Born in
Lewiston, Maine, Rick DiPietro moved to
Winthrop, Massachusetts when he was 10. As a youth, he played in the 1994
Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a
minor ice hockey team from
Beverly, Massachusetts.
Collegiate DiPietro attended
Saint Sebastian's School. He played one season (1999–2000) with
Boston University in the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)'s
Hockey East. In that one year, DiPietro was named to the All-Rookie Team, named Second Team All-Hockey East, awarded the team's co-MVP and was named Hockey East's
Rookie of the Year. In addition, DiPietro nearly set the NCAA record for most saves in a game when he stopped 77 out of 80 shots in a 3–2 quadruple overtime loss to
St. Lawrence University during the NCAA regional final. In his one and only
Beanpot Tournament, DiPietro was named MVP and won the
Eberly Trophy awarded to the tournament's top goaltender.
Professional DiPietro was drafted first overall by the
New York Islanders in the
2000 NHL entry draft, out of Boston University. Islanders general manager
Mike Milbury traded incumbent goalie
Roberto Luongo to create room for the highly touted DiPietro, who was known for his mobility and puckhandling skills. DiPietro became the fourth American to occupy the top draft position in the
NHL entry draft. A groin injury during training camp resulted in DiPietro starting the season with the
Bridgeport Sound Tigers, the Islanders minor league affiliate in the
American Hockey League (AHL). He was subsequently called up twice to join the Islanders, but did not play a game until January 27, 2001, when he debuted against the
Buffalo Sabres. DiPietro's NHL debut was widely anticipated, but in 20 games in the 2000–01 season he managed just three wins against 15 losses for a struggling Islanders team. He played ten games the next season, as well as one playoff game, before being called up permanently in the 2003–04 season. His
goals against average (GAA) improved from 3.49 in the 2000–01 season to 2.36 in the 2003–04 season. On September 12, 2006, DiPietro signed a 15-year, $67.5 million contract with the Islanders, topping former teammate
Alexei Yashin's contract signed before the start of the
2001–02 season of 10 years.
Newsday reported that the team offered him a 15-year contract in September 2005, but the NHL front office discouraged the Islanders from making such an offer. Instead, DiPietro had signed on a one-year deal with the Islanders. DiPietro's contract, the longest under the 2005
NHL collective bargaining agreement, was nearly surpassed during the 2010 off-season, when the
New Jersey Devils attempted to sign
Ilya Kovalchuk to a 17-year contract, but that offer was rejected by the NHL on the grounds of
salary cap circumvention. On March 5, 2007, DiPietro broke an Islanders franchise record by making 56 saves in a 2–1 shootout loss to the
New York Rangers. The previous record was 55 saves, held by both
Félix Potvin and
Billy Smith. The record was later broken by
Dwayne Roloson in 2009. On March 13, 2007, DiPietro suffered a concussion after a collision with
Montreal Canadiens forward
Steve Bégin, when DiPietro raced out to poke check a puck at the blueline at 15:41 of the first period. DiPietro returned for four games but then missed the rest of the regular season after he sustained another concussion in a game against the Rangers. He returned to play games two through five of the Islanders' first round playoff series against the Buffalo Sabres. The concussion was the start of a string of injuries. DiPietro underwent surgery in the 2007 off season to fix a torn labrum in his hip. In 2007, DiPietro expressed a desire to become more of a team leader. He said, "I'm a competitive person, and I have a tendency to have a short fuse with guys sometimes. That's something, as a leader, that you just can't do." DiPietro was selected to appear in his first and only
All-Star Game in
2008 as a reserve, but was later named the starter after New Jersey Devils goaltender
Martin Brodeur dropped out. During the
skills competition the night before, DiPietro injured his hip during the shootout competition. DiPietro continued to play until the Islanders no longer had a chance to make the playoffs and on March 19, it was announced that DiPietro would miss the remainder of the
2007–08 season because of the hip surgery. On June 3, 2008, DiPietro went on a
Sirius satellite radio show being hosted by "
Bubba the Love Sponge," where he told Bubba he would be undergoing knee surgery later that day. The surgery was done on the meniscus in his left knee. DiPietro sat out the first four games of the 2008–09 season (or, controversially, was on the bench as the backup) before starting the team's fifth game in
Florida. He played two games after that, but left after the first period his third game back. After that, he was placed on injured reserve for an "undisclosed lower body injury." On November 1, it was announced DiPietro had undergone another knee surgery after injuring his meniscus. It is unknown whether it is the same knee that was operated on earlier that year. DiPietro returned to the team on December 26, 2008. He won his first game back and earned an assist, which broke
Billy Smith's team record for points by a goaltender. On January 20, 2009, Islanders general manager
Garth Snow announced that DiPietro would miss the rest of the
2008–09 season due to post-arthroscopic surgical swelling in his right knee. On January 8, 2010, DiPietro returned from injury in a 4–3 loss to the
Dallas Stars. His last start of 2010 came against the
Carolina Hurricanes on February 6. He earned his fifth loss in seven starts, as the Islanders fell 3–1. On February 13, he was listed as day-to-day with the flu, and less than a month later, swelling in his left-knee caused him to be placed on the injured reserve list effective March 2, 2010; he did not return for the rest of the season. DiPietro started the
2010–11 season apparently healthy and worked in a "platoon" tandem with
Dwayne Roloson. On December 21, 2010, he was placed on injured reserve, however, due to knee swelling. He returned in December, though due to the strong play of Roloson, he was primarily used as a backup. He made his first start since returning on December 29 in a game against the
Pittsburgh Penguins. DiPietro and the Islanders defeated Pittsburgh in a 2–1 shootout decision behind the sharp play of DiPietro. On December 31, the Islanders traded Roloson to the
Tampa Bay Lightning, confirming the starting job for DiPietro. On February 2, 2011, In his first game against the Penguins since his shootout win, DiPietro engaged in a rare "goaltender fight" against Pittsburgh's
Brent Johnson in the final seconds of the game. He suffered a concussion and was knocked out and had his jaw broken by a single punch to the face by Johnson. The injuries kept him off the ice for weeks. It is not known if the knee swelling was from the fight or another reason. DiPietro returned shortly to finish the season, wearing the old
helmet and cage combo worn by former Islanders goaltender
Chris Osgood. The start of the
2011–12 season featured DiPietro in a three-way tandem with
Al Montoya and
Evgeni Nabokov. Due to a strong pre-season and his performances in DiPietro's absence the previous year, Montoya started the first two games and DiPietro was the backup. During practice for the Islanders' third game, DiPietro took a hard shot to his mask from
Brian Rolston, which concussed him and sidelined him indefinitely. DiPietro returned to action in late October, returning to the more conventional one piece goaltender mask he sported for the majority of his career. On November 5, 2011, DiPietro made 25 saves to earn his first win of the 2011–12 season. Shortly after, he injured his groin and was again out indefinitely; he later required surgery to repair a hernia in the area, sidelining him for the remainder of the season. After playing only three games in the
lockout shortened
2012–13 season, DiPietro was waived by the Islanders and was sent to their AHL affiliate, the
Bridgeport Sound Tigers. He had eight years remaining on his NHL contract. DiPietro started his first game as a member of the Sound Tigers on March 1, 2013. He allowed two goals on the first two shots of the game and five in the first period. He did not return from the locker room for the second period of play as the game eventually ended 7–3 in favor of the opposing
Connecticut Whale. In July 2013, the Islanders used a
compliance buyout to terminate DiPietro's contract. Under the terms of NHL buyouts, DiPietro was to be paid 2/3s of the $36 million he would have been owed over the next 8 years at a rate of $1.5 million per year over the next 16 years. playing his first game 5 days later in which he stopped 25 of 29 shots in a 5–2 loss to the
Grand Rapids Griffins. He was cut by the Checkers on November 26. ==Post-playing career==