He was selected by the Columbus Blue Jackets in the second round, 45th overall in the 2017 NHL Entry Draft, the first player drafted directly out of the French league. He then spent two seasons with Finnish Liiga side KalPa, with whom he won the Spengler Cup in 2018. He moved to North America and made his NHL debut in 2019. Internationally Texier has represented France at the junior and senior level.
The National Hockey League (NHL) Central Scouting, which ranks players eligible for the annual NHL Entry Draft, had Texier as the 16th-best European skater prior to the 2017 NHL Entry Draft.[2] He was ultimately selected in the second round, 45th overall by the Columbus Blue Jackets, becoming the first player drafted directly out of France.[3] After the draft Texier, who was also selected 17th in the CHL Import Draft by the Baie-Comeau Drakkar of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), moved to KalPa of the Finnish Liiga for the 2017–18 season.[3] The team's youngest player, he scored 13 goals and 22 points in 53 games. On 23 May 2018, after the conclusion of the season, Texier was signed to a three-year, entry-level contract by the Blue Jackets, who then let him spend a second season in Finland.[4]
After his second season with Kalpa, in which he led the team with 41 points in 55 games, Texier was assigned to the Blue Jackets' American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Cleveland Monsters. He played seven games for the Monsters, scoring seven points, before the Blue Jackets recalled him.[5] Texier made his NHL debut on 5 April 2019 against the New York Rangers.[6] He scored his first NHL goal the following night against the Ottawa Senators in the team's final regular season game on 6 April.[7] He scored his first playoff goal against the Tampa Bay Lightning in game four of the Blue Jackets' first-round playoff series on 16 April.[8]
Texier holding control of the puck during a game in 2024.
During his first full season in the NHL, Texier suffered a lumbar stress fracture that limited him to playing in only 36 games played during the 2019–20 season.[9] Texier finished with six goals and seven assists in the regular season. Returning to the Blue Jackets for the NHL's return-to-play and playoffs, Texier registered four assists in 10 postseason games.
With the following 2020–21 season delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Texier was originally loaned to join his former Finnish club, KalPa, on 8 September 2020.[10] Due to personal reasons, he opted to cancel his loan and return on loan to hometown club Brûleurs de Loups of the Ligue Magnus until the resumption of the NHL on 5 October 2020.[11]
On 28 June 2024, the Blue Jackets traded Texier to the St. Louis Blues for a 4th-round pick in the 2025 NHL entry draft; Texier subsequently signed a two-year, $4.2 million exteison with the Blues.[13]
International play
Texier has played internationally for France at the junior and senior level. At the 2017 U18 World Championship he helped the French under-18 team win the tournament, earning promotion to the elite division for the first time in their history.[14] Texier recorded five points in five games, and was named the tournament's top forward.[15][16]
He was expected to make his debut for the French senior team at the 2017 World Championship, which was co-hosted in Paris and Cologne, but a shoulder injury kept him out.[17] He played the following year for the senior team at the 2018 World Championship, becoming the third-youngest player in the tournament.[18] He joined the French national team for the 2019 World Championship in which the France got relegated to Division I A after losing all of its seven games.
Personal life
Texier's father, Fabrice, was also an ice hockey player, and introduced his son to the sport. Fabrice played four games in the 1986–87 QMJHL season with the Laval Titan, spending the rest of his career in France, mainly with the Brûleurs de Loups.[19]
^"Alexandre Texier zu den ZSC Lions" [Alexandre Texier to the ZSC Lions]. www.zsclions.ch (in Swiss High German). 25 August 2022. Retrieved 12 August 2023.
^Chaumont, Jean-François (27 June 2017). "Un grand pas pour la France" [A Big Step for France]. Le Journal de Montréal. Montreal. Retrieved 6 April 2019.