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Calvin Davis (born 22 November 2003) is a South African field hockey player who plays for the South African national team. He competed in the 2024 Summer Olympics . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Davis attended the University of Guelph, where he played with the Guelph Gryphons men's ice hockey team. For his outstanding play during the 1997–98 season, Davis was named the CIS Player of the year and was awarded the Senator Joseph A. Sullivan Trophy.
Davis spent one season with the Green Bay Gamblers of the United States Hockey League (USHL). During the 2020–21 season, he appeared in 35 games and posted a 20–9–2 record, with a 3.34 goals against average (GAA), .895 save percentage and three shutouts. [1] Davis began his college ice hockey career for Denver during the 2021–22 season.
This is a list of National Hockey League (NHL) players who have played at least one game in the NHL from 1917 to present and have a last name that starts with "D". List updated as of the 2018–19 NHL season.
Kelly Davis (born September 23, 1958) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who played in the World Hockey Association (WHA). [1] Davis played 18 games with the Cincinnati Stingers during the 1978–79 WHA season. [2] He was drafted in the sixth round of the 1978 NHL Amateur Draft by the New York Islanders. [1]
Howard Davis (chemical engineer) (1937–2009), American chemical engineer; Howard Davis (field hockey) (born 1932), British Olympic hockey player; Howard Davis Jr. (1956–2015), American amateur and professional boxer, won Olympic gold, 1976; Howard McParlin Davis (1918–1994), American professor of art history at Columbia University
Ronald Davis [1] (28 December 1914 – 24 October 1989) was a British and Welsh international field hockey player. In the 1948 Summer Olympics, he was a member of the British field hockey team which won the silver medal. He played one match as a forward. [2]
Davis spent most of his fifteen-year pro career playing for minor-league teams, with occasional call-ups to the Montreal Canadiens (with whom he won a Stanley Cup in 1953), Chicago Black Hawks, Detroit Red Wings, and Boston Bruins. In 1964–65, he was a player-coach for the Muskegon Zephyrs of the International Hockey League.