This season, Quenneville surpassed the 200-point mark and became Medicine Hat Tigers' all-time leading scorer among defensemen, wrapping up his Tigers career with 214 points (69G, 145A) in 251 games.
"He's had a great career and has 200 points now in the Western League, which is a huge number for a d-man," Quenneville's brother, and New Jersey Devils prospect, John said. "I don't think there's very many d-men in the last 10 years that have done that, so it's a really good career in the Western League."
Of all of Quenneville's junior accomplishments, setting the Tigers' d-man scoring record stands above the rest and the Edmonton, AB, native is happy he was able to eclipse the mark when trade rumors swirled around the deadline.
"That was one I really wanted," Quenneville said. "When you get drafted into an organization, whether it's junior or the NHL, and you want to become an all-time great and I was just so grateful to be able to do that with Medicine Hat."
The Islanders drafted Quenneville in the seventh round (200th overall) of the 2016 draft and that's another source of fuel the defenseman has used as motivation, as well as a learning tool.