy high above my head, just as those grown men had.

My dad became a Habs fan when he w

‘There was no hockey background’: NHL star Nazem Kadri shares his story in new book

His playing career is far from done, but Calgary Flames star Nazem Kadri is taking a look back at his life so far in his first book.  The memoir, titled Dreamer, My Life on the Edge, begins with the story of another Nazem Kadri — his grandfather, who came to Canada from Lebanon in the 1960s.

“That’s what makes the unique story as unique as it is,” Kadri  said  in an interview with Global News. “There was no hockey background for myself, no experience coming in.”

Still, Kadri  fell in love with the game when he was just a little boy,  In his hometown of London, Ont., he and his dad would attend every game they could to cheer on the London Knights. On the ice, Kadri showed talent early on. But in an environment where most of his teammates and their families were white, the Muslim hockey player encountered racism as well.

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“As a young kid you don’t quite understand how to navigate that, so I leaned on my

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