Loach was selected by the Guelph Platers of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) in the first round, third overall, in the 1985 OHL Priority Draft.[1] He joined the Platers for the 1985–86 season, playing in 65 games, scoring 45 goals and 83 points.[2] He was named the OHL's Rookie of the Year.[3] Coached by Jacques Martin, the Platers made the OHL playoffs and Loach played in 20 games tallying 7 goals and 15 points as Guelph went all to the way to the final.[2] and won the J. Ross Robertson Cup as league champions.[3]
He rejoined the Platers for his final year of junior hockey during the 1987–88 season, playing in 66 games, scoring 43 goals and 92 points.[2] He set a new franchise record for most goals scored for the Guelph Platers with his 83th career goal in November, surpassing the previous tally of 82 set by Kirk Muller and Keith Miller.[6] On January 6, 1988, he scored his 100th and 101st career goals for the Platers in a loss to the Hamilton Steelhawks.[7] Loach was the first player to score 100 goals for the team. However, the Platers failed to make the playoffs.[8]
Professional career
Chicago Blackhawks
Loach was drafted by the Chicago Blackhawks of the National Hockey League (NHL) in the fifth round, 98th overall in the 1986 NHL entry draft.[9] He joined the Blackhawks after his junior career was finished and was assigned to Chicago's International Hockey League (IHL) affiliate, the Saginaw Hawks coached by Darryl Sutter, to begin the 1988–89 season.[10] In January 1989 his assignment was swapped to the Flint Spirits of the IHL in exchange for goaltenderRay LeBlanc, with Loach returning to Saginaw at the end of the season.[11] He played in 32 games with Saginaw, scoring 7 goals and 13 points.[2] Traded for the popular LeBlanc, Loach was at first resented by the Flint fan base as not equal quality as a trade return. However, coached by Don Waddell, Loach went on a scoring streak, adding 37 points in the following 31 games and earning IHL Player of the Week honours in March.[9] While playing on a line with Michel Mongeau and Yves Héroux, he put up 22 goals and 48 points in 41 games with Flint.[2][12] The following season, the Blackhawks assigned Loach to their new IHL affiliate team, the Indianapolis Ice, coached by Darryl Sutter.[13] He played three games with the Ice, registering one assist.[2] In late November 1989, Loach was loaned to the Canadian National Team for 30 days,[14] during which he appeared in nine games, scoring three goals and four points.[2] After returning from the national team loan, there were no spots open on the Ice and Loach was loaned to the Fort Wayne Komets of the IHL.[15] He played in 54 games with the Komets, scoring 15 goals and 48 points.[2]
In the 1991 offseason Loach signed as a free agent with the Detroit Red Wings and was assigned to their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Adirondack Red Wings in September.[18] He spent one year with Adirondack scoring 86 points in 67 games during the 1991–92 season.[2] He was leading the league in scoring in December with 18 goals and 40 points when he suffered a broken thumb that knocked him from the lineup.[19][a] He returned to the lineup on January 8, 1992 after missing 13 games.[20] Adirondack won the Calder Cup that season.[21]
Expansion and Los Angeles Kings
The NHL expanded during the 1992 offseason, adding two teams, the Ottawa Senators and Tampa Bay Lightning. Detroit left Loach exposed in the 1992 NHL expansion draft and he was selected by the Senators.[22] Loach was one of the players selected as part of the Senators' strategy of picking young, talented players who had not succeeded with their original teams.[23][24] The 1992–93 NHL season saw Loach finally make his NHL debut. On October 12, 1992 Loach made his first NHL appearance in a 6–3 loss to the Boston Bruins.[25][26] He appeared in three games with the Senators early in the season. However, after going scoreless, the Senators attempted to send him to their AHL affiliate, the New Haven Senators, exposing him to waivers in late October. Loach was quickly picked up by the Los Angeles Kings however, and earned a spot on the Kings roster. He had a connection to coach Barry Melrose, for whom he played for in Adirondack.[27] He made his Los Angeles debut on October 31 in a 7–1 victory over the Hartford Whalers, inserted into the lineup along with forward Robert Lang and defenceman Peter Ahola, replacing the scratched forwards Dave Taylor, Pat Conacher, and Bob Kudelski.[28] Loach earned his first NHL point in the game, an assist on Tomas Sandström's goal in the third period.[29] He scored his first NHL goal on November 14 against Ron Tugnutt, assisted by defenceman Charlie Huddy and forward Tony Granato, in the third period of an 6–2 win over the Edmonton Oilers.[30][31] He registered his first multi-point NHL game on December 5, assisting on Huddy's first period goal and scoring his own in the third period in a 7–3 win over the Whalers.[32]
Loach played in 50 games with the Kings, scoring 10 goals and 23 points,[2] often playing on a line with fellow rookies Jim Hiller and Lang.[33] He suffered a broken thumb after a collision with defenceman Huddy in practice, missing eleven games. Loach was briefly assigned to the Kings' IHL affiliate, the Phoenix Roadrunners, and was recalled at the end of December.[34][35] He played in four games with the Roadrunners, scoring 2 goals and 5 points.[2] In his second game after his return on January 19, 1993, Loach ended up on a line with Jari Kurri and Luc Robitaille, and the three accounted for four goals and nine points that night in a 5–4 victory over the Edmonton Oilers, with Loach notching one goal and two assists.[36][37] The Kings made 1993 Stanley Cup playoffs and made it all the way to the Stanley Cup finals, but Loach did not see any playing time. After injuries to Huddy and Taylor, Loach and Jimmy Carson were inserted into the lineup for Game 4 of the Stanley Cup finals versus the Montreal Canadiens, his only NHL playoff game.[38]
In the 1993 offseason, the NHL expanded again, and Loach was exposed in the 1993 NHL expansion draft by Los Angeles. He was claimed again, this time by the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim.[39] He was unable to crack the Mighty Ducks roster for the 1993–94 season, and was assigned to Anaheim's IHL affiliate, the San Diego Gulls.[40] He spent the majority of the year with the Gulls, playing in 74 games, scoring 42 goals and 91 points.[2] Loach was recalled in February 1994 by the Mighty Ducks[41] and made his NHL season debut on February 16 against the Philadelphia Flyers, centering the fourth line between Todd Ewen and Stu Grimson.[42] He played in three games with the Mighty Ducks, going scoreless, with his last game being a 4–1 loss to the St. Louis Blues on February 20.[2][43] He was replaced in the lineup for the newly-acquired Stéphan Lebeau.[44] Loach was returned to San Diego in March.[45] This would be the last time he would play in the NHL.[2] He finished the season as the Gulls most valuable player and led the team in scoring.[46]
Minor leagues
Having played out his option with the Mighty Ducks, Anaheim's general managerJack Ferreira declined to offer Loach another contract at the end of the 1993–94 season.[47] A free agent, he signed a three-year contract to return to San Diego in August 1994.[46] During the 1994–95 season he played in 13 games with San Diego, scoring 3 goals and 13 points before being traded to the Detroit Vipers in November for Ron Wilson.[48] He finished the season with 32 goals and 75 points in 64 games with Detroit,[2] leading the team in scoring.[49] He was selected to play in the 1995 IHL All-Star Game for Detroit along with teammates Jason Woolley, Gord Hynes and Rick Knickle.[50] He also added three points in nine playoff games for the Vipers.[2] He missed two weeks during the playoffs after suffering a compound fracture in his left hand, requiring surgery.[49] He returned to the Vipers for the 1995–96 season, playing in 79 games, scoring 35 goals and 81 points.[2] He was named to play in the 1996 IHL All-Star Game, representing the Eastern Conference.[51] He played in eleven playoff games, adding one goal and six points.[2]
In August 1996, Loach was traded by the Vipers to the San Antonio Dragons of the IHL in exchange for his former linemate Michel Mongeau.[52] In the 1996–97 season, Loach played in 70 games for the Dragons, registering 24 goals and 61 points.[2] Loach represented the Dragons at the 1997 IHL All-Star Game and was named one of the starters for the Western Conference.[53] Loach scored a pair of goals during the All-Star Game as the Western Conference won it 6–4.[54] Loach appeared in nine playoff games for the Dragons, scoring one goal and four points.[2]
For the 1997–98 season, Loach signed overseas with Zurich SC.[2][55] He played in 15 games with Zurich, registering 2 goals and 7 points[2] before returning to North America, re-signing with the Dragons in November.[56] He played in 52 games with the Dragons, scoring 7 goals and 36 points.[2] Loach split the 1998–99 season between three teams, beginning with HK Ljubljana Olimpija of Alpenliga in Europe, where he appeared in 11 games, registering 4 goals and 14 points.[2] He returned to the IHL with the Long Beach Ice Dogs, playing in 30 games, scoring 12 goals and 21 points before being traded to the Kansas City Blades for future considerations as the Ice Dogs moved to unload Loach's contract once they became fully healthy.[57] He finished the season with 9 goals and 14 points in 22 games with the Blades and added one goal in three playoff games.[2]
Loach then played from the 1999–2000 season until the 2002–2003 season with the Missouri River Otters of the United Hockey League (UHL). Over four seasons he scored 310 points in 238 games with the River Otters. In his first season, he made a single appearance with the Chicago Wolves of the AHL, but played in 8 games during the 2000 Calder Cup playoffs, during which the Wolves won the Calder Cup. He also made two appearances for the Wolves during the 2001 Calder Cup playoffs. During the 2002–03 season Loach also made an appearance with the Los Angeles Kings minor league affiliate Manchester Monarchs of the AHL, playing three games.[2] Loach was named the league's most sportsmanlike player for the 2002–03 season. Loach retired from hockey following the 2002–03 season.[58] Loach came out of retirement for the 2005–06 season with the River Otters, skating in 21 games with the team[2] and appearing in his 1,000th professional hockey game,[59] before retiring again in 2006.
Coaching career
For the 2003–2004 season Loach was hired as the head coach of the River Otters in July.[60] During the season, he underwent emergency brain surgery in December 2003.[61] He coached the team for the majority of the year, but departed for personal reasons after 70 games and a 16–47–7 record, during which the team set a new record for the worst start in league history, going 0–11–2. He was replaced by his assistant, John Wensink.[61][62]
Personal life
After leaving coaching, Loach worked in the auto industry in the St. Louis, Missouri area. He is married with two sons.[63] He had his jersey retired by the River Otters, the only player to have his number retired by the team.
For several years during the mid 1990s, Loach ran his own hockey school for children in Northern Ontario. He started this while playing for the Detroit Red Wings and teammate Keith Primeau would participate. Loach's ran for three years and even spawned one professional NHL hockey player, fellow Hockey Heritage North Alumni, Kurtis McLean. Loach also helped raise money for local charities in Northern Ontario by lending his services to charity hockey tournaments. One in particular is the Canadian Tire Rino Robazza Memorial Hockey tournament.[64]
^Moore, John (November 27, 1986). "Platers are coming into their own". The Hamilton Spectator. p. 53. Retrieved September 17, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Zwolinski, Mark (November 5, 1987). "Milestone for Lonnie". Toronto Star. p. 50. Retrieved September 17, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Cannon, Steve (March 19, 1988). "Noble's 4 points put him over 100". Waterloo Region Record. p. 31. Retrieved September 17, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Brunner, Steve (September 22, 1989). "Ice gets 22 from Blackhawks". p. 47. Retrieved September 18, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Pickett, Bill (November 22, 1989). "Win will put Ice 2 points from top". Indianapolis Star. p. 22. Retrieved September 18, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Pickett, Bill (December 23, 1989). "Ice sink Komets with 6–4 victory". The Indianapolis Star. p. 23. Retrieved September 18, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"NHL free agent list". Arizona Daily Star. July 3, 1990. p. 30. Retrieved September 18, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
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