ATD 2010 Bios

DoMakc

Registered User
Jun 28, 2006
1,369
431

Trevor Linden
images



Accomplishments:

King Clancy Memorial Trophy (1997)
NHL 1st All-Rookie Team (1989)
2x played in Allstar Games (1991-92)

- scored 6 times 30+ goals and 4 times 70+ points
- his playoffs ppg jumps to 0,8 from 0,63 in the regular season
- was ppg player in playoffs during his first stint with Canucks (1989-97)

Quotes:

Joe Pelletier said:
He [Linden] was essentially a hard worker, the personification of selflessness, an unquantifiable hockeyist who excelled in intangibles, effort and class.
He was also a great person - the kind of person we all want to be.

[...]

On the ice he's the kind of player who's true value can never really be measured by any statistic. Rest assured those on the ice, friend and foe, had great respect for Linden's intricate abilities. He's not a great scorer but has always done the small things so extremely well - a big reason for his playoff success. Linden is a big game player. In the big games its those intangible things - faceoffs, defensive excellence, physical but disciplined play, always making the safe if unspectacular play - that make the difference between winning and losing. He was a hockey player's hockey player.

Trevor Linden is a leader. Trevor Linden is a winner. You have to watch his game closely to truly appreciate his excellence.

Mark Brophy said:
Watch Linden closely and you won't be blown away by any particular skill; his conviction and determination are his strengths. He doesn't have the hardest shot in the league, yet the puck doesn't flutter when he snaps it towards the gal. He is a deceptively fast skater. In a race for the puck, an opponent might look like he's skating quicker, but Linden often gets there first using a long, fluent stride.
 

EagleBelfour

Registered User
Jun 7, 2005
7,467
62
ehsl.proboards32.com
With our 12th selection, the 346th overall in this year All-Time Draft, the Detroit Falcons are extremely please to select Monsieur Roy Thomas Worters

P196904S.jpg


Name: Shrimp
Height: 5'3''
Weight: 135 lbs
Position: Goaltender
Catch: Left
Date of Birth: October 19, 1900
Place of Birth: Toronto , Ontario, Canada
Date of Death: November 07, 1957 (Age: 57)

Second All-Star Team Goalie (1932, 1934)
Hart Memorial Trophy (1929)
Vezina Trophy (1931)
Team Captain (1932-1933)
Hockey Hall of Fame (1969)

Top-5 Wins (3rd, 5th)
Top-5 Goal Against Average (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 3rd)
Top-5 Shutouts (2nd, 2nd, 2nd, 4th, 4th, 5th)

Top-5 Playoff Wins (3rd, 4th)
Top-5 Playoff Goal Against Average (1st, 3rd, 3rd)
Top-5 Playoff Shutouts (1st, 3rd)

Hart Nomination (1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th)

- Named the 2nd best Little Man in the history of hockey by Stan Fischler
- Worters was an accomplished second baseman on the local baseball circuit
- He grew up in the same part of town as the famous Conacher brothers
- With Worters in goals, the Yellowjackets won consecutive championships in the USAHA
- He was signed as a free agent by Pittsburgh onSeptember 26th, 1925
- On November 26th, 1925 at the Boston Hub Arena in Boston's Back Bay, Worters stopped 26 of 27 shots to record the first win in Pittsburgh franchise history
- In 1925-26, Worters stopped 70 of 73 shots in a 3-1 loss to the New York Americans
- On November 1st, 1928, he was traded to NY Americans by Pittsburgh for Joe Miller and $20,000
- Worters became the first goalie in NHL history to record back to back shutouts in his first two games for a new team (New York Americans)
- Worters is the first goalie to win the Hart Trophy as the league's most valuable player
- On February 27th, 1930, Worters was loaned to the Montreal Canadiens by the New York Americans to replace George Hainsworth, in a 6 to 2 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs. It was his only appearance with the club
- During his contract negotiations with the Amerks, Worters demanded, and received, a three years, $8,500 per season contract; an enormous sum for a goalie at that time
- In 1934, he was out for a month with a broken fingers
- He missed the remainder of 1936-37 season recovering from hernia surgery, suffered on January 25th, 1937
- Worters is known as a goaltending innovator. He was the first goalie to use the blocker as a tactic. In those days the blocker was just a heavily padded glove, but he was the first to use that hand to deflect shots into the corner as opposed to trying to catch them
- After retirement, Roy Worters worked with handicapped children
- Roy Worters died of throat cancer on November 7, 1957

HHOF said:
Despite his 5'3" frame, the aptly named "Shrimp" Worters seemed like a giant to opposing shooters. He became one of the NHL's all-time great goalkeepers, chalking up a phenomenal 66 shutouts in only 12 seasons. But because his tenure was chiefly with the Pittsburgh Pirates and New York Americans, Worters never felt the exhilaration of a Stanley Cup win.

The Pirates were weak defensively, but Worters routinely kept them competitive.

Over a nine-year span, the Americans qualified for the post-season only twice. One of those playoff appearances came in Worters' first year, after he registered a 1.15 goals-against average to elevate the play of a team that had finished in last place the year before.

Even though the Americans remained weak, Worters continued to rack up shutouts and keep his goals-against mark respectable. He was placed on the NHL Second All-Star Team in 1932 and 1934.

He never played on any powerhouses, which made his 67 shutouts, 171 wins and his durability all the more impressive.

Joe Pelletier said:
Shrimp stood all of 5'3" and never weighed more than 130lbs, but he was a giant of the goaltending crease. Most of those 130lbs must have been from his huge heart.

Worters is seldom mentioned when discussing the greatest goalies of all time, likely because he played with some pretty bad teams. It would be tough to imagine how bad those teams would be without Worters.

In perhaps Worters' greatest accomplishment, he became the first goalie to win the Hart Trophy as the league's most valuable player in 1929. After arriving from Pittsburgh after a lengthy contract dispute, Worters instantly made the Amerks into a solid team, recording a second place overall record of 16-12-10, a tremendous improvement over the last place finish the season before. That set up a memorable playoff showing with the cross-town Rangers, but the Rangers would prevail.

Despite his incredible play, the Americans remained a weak team, only qualifying for 2 playoffs in Worters 9 seasons tending goal. His 171-229-83 career won/loss record is reflective of the weak teams he played for, but his 67 career shutouts speaks volumes about just how good this guy was.

1933-34 O-Pee-Chee V304A #45 Roy Worters said:

Sport Encyclopedia said:
Buoyed by the acquisition of Goalie Roy Worters from the Pittsburgh Pirates the Americans come storming out of the gate making the playoffs for the first time in since moving to New York with a solid record of 19-13-2, good enough for 2nd place. The diminutive Worters listed at 5'3" went on to become the first Goalie to win the Hart Trophy as NHL MVP with an amazing 1.21 GAA. Facing the New York Rangers in a total goal series Worters would keep the Rangers off the board in the first game. However, the Americans would be unable to score either as the Rangers final won the series 1-0 in overtime of Game 2.

Crashing the Goalie said:
Worters finished the 1930-31 season with a 1.61 goals-against average, and was awarded the Vezina Trophy.

He played on a terrible team – the Americans – who didn’t even make the playoffs (They finished with an 18-16-10 total.) that season.

The Amerks scored only 76 goals in 44 games (The league’s average was 105.), which was tied with the pathetic Philadelphia Quakers, who won only four contests.

Worters held his rivals to only 74 goals, and had the NHL’s most ties – 10.

And, while literally standing on his head, he wasn’t even selected to the first or second All-Star teams.

Who's Who In Hockey said:
Worters played so well that first year the New Yorkers, that he lifted his club out of the basement and into the playoffs. For his heroics, Roy was awarded the Hart Trophy as the league's most valuable player.
Shrimp's finest season was 1931, when he racked up a stingy 1.68 goal-against-average and won the Vezina Trophy as the loop's top stopper. There was one small problem though; the Americans' forwards sometimes seemed unable to score any goals. Despite Roy's artful acrobatics in goal, the Americans failed to make the playoffs.
Worters played six more years with the punchless Americans, performing admirably, but unable to single-handedly carry his club to the playoffs.
He finally retired in 1937.

The All-New Hockey's 100 said:
Although the goaltending theory has always been ''the more net filled the better'', Worters amply demonstrated that a tiny man with catlike moves could play as well - or better - than the best of the big ones. Worters was the best of the little men and, in the opinion of some, the best of them all.

Trail of the Stanley Cup said:
1929 Playoff Semi-Final: Americans vs. Rangers, Game 1
The fans were given sixty minutes of thrills in the first game with both sides having many chances but Worters was impregnable

50plus.com said:
Lionel became an NHL coach as well, although what success he had with the floundering New York Americans belonged mostly to the tiny goaltender, Roy Worters, a marvellous competitor - at 5 ft. 3 and 135 pounds.


Sites:
http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=P196904#photo
http://www.sihrhockey.org/member_player_sheet.cfm?player_id=4818&mode=2
http://www.greatesthockeylegends.com/2007/02/roy-shrimp-worters.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Worters
http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080...lverwareTrophyWinner.jsp?tro=HMT&year=1928-29
http://www.habseyesontheprize.com/2007/10/mickey-murray-and-roy-worters-1929-30.html
http://hockeygoalies.org/bio/worters.html
http://www.pittsburghhockey.net/PiratesPages/PiratesLOBBY.html
http://www.sportsecyclopedia.com/nhl/nya/nyamericans.html
http://crashingthegoalie.com/2008/08/28/hockey-trivia-7/#more-844
http://www.shortsupport.org/cgi-bin/whowho_bio.cgi?seq=471&orderby=height&direction=ASC
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=pv&GRid=10447&PIpi=1703636
http://50plus.com/50plus-article-print.cfm?documentID=7777
 

Nighthawks

Registered User
Feb 5, 2010
157
0
CT
New Haven Nighthawks, Defenseman, Eduard Ivanov.
i003.gif


Position: D
Shoots: L
Height: 5-10
Weight: 185
Born: 4/25/1938 in Moscow, USSR

Awards and Achievements
3-Time Soviet League 1st Team All-Star (1963, 1964, 1965)
1-Time Soviet League 2nd Team All-Star (1966)
1-Time Soviet League 3rd Team All-Star (1967)
Olympic Gold Medal (1964)
Soviet and Russian Hockey Hall of Fame (1963)

From Greatest Hockey Legends.com
Edward Ivanov had a North American first name, and he played a North American style of defense. He was a defensive defender who loved to play physically. He would do anything - sacrifice his body, block shots, clear the front of the net - in order for his team to win. He had a great ability to spring transition offense with his deadly accurate passing.

Greatest Hockey Legends.com
Ivanov's play quickly improved with the guidance of Ragulin. Soon Ivanov was considered one of the best players in the country, and the Ragulin-Ivanov tandem is still considered to be perhaps the best defensive duo in Russian history, with the possible exception of the Viacheslav Fetisov-Alexei Kasatonov pairing of the 1980s.

From Greatest Hockey Legends.com
XXXX wrote the following about Ivanov, "Like an experienced warrior, he has many fine qualities, courage, and decisiveness. He is entirely dedicated to hockey, he is in love with the game, he thirsts for battle." I don't think a hockey player on either side of the Atlantic could get a better quote from his coach.

From Greatest Hockey Legends.com
From 1963 through 1967, Ivanov was part of 4 USSR championships, and 3 world championships. Always one to tinker with the game, XXXX was particularly pleased with Ivanov's versatility and complete understanding of the game.

Greatest Hockey Legends.com
Ivanov's shining moment came at the 1964 Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria. Ivanvov was a key player of the 1964 gold medal championship team in his only Olympic games. Under the revolutionary roaming system, Ivanov, still technically listed as a defenseman, scored 6 goals and 7 points in 8 contests and was named as the best forward in the Olympics.

Greatest Hockey Legends.com
Though his career with the national team was cut short, the 5'10" 185 pound Ivanov continued to play the game he loved until 1970. Though he was devastated by the demotion and the politics played, he never lost his love of hockey. "When I played we loved hockey more than anything else," he told Lawrence Martin in the excellent book The Red Machine. "Today the younger players have less pure emotion in their attitude towards the game. We didn't think much about monthly wages. It was important for us just to play hockey."
 

EagleBelfour

Registered User
Jun 7, 2005
7,467
62
ehsl.proboards32.com
With our 13th selection, the 351st overall in this year All-Time Draft, the Detroit Falcons are very happy to select Right Winger Francis Albert Clarence Finnigan

008115116.jpg


Name: The Shawville Express, The Slumbering Romeo
Height: 5'9''
Weight: 165 lbs
Position: Right Wing
Shoots: Right
Date of Birth: July 09, 1903
Place of Birth: Shawville, Quebec, Canada
Date of Death: December 25, 1991 (Age: 88)

Stanley Cup Champion (1927, 1932)
Stanley Cup Finalist (1935, 1936)
Selke Trophy (1930*, 1933*, 1934*, 1936*)
Played in NHL All Star Game (1934)
Team Captain (1930-1931; 1932-1933)
#8 retired by the Ottawa Senators (1992)

Top-10 Scoring (9th, 10th)
Top-10 Goalscoring (6th, 6th)

Top-10 Playoff Scoring (5th, 8th, 8th)
Top-10 Playoff Goalscoring (3rd, 9th)
Top-10 Playoff Assist (3rd, 4th, 5th, 5th)
Top-10 Playoff Penalty minutes (7th, 10th)

- Named the best defensive forward of the 1930's by Ultimate Hockey
- Named the best penalty-killer of the 1930's by Ultimate Hockey
- Brother of Ed Finnigan and father of Joan Finnigan, a published writer
- As he had to take the train from Shawville to Ottawa, Frank picked up the nickname of "Shawville Express"
- He received his first fee for playing hockey when he was 13, playing for Quyon against Fitzroy Harbour, for which he received $10
- Finnigan signed as a free agent by Ottawa Senators on February 21st, 1924
- On September 26th, 1931, he was claimed by the Toronto Maple Leafs from the Ottawa Senators for the 1931-32 season in thedispersal draft
- On march 15th, 1934, Finnigan scored the final Senators goal in the final season that the NHL Senators played in Ottawa. He scored an unassisted goal at the 1 minute, 7 second mark of the second period
- Transferred to the St-Louis Eagles after Ottawa Senators franchise relocated on September 30, 1934
- He was Traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs by the St-Louis Eagles for cash on February 13th, 1935
- Finnigan recorded the most game played in the Ottawa Senators franchise history with 363
- During World War II, Finnigan joined the Canadian Air Force
- When a movement began to bring back the Senators in the early 1990's, Finnigan was recruited as a living link to the team's illustrious past. Finnigan was scheduled to drop the first puck for the new Ottawa Senators expansion franchise, but died in 1991 from a heart attack on Christmas day
- He was the last surviving member of the 1927 Stanley Cup champion Senators and was also the oldest living NHL player
- The street in front of the main entrance to the Ottawa Senators' arena, the Scotiabank Place, is named the ''Frank Finnigan Way'' in his honour. There is also a restaurant inside Scotiabank Place named ''Frank Finnigan's''

Joe Pelletier said:
Frank Finnigan was born in Shawville, Quebec, only 75 km outside the city of Ottawa. It was in Ottawa that Finnigan established himself as a legend of hockey.

Frank never got a chance to really play until the 1926-27 season. He responded well, scoring 15 goals in 36 games, and adding 3 more in 6 playoff contests en route to winning the Stanley Cup against Boston. "The Shawville Express" even managed to score the game winning goal in the first game of the finals!

When forward passing was finally allowed in all three zones in 1929, Frank had his best statistical year ever, posting 21 goals and 15 assists in 43 games.

Finnigan, an eight-year veteran who played a reliable two-way game, gave the Leafs a solid second line winger and an expert penalty killer. After playing a key role in the Leafs' 1932 Stanley Cup victory, Frank was returned to Ottawa.

Although he was small he was nearly impossible to knock off of his feet. He was strong as an ox, having worked as a telephone lineman in Ottawa prior to turning pro with the Sens. Finnigan was an extraordinary defensive forward.
---------------
Then there was Frank Finnigan, the "Shawville Express," who had his number 8 retired the new Senators when they returned to the league in 1992. He was a flawless defensive forward.

1936-1939 Diamond Match Cover said:

Trail of the Stanley Cup said:
He became a regular in 1928, with Kilrea and Nighbor, and led the team in goals and points for two years. He was the policeman of the line and took a lot of penalties.

Globe and Mail; June 1st said:
Seven of those 12 players — Connell, Clancy, Hooley Smith, Denneny, Nighbor, Boucher and Adams — are in the Hockey Hall of Fame. Many believe Fearless Frank Finnigan should also be there. As a fitting tribute, his sweater was retired by the current Senators not long after his death in 1991.


1933-34 O-Pee-Chee V304A #25 Frank Finnigan said:

-'' I'd label him as one of the finest right wingers in hockey. He could dish out the punishment and take it, too, as he flew down his wing. He was another straightaway skater. You could put a string out there and Finnigan would skate right up and down that line.'' - King Clancy

-'' I'd give anything to have a team of Finnys.'' - Dick Irvin Sr.

Sites:
http://www.sihrhockey.org/member_player_sheet.cfm?player_id=1122&mode=2
http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SearchPlayer.jsp?player=12594
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Finnigan
http://ottawahockeylegends.blogspot.com/2007/05/frank-finnigan.html
http://www.ansports.com/jerseys/Finnigan/Finnigan.html
http://www.geegeehockey.com/m_history1910s1920s.html
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/article763191.ece
 

Leafs Forever

Registered User
Jul 14, 2009
2,802
3
In his first six seasons, he scored a remarkable 176 goals in just 170 games, a pace that wasn't equaled until Wayne Gretzky came along in the 1980s and rewrote the NHL record book. -legends of hockey

His name is also in the record book on account of the 1922 Stanley Cup playoffs. The St. Pats played the champions of the Western Canada Hockey League, the Vancouver Millionaires, in a best-of-five finals. He scored two game-winning goals, including four in the fifth and final game, a 5-1 Toronto rout. In all he scored nine of the team's 16 goals, and those nine are still a Stanley Cup finals record-legends of hockey

He was one of the NHL's earliest scoring sensations He often jostled with the likes of Cy Denneny and Joe Malone for the scoring championship.-Joe Pelletier

He was, perhaps, the greatest sharpshooter of them all, and he won many a game for Toronto. He had an uncanny knack for getting the puck away at remarkable speed, and all netguardians made no secret of the fact that they feared the Toronto rightwinger.- Globe and Mail, November 8th, 1930

During his eleven seasons as an NHL player he became known for his incredible stickhandling hard and accurate shot, which helped him become one of the NHL's snipers of his era. His best year on record was when he scored 38 goals (in 29 games) and 6 assists for 44 points in 1924-25.-Joe Pelletier

Just a nice little story about Dye's return to Toronto, although it does highlight how respected his shot and abilities were:

Last night at the Arena Gardens, where the Poppy Fund games was played, and much money was reaped into a worthy cause, "Hap" Watson, announcer extrodinaire, strode to centre at the ice-surface and said: "Ladies and Gentlemen, the player wearing no.7 tonight is Cecil (Babe) Dye." And the roar of approval that arose from the vast throng must have brought back memories to Dye, greatest sharpshooter of these modern days in hockey. There was a time when Dye was the most valuable member of the St.Patricks team. He could score, and goals count, without a doubt. Then four years ago he was sent ot the Chicago Blackhawks, where he had a great season. The next fall he broke a leg while training at Winnipeg, and since then has been kicked around a little bit, without getting a real chance to show his wares. Recently, New Haven released him. Last night, "Babe" Dye came back to the scene of his great triumphs, and the old guard applauded. They had not forgotten. They would have this North Toronto boy regain his place in hockey. So Dye stepped out, and he suprised all and sundry. That shot was there again. The puck fairly whistled as he sped netward, but ill luck kept Dye's name off the score sheet. One one occasion he came within an inch of beating Goalkeeper Benny Grant, and that puck was travelling. Every now and again some one comes forward to say that a certain player can shoot like Dye could. Well, perhaps. Charlie Conacher can whip that puck along with amazing speed. He is Dye's logical successor, but they can toss all others aside. Men who can shoot the puck like Dye can are not developed often, as the records show. So elated were the Leafs with Dye's showing last night that he has been asked to practice with them, and it is likely that he will not be out of a position very long.-M.J. Rodden, Sports editor for the Glove and Mail, November 11th, 1930

Accounts of his play (too many to copy and paste in bio):

http://hfboards.com/showpost.php?p=24408187&postcount=657

The Toronto St.Patricks are very happy to select, an amazing goalscorer who, in his career, starred for the St.Pats...



BABE DYE!

Awards and Achievements
1 x Stanley Cup Winner (1922)
2 x Art Ross Trophy Winner (1923, 1925)
3 x NHL Goals Leader (1921, 1923, 1925)
1 x Retro Conn Smythe Winner (1922)
Note: No NHL AST's in is time, or he would almost certainly have won quite a number.

Top 10's
Goals- 1st(1921), 2nd(1922), 1st(1923), 2nd(1924), 1st(1925), 8th(1926), 2nd(1927)

Assists- 3rd(1923)

Points- 2nd(1921), 3rd(1922), 1st(1923), 6th(1924), 1st(1925), 5th(1927)

Playoff Goals: 1st(1922)

Playoff Points: 1st(1922)

Biography
Babe Dye was truly a tremendous athlete. He was a halfback at one point for the Toronto Argonauts, as well as a great baseball player who was offered a tremendous salary of $25,000 to join the Philidelphia Athletics team in 1921, but he would stick to playing with Toronto and Buffalo in the international league as his real career was in hockey.

He would join the St.Pats in 1918, and he would spend most of his tremendous career there. He would be the St.Pats first scoring star, and although he had some skating deficencies, his great stickhandling and incredible hard and accurate shot allowed him to become one of the best goalscorer's of his era, outscoring the likes of Cy Denneny, Joe Malone, and Newsy Lalonde.

His tremendous scoring set records, perhaps most notably in the 1922 playoffs, the one year in which his medocre St.Pats team was able to reach the cup final. In the cup final series against the Vancouver Millionares, Dye truly shined, scoring 9 of his teams 16 goals, still a record for the cup finals, and leading his team to a comeback series victory over the Millionares.

Dye would continue to dominate with the St.Pats until the 1926-1927 season, when he was sold at the start to Chicago. He would have one very good year with Chicago before a broken leg effectively ending his career, causing him to miss a season and never regain old form in his last full season. After a few games as a Leafin 1930-31, he would retire. He was inducted to the hockey hall of fame in 1970.
 
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Leafs Forever

Registered User
Jul 14, 2009
2,802
3
Credit to Dreakmur for providing some voting numbers.

The League saw many examples of Pavel's brilliant puck handling skills, passing ability and accurate shot through the season and he built a name for himself as a player who could make just about any defender look like a complete fool-datsyuk13.com

Plays a very patient game with the puck. Sets up his linemates with aplomb and scores highlight-reel goals. Also possesses outstanding defensive instincts and face-off skills.-hockeynews

We knew in rookie camp that he was going to be a player, but we didn’t know he’d play as well as he has. He’s a great stick handler-Scotty Bowman

"The way he plays, he fits on the team because he’s a smart player. He knows how to play the puck-possession game.”-Igor Larianov

"He’s so gifted, so smart, he’s got a great temperament for the game, too.” -Brett Hull

“I still say he’s the smartest player I’ve ever played with. Pavel sees the game as well as any of the elite players in this league.”-Brett Hull
Some of the things he’s done are truly amazing. Those are not normal skills. Those are way, way up there in the stratosphere, and you shake your just head after he does it. And he does it on a consistent basis. He’s a special player.”-Rick Dudly, former Panthers GM

“Pavel’s biggest strength is his ability to beat people, hold on to the puck and draw people to him.”-Steve Yzerman

When he’s hot, it’s so much fun to play with him because he can do so much on the ice. If you just keep your stick down, you know you’re going to get the puck. You don’t really know how he does it.”-undrafted player, teammate and sometimes linemate of player mentioned

He is as good a player and as dominant player as there is in this league.”-undrafted coach

He’s good on faceoffs, good on defense and great on offence. Who wouldn’t want him on the ice?”-undrafted coach

“He’s got great feel, a sixth sense. Like radar, he knows you’re going to be there.”-undrafted coach

“I I don’t know if there is a player stronger on his skates than Pavel.”-teammate Niklas Lidstrom

The Toronto St.Pats are happy to select, a wonderful two-way forward and playmaker...


PAVEL DATSYUK!

Awards and Achievements
2 x Stanley Cup Champion (2002, 2008)
3 x Stanley Cup Fianlist (2002, 2008, 2009)
2 x Selke Trophy Winner (2008, 2009)
1 x Second Team All-Star centre (2009)
4 x Lady Byng Trophy Winner (2006, 2007, 2008, 2009)

Hart voting - 9th(2008), 3rd(2009)

All-Star voting - 9th(2004), 4th(2006), 7th(2007), 3rd(2008), 2nd(2009)

2008, his all-star votes were split at C and LW, as he was 6th for LW too!

Top 20s
Assists: 9th (2006), 8th(2007), 2nd(2008), 5th(2009)

Points: 17th(2006), 15th(2007),4th(2008), 4th(2009)

Playoff Goals- 3rd(2007), 4th(2008)

Playoff Assists-6th(2008)

Playoff Points- 6th(2007), 4th(2008)

Biography
Datsyuk would get a big taste of success right at the start of his NHL career. After a very solid rookie season, Datsyuk would get to hoist the cup. His success would continue the next year, playing alongside Brett Hull, and also continuing to develop under mentorship of Larianov and Hull. He would easily top his rookie season margins, and continue to improve his play up to the lockout, showcasing himself as a rising young star.

After the lockout, Datsyuk would truly light it up, setting career highs in assists and points and emerging as the Wings offensive leader. His numbers would continue to improve, and by the 2008 season he truly became an elite two-way player, helping the Wings to a cup victory as well as winning the selke trophy and setting career highs in scoring. He would put up a similar performance the next season, but the Wings could not beat the young, upcoming Penguins in the 2009 final. Despite that setback, Datsyuk looks to have a great future ahead of him in which he will likely accomplish much more.
 
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TheDevilMadeMe

Registered User
Aug 28, 2006
52,271
6,981
Brooklyn
Alfred Pierre "Pit" Lepine, C

Lepine_Pit_01.jpg


legendsofhockey said:
He was an excellent goal scorer who could also check and battle for the puck in the corners.

-Stanley Cups in 1931, 32

-Awarded 3 Retro Selkes (1931, 32, 34)

- Was considered the Best ‘’Shadow’’ of the 1930’s by Ultimate Hockey

- Frank Finnigan rated Lepine as one of the greatest defensive forward of all-time.

- Holds Montreal Canadiens team record for most goals (4) and most points (5) in one period

- In 1929, he recorded 5 goals in the same game

-Despite spending most of his career stuck behind Howie Morenz (in an era where top line players got the vast majority of the scoring opportunities), Lepine managed:

-6 10 goal seasons
-4 15 goal seasons
-3 times Top 10 in goal scoring

Durabillity: only missed 2 games from 1928-1935

Canadiens official website said:
Tall and lean, the 5-foot-11 center was a shifty, fluid skater and adept stickhandler - a scoring threat whenever he had the puck.

Playing in the shadow of the NHL’s feature attraction and Montreal’s top center, Howie Morenz, Lépine didn’t see the ice time he might have with another team. Nonetheless, he soldiered on without complaint, making the most of the time he got in the spotlight.


Joe Pelletier said:
Pit Lepine was a tall and rangy player who broke in with the Montreal Canadiens 1925 and played his whole 13 year career with the Habitants.
...
Lepine was a very competent center who, in addition to his playmaking ability, was very adept with a sweeping poke-check. However, he was destined to play for many years under the shadow of the great Howie Morenz who centered the first line.
...
He was very prominent when the Montreal Canadiens won the Stanley Cup the next two years, playing with ***** and ******** but frequently relieving Morenz on the first line.

When Morenz was traded to Chicago, Pit became the center for Aurel Joliat and ******** and led the team in scoring points in 1934-35.

Ultimate Hockey said:
This tall, gangly veteran of the montreal city Senior Hockey League jioned the Montreal Canadiens in 1925-26[...]Early on, sportwritters were comparing his style to that of former Ottawa Senators great Frank Nighbor.

A honey-smooth skater and playmaker, Lepine was the head-coach's go-to guy when it came to shadowing or penalty-killing.

As it often the case when a good player play behind a great player, Lepine was overshadowed (by Morenz)

Frank J Selke said:
Lepine brought to the game a polish seldom seen before. On any other team Pit would have been a blazing meteor, but he was doomed to play all his hockey in the shadow of the truculent Morenz, who at the time, was the fiercest competitor in all of hockey.

Baz O'Meara said:
Wonderful player, smooth, gifted with a great shot. His superb all-around abilities wooed Canadiens fans almost from the first moment he stepped on the ice. A marvelous two-way pokecheck ... the embodiment of grace on the ice, a man whose skill and dexterity only became tremendously apparent after Morenz had left

(Thanks to EB's ATD 10 profile for much of the above info)
 
Last edited:

Nighthawks

Registered User
Feb 5, 2010
157
0
CT
New Haven Nighthawks, Center, Edgar Laprade.
44-26978-F.jpg


Position: C
Shoots: Right
Height: 5-8
Weight: 160 lbs.
Born: October 10, 1919 in Port Arthur, Ontario

Awards and Achievements
Calder Memorial Trophy Winner (1946)
1-Time Lady Byng Trophy Winner (1950)

From Greatest Hockey Legends.com
Known as "Beaver" because of his hustle and work ethic on the ice, Laprade was known as a aggressive but very clean player. Twice he went the entire season without recording a single penalty minute, and only had 42 PIM in in his 500 NHL game career. He was also known as a play making center with great speed and athleticism. He was a tremendous defensive player as well, making him one of the greatest two way centers in NHL history. A strong back checker and prolific penalty killer, Laprade perfected the "poke check" as an effective strategy.

From Legends of Hockey.net
A tremendous playmaking center and smooth skater, Edgar Laprade was one of the NHL's best forwards during the late 1940s. Blessed with exceptional lateral mobility and an effortless skating style, he was a brilliant penalty killer and determined checker. Laprade could also score and was one of the league's most dangerous skaters on the counterattack. Unfortunately, many of his exploits took place when he played for a New York Rangers franchise that was in decline.

From Legends of Hockey.net
An outstanding playmaker, Edgar Laprade was the National Hockey League's premier checking centres during an era when defensive forwards were overshadowed by the exploits of the goal scorers.
 

TheDevilMadeMe

Registered User
Aug 28, 2006
52,271
6,981
Brooklyn
Dirk Graham, RW

dirk-graham-2.jpg


-Selke Winner in 1991
-3 Times Top 10 in Selke voting (1, 7, 7)

-Blackhawks record 10 shorthanded goals in 1989
-9th All-Time in career Shorthanded goals with 35

-7 straight seasons of 45+ points
-78 points in 88-89
-12 points in 18 playoff games in 1992

-Blackhawks captain from 1989-95.

-represented Canada in the 1991 Canada Cup (scored a SHG in the finals against the US)

In a 1993 poll of 21 NHL coaches, Graham received
-2 votes for “Best Defensive Forward”
-2 votes for “Best Penalty Killer”
-1 vote for “Toughest Player”

legendsofhockey said:
Forward Dirk Graham spent parts of a dozen NHL seasons with the Minnesota North Stars and Chicago Black Hawks in the 80s and 90s. He was a diligent checker, team leader and under-rated goal scoring threat.

He was an inspirational leader on and off the ice and was an exemplary worker on both specialty teams

Joe Pelletier said:
Meet Dirk Graham - Mr. Chicago Blackhawk.

Dirk Graham was a hard-hitting, defensive-minded forward in his eight years with the Blackhawks. His hustling aggressive style was very typical of the Hawks in those days. He was a tireless worker who did anything necessary to help Chicago win hockey games.

He was also pretty good with the puck.

But most importantly, he was a leader.

Joe Pelletier said:
Graham, who won the Selke Trophy as the league's best defensive forward in 1991, was a playoff warrior. In the 1990 playoffs he played with a frozen leg due to a cracked knee cap. In 90 career playoff games Graham potted 17 goals and 27 assists to go along with countless body checks and dogged determination.

Jeremy Roenick said:
Dirk Graham, I've said many times, is the captain of captains. He is a man that has gone through so much adversity, who has paid his dues well beyond anybody's expectations.

Blackhawks Teammate said:
"I think Dirk Graham is probably the most important player on our team, being the captain right now. He holds the group together. He's our captain. He's the guy the guys look up to. He's a quiet leader, but when he has something to say, the guys listen to him. He just goes out and plays hard. Night in and night out he does it.
 

DoMakc

Registered User
Jun 28, 2006
1,369
431

Edward Harris
HarrisTedPhiladelphiaRamblers102857sq200.jpg

Accomplishments:

5x Stanley Cup (1965-66, 1968-69, 1975)
NHL 2nd All-Star Team (1969)
Eddy Shore Award (AHL - Outstanding defenceman) (1964)

Quotes:

ourhistory.canadiens.com said:
Game in and game out, Harris’ physical game played an important role in the Canadiens success in the 1960s. He tangled with incoming forwards, kept the Montreal crease free of upright enemy players, applied some of the heaviest checks in the NHL and, on more than a few occasions, inflicted fistic retribution on those foolish enough to take liberties with his more subtly skilled teammates.

Joe Pelletier said:
Harris was an imposing defenseman at 6'2" and 183lbs, and he liked to use his size. He accumulated over 100 PIMs in 5 of his 8 minor league seasons. His feistiness resembled Shore's, but Eddie showed Harris how to become a stalwart defensive blue liner through perfect positioning.

"He (Shore) taught me how to play the man and the puck. I figure he made me more versatile," said Harris of his mentor
[...]
Though he was generally a role player who was happy to be in the shadows of more talented teammates, once in a while Harris took the center stage spotlight, almost always in terms of a fight. He quickly established a reputation as one of the top rumblers in the league, thanks to a heavyweight battle against Orland Kurtenbach of the Rangers early in the 1966-67 season.
[...]
Harris' experience and savvy would prove to be a big part of the Flyers repeat as Stanley Cup champs. For Harris it was his fifth Cup victory.
 

Nalyd Psycho

Registered User
Feb 27, 2002
24,415
15
No Bandwagon
Visit site
Fred Stanfield
stanfield.jpg

Top 20 Assists finishes:
4th (1972), 6th (1971), 7th (1968, 1973)
Top 20 Points finishes:
t-9th (1971),12th (1972) 15th (1968)


Harry Sinden said:
In one sense he is the key to our team. Orr and Espo are expected to be important key figures. However, we win many of our games on the work of our second line. Our second line is the best second line in the NHL. Most clubs put their checking line on our big Esposito line and hope they play evenly against the second line with their second line. They figure that their first line may outscore our third or checking trio, but they almost always under-rate Stanfield's muckers.
Stanfield, who had 4 brothers who all play professional hockey, had a reputation as a speedy playmaker, a fine faceoff man and a strong specialty teams player. He showed up to play every night, earning him the nickname Steady Freddy.
Source

In Boston, Stanfield joined XXXX XXXXXX and Johnny Bucyk to form what is often considered to have been the best second line in hockey from 1967 to 1972. Known as "Steady Freddie." Stanfield had a reputation as a player who showed up to play every night. His hard work, fine skating and face-off prowess endeared him to the Bruin fans and made an important contribution to the team's two Stanley Cup victories in 1970 and 1972.
Source
 

Hedberg

MLD Glue Guy
Jan 9, 2005
16,399
12
BC, Canada
C Mats Sundin, Multi-Sport Athlete:
sundin.jpg


VancouverCanucksvTorontoMapleLeafs0.jpg


1346 GP, 564 G, 785 A, 1349 Pts
1991 World Championship Gold Medalist
1991 Canada Cup All Star
1992 World Championship Gold Medalist
1996 World Cup All Star
1998 World Championship Gold Medalist
2002 Olympic All Star
2002 2nd Team All Star
2004 2nd Team All Star
2006 Olympic Gold Medalist
1997 - 2000 Toronto Maple Leafs Captain
Captain of Sweden at the 2006 Olympics

Legends of Hockey:
After winning the Swedish title with Djurgarden and competing successfully with Tre Kronor in the Bern World Championship, Sundin left for North America without further notice in the summer of 1990. At that point, he had become one of the all-time greats in Swedish hockey. Only two players besides Sundin have won three World Championships.

After being traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1994, the young Swede became a smashing success. In just one year he rose to stardom in a city well known for its taste for fine hockey and fighting spirit. He won the honor of being named the team's captain, the first foreign captain in the history of the Maple Leafs.

Since joining the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1994, Sundin has enjoyed a number of accomplishments while leading the club in scoring for each year except one. In 2002-03, he became the first Swedish born player to reach 1,000 points at the NHL level, and as of 2006-07 he has more career goals, assists and points than any other Swedish born NHL player.

In international compeition, Sundin is recognized as being one of the elite players in the hockey world. He has represented his homeland at 14 international competitions, has one Olympic gold medal, and won gold in three World Championships. Sundin has held the position of team captain for the national squad for the better part of the last decade.

Greatest Hockey Legends:
Sundin was a 2006 Olympic gold medallist, was the first European drafted first overall, and was the first Swede to score 1000 points. He was "a remarkably durable, highly skilled player" who played in 1346 games, scoring 564 goals and 1349 points.

Sittler and Sundin both bled Maple Leafs blue, captaining the team for long tenures and without much help. They were maligned to some degree, mostly unfairly, because of the lack of team success. Neither player won a Stanley Cup, or even a major individual trophy. Those outside of Toronto suggested that both were very good and very popular players, elevated to great players only because they were the face of the franchise in the most intense market in hockey.

mats-sundin-returns-to-toronto.jpg


RTEmagicC_Sundin_OL_1A1U0558jpg-1.jpg
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,154
7,284
Regina, SK
Bill White, D

white.jpg


- 6'2", 195 lbs
- Stanley Cup Finalist (1971, 1973)
- Summit Series Champion (1972)
- NHL 2nd All-Star Team (1972, 1973, 1974)
- Placed 3rd, 3rd, 3rd, 7th in Norris Voting
- Placed 3rd, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th, 7th, 9th in All-Star Voting
- Top-12 in Scoring By Defensemen 4 Times (4th, 5th, 10th, 12th)
- Top-10 in Playoff Scoring By Defensemen 6 Times (4th, 5th, 5th, 6th, 6th, 10th)
- Career adjusted +118
- Summit Series +/- Leader (1972, +8)
- NHL All-Star Game Participant (1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974)

loh.net said:
A relatively late bloomer, Bill White developed into one of the game's steadiest defensemen. Although he didn't play in the NHL until he was 28 years old, he enjoyed an exemplary 11-year career. While playing with the Chicago Black Hawks, he formed one of the top blue line tandems in the league with Pat Stapleton. He was an effective positional rearguard who didn't have to play rough to achieve his goals.

...Chicago tried to acquire the lanky defender (from Springfield) but, as was his style, Shore demanded too much in return. In the meantime, White's mental toughness and defensive game were strengthened as he played under one of the strictest coaches in the history of the game. In May 1967 White finally caught a break when his rights were acquired by the expansion Los Angeles Kings. White went on to demonstrate the benefit of increased roster space for NHL-caliber players.

White scored 38 points in 74 games as a "rookie" in 1967-68 and helped solidify the club's blue line. Many felt he outplayed Calder Trophy winner Derek Sanderson, but the fact that he was 28 years old may have played a role in his not winning the top rookie honors. He played one more full season on the West Coast and led all West Division backliners with 28 assists. Then his career changed forever when he was involved in a multi-player trade with Chicago in February 1970. The Hawks were in the midst of jumping from last to first in the standings in one season and were assembling a top-flight defensive unit to play ***** ****'s style of hockey.

It was in the Windy City with defense partner Pat Stapleton, that White found his niche as a pro. Playing superb defense and making smart offensive plays when called upon, White helped the Black Hawks reach the Stanley Cup finals in 1971 and 1973 and was placed on the NHL Second All-Star Team for three straight years from 1972 to 1974.

A high point in his career came when he played seven of the eight games for Canada in the 1972 Summit Series versus the USSR. White's only goal of the series was a crucial one that tied the score 3-3 in the second period of the eighth and deciding match. It was his textbook defense and ability to thwart opposition attacks without ending up in the penalty box that made White such an important member of the blue line corps.

White remained a pillar on the Chicago defense after his long-time partner Stapleton joined the WHA in 1973. White's career was ended by an injury he suffered during the 1976 quarterfinals versus the Montreal Canadiens. While chasing a puck in the corner, Habs forwards Doug Jarvis and Bob Gainey converged on him, causing White to fall awkwardly into the boards. He was diagnosed with an injury to the cervical nerves route and wasn't able to gain full use of his right arm for months.

Joe Pelletier said:
Bill White's road to stardom was long, although it wasn't until after the famous Summit Series in 1972 against the Russians that he got the recognition among the fans that he deserved as arguably the league's best defensive defenseman.

White was selected by Canada's coach to bolster the defense and Bill proved to be the calm and collected defenseman needed in such a series. Bill White was an outstanding defenseman with Team Canada 1972, contributing 1 goal and 1 assist in seven games played. Not exactly a flashy player, White's inclusion on the team may have surprised casual hockey fans, but certainly not his teammates.

White of course counts game eight as his favorite memory of the series - Henderson's goal and the celebrations. But don't forget the Canadians had to kill off the final 34 seconds of the game following Henderson's goal - 34 seconds which felt like an eternity.

Who was put out on the ice to help kill off the final seconds? Bill White. In fact it was White who relieved the pressure the Soviets were applying late in the game when he flipped the puck high down the ice. White's clearing attempt was perfect, as it was not far enough for icing. That effectively killed off the rest of the game.

The Russians constantly praised White for his steady and classy play.

...Eddie Shore was every hockey player's nightmare and Bill's situation wasn't any different. Although Bill was clearly good enough for the NHL, Shore denied him the opportunity to play in the NHL. Several teams showed their interest in Bill but quickly changed their minds when Shore told them what he wanted in return.

...White made his NHL debut for Los Angeles as a 28-year old. He played a steady, cautious game with few errors, relying on his lengthy reach and surprisingly mobile skating ability. He was the kind of defensemen most fans and media won't notice during a game, but his coach and teammates appreciate.

A contract dispute lead to strained relations with the Kings, and ultimately a trade to Chicago. At the time of his arrival, Chicago's anchor on defense Pat Stapleton was injured. Bill filled that spot more than adequately and the duo became a vital cog for the Chicago defense for years.

Coach ***** **** was especially thankful to have White on his blue line.

"He's not spectacular, but he does a solid, workman-like job. He doesn't make too many mistakes. He's not going to dazzle anyone, but he's just the steady, dependable sort of defenseman we need."

Bill's steady but unspectacular play saw him appear in six straight All-Star games between 1969-74. He was also a 2nd team All-Star for three consecutive seasons between 1972-74. He helped the Hawks reach the Stanley Cup finals in 1971 and 1973, though they came up short both times.

Although White was robbed of many good years in the NHL he managed to play in 604 regular season games and 91 playoff games until he retired after the 1975-76 season.

Kings Of the Ice said:
An editorial in The Hockey News said, "He isn't a heavy hitter, but he locks up attackers in his long arms, reaches out and lifts the puck from them and clears it by skating out with strong, sure strokes or by laying a perfect pass on a teammate's stick"... After the Summit Series, one of the Soviet coaches praised the effort of "that bald fellow" on defense. White's strong play didn't go undetected, as he won honours as Canada's co-player of the game for Canada following the seventh game... After Stapleton left, he often teamed effectively with **** *******, who said playing with White was "like going to school for defensemen".

Fischler's Hockey Encyclopedia said:
Living with Shore would either teach a player one hell of a lot about hockey, or turn him into a basket case. In White's case, he became a damn good defenseman. He's long and tall and does his job without fanfare. He can lug the puck out with great speed and elan, but his forte is behind the blue line.

Hockey Chicago Style said:
Bill White was often described as the league's best defensive defenseman during his career, possessing defensive skills that were nearly flawless. While on the ice, he emphasized keeping things in order in the Hawks end and feeding accurate passes to the forwards... The fact that he wasn't a great goal-scoring defenseman wasn't because he didn't have the ability to be one. Rather, it was because of the strict defensive system that the coach emphasized... "We tried to get him out of Springfield several times", explained Tommy Ivan...

Hockey All-Stars said:
He notched a career-high 11 goals as a rookie and always moved the puck well to his forwards, but White's primary contribution was on defense. "He's darn hard to get around because of his height and reach. He is a good, sound player who takes his man into the boards but doesn't get you into trouble with stupid penalties.", said his coach.

NHL 75th Anniversary Commemorative Book said:
White played the finest hockey of his career in the Summit Series

Chicago Blackhawks: Seventy-Five Years said:
A superlative defenseman...not flashy but consistently efficient. He fit the Blackhawks' scheme like a glove, and his steadying influence was the perfect match for the team's exuberant spirit... Often described as the league's best defenseman during his career.

Golly Gee said:
(in game 6 of the Summit Series) big Bill White mugged everybody within reach, and he could reach a country mile...

Hockey Showdown said:
Bill White was the same way, no big advance notices, just a solid, stand up defenseman who played as well at his position as anyone we had.

The Thinking Man's Guide To Pro Hockey said:
...as opposed to a ******* or White, who could protect their goalies by poking the puck away from opponents, and knew how to maneuver them into the boards...

The Big M said:
I never liked Bill White (prior to the summit series)... Bill White always played a steady game. He was an all-star and played exceptionally well... Our defense corps in '74 wasn't as good at the 1972 team because that team had Serge Savard, Guy Lapointe, Bill White - that group of guys knew how to play.

None Against! said:
Our own Billy White, for example, masters the corners by stealing the puck right off an opponent's stick.... an easygoing, gentle sort of guy who psyches himself up for games just like a rookie. Bill can suddenly turn not so gentle if he's pushed.

Cold War: The Amazing Canada-Soviet Hockey Series Of 1972 said:
Bill White remembers feeling honoured to be asked to play on Team Canada, but also feeling he has a duty to do it, "lke going and being on jury duty. You can't turn it down."... inserted into the lineup for game 2, Stapleton and White were so effective that they played the rest of the series... Both Savard and White are tall and have long arms; reach will make a difference in checking the Soviet forwards, who often move too fast, or pass too elusively, to bodycheck... (in the closing seconds of game 7) Bill White and Pat Stapleton threw their bodies all over the ice to block Soviet shots in the closing seconds...

Home Game said:
Bill White, tall, lean, and cobra-bent, was already in 1972 a veteran... Eschewing the power game, he played with great finesse, using his long arms and stick to break up plays, sending his teammates into open ice with clever, penetrating passes.

...Last Minute Of Play said:
On the ice he looked much taller than he actually was... In action, White was a mixed bag of contradictions. His compact skating style was a cross between stride and glide that was fluid but never appeared to move his large frame quickly enough, although he was always there, in the road, blocking the way. He used his skates well, smothering loose pucks in the corner, and had unusually large, beefy hands at the end of a reach bordering on illegal. He was inordinately strong and was workmanlike in the corners and in front of the net, where he could wrestle with the biggest centres or drape himself all over the small ones like a construction scaffold. He was a deft passer and had no problem jumping into the rush. At his best weight, 200 pounds, he was spread sparsely over a lean frame, but he packed a punishing check when the opportunity merited, and with his reach, size, and skating style, he seemed to be in several places at once. Understandably he was a coach's dream, and in the realm of defensemen he was simply an outstanding example of how to play the game most efficiently and effectively.

The Game I'll Never Forget: Pat Stapleton said:
What happened was that the ligaments in my knee were torn. It took a long time to get over that, maybe until midseason of 1970-71. Luckily, I was playing with Bill White as my defensive partner and maybe he carried me a little bit.

Globe and Mail said:
Leafs are seeking to bolster their rookie defense, one reason Gregory is interested in Bill White of Los Angeles... "I'd have to be out of my mind if I didn't want White," Gregory said... White, 30, is considered one of two or three good defensemen in the expansion division... Los Angeles coach Hal Laycoe said: "White's a big part of his team. He doesn't put people in the building like Bobby Hull, but in a modest way he's our Hull."

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1972 said:
Was always rated one of the best defensemen in the minor leagues... one of the tallest defensemen in the league and one of the best puckhandlers too...

None Against! said:
In addition to his modesty is his remarkable ability to psyche up for games just as if he were a rookie. Seeing such great desire in a 33-year old pro is a true inspiration. And Bill's rock-solid teperament has a Gilbraltarlike infulence on the Black Hawks today... picture me and Bill bent way over in our stalls - concentrating like mad before the start of a big game. "Maggy", he murmurs, giving me a nudge of reassurance, "winning's the only way." This has now become one of my favourite expressions.

Sports Illustrated said:
White's defensive mistakes over a season can be counted on the fingers of Goal-tender Tony Esposito's left hand

Poll of NHL correspondents from The World Almanac Guide To Pro Hockey 1974-75 said:
BEST DEFENSIVE DEFENSEMEN:

1. Bill White 51 pts
2. undrafted 10 pts
3. Bobby Orr 9 pts
4. Borje Salming 8 pts
5. undrafted 6 pts
6. Terry Harper 5 pts

SMARTEST PLAYER:

Bill White was 7th with one first-place vote. Orr, Mikita, Clarke, Keon, Richard, Esposito and Westfall placed higher.

Note that in the "best defensive defenseman" poll, White had more voting points than the next five players combined.

NHL Coaches; Polls said:
BILL WHITE

Best defensive defenseman | 1st | 1974
Best defensive defenseman | 2nd | 1976

FUN FACTS:

Most times top-10 in All-Star voting, defensemen, 1968-1975:

Bobby Orr | 8
Bill White | 7
Brad Park | 6
J.C. Tremblay | 4
Jim Neilson | 4
Pat Stapleton | 3
Guy Lapointe | 3
Jacques Laperriere | 3
(undrafted) | 3
(undrafted) | 3
Ted Green | 2
Serge Savard | 2
Tim Horton | 2
Ted Harris | 2
Denis Potvin | 2
Borje Salming | 2
(5 undrafted) | 2

Highest career adjusted +/- per game, defensemen, 1968-2009

ORR, BOBBY | 0.88
HOWE, MARK | 0.40
BOURQUE, RAY | 0.35
SALMING, BORJE | 0.31
ROBINSON, LARRY | 0.26
MacINNIS, AL | 0.24
(undrafted) | 0.23
(undrafted) | 0.23
POTVIN, DENIS | 0.23
RAFALSKI, BRIAN | 0.23
(undrafted) | 0.21
(undrafted) | 0.21
WHITE, BILL | 0.20
PARK, BRAD | 0.20
PRONGER, CHRIS | 0.20
LIDSTROM, NICKLAS | 0.20
McCRIMMON, BRAD | 0.19
GONCHAR, SERGEI | 0.18
(undrafted) | 0.18
(undrafted) | 0.18

Highest Percentage of Team's PPGA on-ice for, career, post-expansion, defensemen:
WHITE, BILL | 604 | 65%
ORR, BOBBY | 596 | 63%
CHELIOS, CHRIS | 1616 | 58%
BOURQUE, RAY | 1612 | 58%
SAVARD, SERGE | 1038 | 58%
HAJT, BILL | 854 | 57%
BECK, BARRY | 615 | 57%
STEVENS, SCOTT | 1635 | 56%
HATCHER, DERIAN | 1045 | 56%
SCHOENFELD, JIM | 719 | 56%


NHL Penalty Killing Stats, 1971-1976 (White's Time With Chicago)

Team | PPGA | PPOA | PK%
Philadelphia | 377 | 2357 | 84.01
Chicago | 274 | 1612 | 83.00
Boston | 310 | 1820 | 82.97
Montreal | 276 | 1620 | 82.96
Buffalo | 296 | 1691 | 82.50
NY Rangers | 291 | 1596 | 81.77
Los Angeles | 285 | 1537 | 81.46
Atlanta | 193 | 1036 | 81.37
NY Islanders | 236 | 1240 | 80.97
Detroit | 355 | 1805 | 80.33
Pittsburgh | 330 | 1647 | 79.96
St. Louis | 396 | 1855 | 78.65
Toronto | 359 | 1679 | 78.62
California | 334 | 1505 | 77.81
Minnesota | 377 | 1676 | 77.51
Vancouver | 412 | 1734 | 76.24
Kansas City | 133 | 528 | 74.81
Washington | 158 | 580 | 72.76

Chicago was killing penalties better than even Ramsay's Sabres, Orr's Bruins, and Gainey's mighty Habs. Only the Parent-led Flyers were better during this time.

In the 1977 season, Chicago's first without White, their PK% dropped to 78.01%, 13th out of 18 teams. This represents a 29% increase in goals against per opportunity.

The LA Kings took a bit of a tumble after trading White, too. In their two full seasons with White, they killed 79.73% of their penalties. In the two full seasons after, it was 76.43%. This was a 16% increase in goals against per opportunity.

Chicago Blackhawks Top-12 Penalty Killers, 1971-1976

Name | GP | PPGA | PPGA/GP
Bill White | 394 | 151 | 0.38
(undrafted) | 207 | 58 | 0.28
Pat Stapleton | 229 | 59 | 0.26
(undrafted) | 380 | 94 | 0.25
(undrafted) | 324 | 71 | 0.22
(undrafted) | 305 | 61 | 0.20
(undrafted) | 261 | 50 | 0.19
(undrafted) | 446 | 81 | 0.18
Stan Mikita | 408 | 64 | 0.16
(undrafted) | 302 | 44 | 0.15
(undrafted) | 347 | 47 | 0.14
(undrafted) | 463 | 40 | 0.09

Bill White was by far the most important member of the NHL's 2nd-best penalty kill. During his 6 full seasons in Chicago, he was on the ice for 60% more PPGA than any other player, and had twice as many as all but two players. His per-game average was double all but five players, and only Stapleton and someone else had even 2/3 as many PPGA/GP as White.
 
Last edited:

DoMakc

Registered User
Jun 28, 2006
1,369
431
Stefan Persson
0b0b1f0afb.jpg


Accomplishments:

4x Stanley Cup (1980-83)
Top 5 in D Scoring (1979 (4))
3x Top 3 Power Play Goals On-Ice For (1978(2); 1979(1), 1981(1))
3x Top 10 in Power Play Scoring (1978(6), 1979(6), 1981(4))
2x Top 11 in Playoffs Assists (1980 (11), 1982 (4))

Quotes:

Wikipedia said:
Persson's responsible, defensive style was endorsed highly by the Islanders head coach, Al Arbour, and Persson's career in the NHL started swiftly. Persson also showed an adept passing ability and an occasional scoring touch. This was no more apparent than during the Islanders first Stanley Cup playoff run in Game 1 of the 1980 Finals against the Philadelphia Flyers. It was late in the third period, when Persson scored the game-tying goal to force a sudden-death overtime that the Islanders would win. Outdoing his regular season output of four goals, Persson scored five goals in the 1980 playoffs, and had serious consideration to become the first Swede to capture the Conn Smythe Trophy, which is awarded for MVP of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Trottier(the HFBoards user) said:
A quality dman, who would be a 1st pairing guy on many teams, both back in his day and today. Very smart, cerebral player. In many ways, a poor man's Lidstrom. Teppo Numminen is an even better comparison. More physical than Lidstrom, but not as skilled in all other areas. (His d partner was Dave Langevin who was a very physical player.)

Really solid in all apsects of the game, but I'd say his best skills were his passing and positioning, which is why he was on the PP, opposite Denis Potvin.

Just an incredibly reliable player. You knew what you were getting nightly.

Darth Milbury said:
Persson wasn't really a defensive dman. He was an elite playmaker on the point. In fact, in his rookie year, he set an NHL record for assists by a rookie dman. He was used on the first unit of the Isles's lethal first powerplay unit. The Isles also sent him out in virtually every critical offensive situation. His playmaking was critical to the success of the Isles offense.

I used to be frustrated by his refusal to shoot. Because, if he got some room to wind up, his shot was absolutely impossible to stop.

Persson was not much of a physical player. He was sort of tall and weedy and got out muscled in front of the net. But, he was very strong defensively. At the end of his career, as his offensive skills began to fade, he still make very important contributions to the team.
 
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EagleBelfour

Registered User
Jun 7, 2005
7,467
62
ehsl.proboards32.com
With our 14th selection, the 435th overall in this year All-Time Draft, the Detroit Falcons are extremely please to select C/LW Fleming David Mackell

000095961.jpg


Nickname: Mac
Height: 5'7''
Weight: 156 lbs
Position: Center, Left Winger, Right Winger
Shoots: Left
Date of Birth: April 30, 1929
Place of Birth: Montreal , Quebec, Canada

Stanley Cup Champion (1949, 1951)
Stanley Cup Finalist (1953, 1957, 1958)
NHL First All-Star Team (1953)
Played in NHL All-Star Game (1947, 1948, 1949, 1954)

Top-10 Scoring (7th, 8th, 10th)
Top-10 Goalscoring (5th)
Top-10 Assist (5th, 8th)
*0.55 Point per game in the regular season*
Top-10 Playoff Scoring (1st, 3rd, 6th, 7th, 8th)
Top-10 Playoff Goalscoring (4th, 5th, 10th, 10th)
Top-10 Playoff Assist (1st, 1st, 6th, 6th, 7th, 10th)
*0.79 Point per game in the playoffs*

Hart Nomination (9th)

- Fleming Mackell is the son of Jack, won won the Stanley Cup with the Ottawa Senators in 1920 and 1921. Fleming is also the father of Joanne Mackell, a singer-songwriter
- He won the Memorial Cup in 1947 and registered the most point in the tournament
- In the summer 1947, Mackell 3-month son died
- Mackell lost all his teeth to hockey before turning pro with the Maple Leafs
- At 18, Mackell was the youngest player on the ice at the first-ever NHL All-Star game, on October 13th, 1947
- He was traded to Boston by Toronto for Jim Morrison, on January 9th, 1952
- Mackell won the Dufresne Trophy in 1953, awarded annually to the outstanding Bruins player
- He coached one game in the QJMHL with the 1974-1975 Cornwall Royals

Ultimate Hockey said:
He was a tough, chippy little center. Like a lot of small players, Mackell was a maddening guy to play against. He was a tricky center who would dart from point to point on the ice. He had superb acceleration, was a nifty stick-handler, and had a star quality shot. And the boy had heart.

Peak years 1953-57
Comparable Recent Player Theoren Fleury
In a Word ROOSTER

Who's Who In Hockey said:
One of the speediest skaters ever to grace the National Hockey League.

Trail of the Stanley Cup said:
Mackell was a tough little centre.

He had a good year in 1957, playing with Toppazzini and and Regan, and was outstanding in the final series of the playoffs against Canadiens. The following year he was again brilliant, playing with Toppazzinin and McKenney, and let the point scorers in the playoffs.

Boston finished second in 1959 and the line of Mackell, Toppazzini and McKenney was equal with the 'Uke' trio in goal production.


1957 Playoffs Stanley Cup Finals:
Game 4: XXX XXXXXXX and Fleming Mackell were again the stars in the second game at Boston

1958 Playoffs Semi-Final
Game 6: The Toppazzini, Mackell and McKenney line was the best
1959 Stanley Cup Final
Game 4: Boston again evened the series winning the fourth game 3-1 on the brilliant play of Mackell, Toppazzini and McKenney line

1959-60 Topps #19 Fleming Mackell said:

1957-58 Topps #16 Fleming Mackell said:

1954-55 Parkhurst #50 Fleming Mackell said:

Truro Daily News said:
Interestingly, in checking closely we find that when comparing Fleming MacKell's playoff scoring statistics with players of his era who have been inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame he has outscored a number of them.

New York Times; April 15th 1957 said:
Fleming Mackell was the hero as an inspired Boston Bruins' hockey team remained alive in the fourout-of-seven Stanley Cup final play-off series by blanking the Montreal Canadiens, 2 to 0, at the Boston Garden tonight.

Globe and Mail; October 11th said:
Not so, however, fighting little Fleming Mackell. The hard-working ex-St.Michael's star accounted for two of the Toronto goals and helped set up the plays for the two of his pivot man, Max Bentley.
As has been the case in the last three exibition games, the new line of Bentley and a couple of rookies, Mackell and Les Costello, has carried most of the Leafs' scoring mall.

Globe and Mail; April 9th said:
So effective was the work of the quick-skating Max Bentley, Joe Klukay and Fleming Mackell that they accounted for three of the Toronto goals, more than enough to move the Leafs into a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven semi-final playoff series.

Globe and Mail; April 2nd said:
Fleming Mackell's sizzling 15-footer, fired with less than six minutes to go, tonight enabled Boston Bruins to square their best-of-seven, National Hockey League semi-final playoff series with Mnotreal Canadiens.

Globe and Mail; February 27th said:
Fleming Mackell checked as though he were waging a personal vendetta with every Leaf on the ice. Mackell and strong-checking Gerry Toppazzini were especially effective in frustrating Leafs' alleged power play.
Leafs succesfully blanked Bruins' main line of XXX XXXXXX, XXXX XXXXXXXXXX and Don McKenney but they were hardly prepared for the offensive of XXXXXXX, Mackell and XXXXXXX, three centerman playing on one line.
Mackell had performed adagin-like feats to keep the puck in the Leaf end.

Globe and Mail; December 16th said:
Mackell, skating as if his pants were on fire, tied the score in the second period. He dodged XXX XXXXXXX at the Leaf blue line, flew around XXX XXXXXXXX and beat Chadwick with a hard, high back-hander.

Globe and Mail; April 18th said:
Mackell, Toppazzini and Don McKenney played vigorous, two-way hockey for the Bruins.

Globe and Mail; February 20th said:
Fleming Mackell scored Montreal's first two goals with a performance that should have some NHL expansion team knocking on his door.

Sport Illustrated; April 22nd said:
Montreal, out to sweep Stanley Cup final in four straight after outscoring Boston 1-0, 4-2 for 3-0 lead, ran smack-dab into red-hot Fleming Mackell and Goalie Don Simmons, who lifted Bruins to 2-0 victory at Boston, sending series into fifth game.

- ''There was a lot of intimidation if you weren't big. If you weren't a rough, tough player, you could never show that you didn't like the rough stuff or they would run you out of the league.'' - Fleming Mackell

- ''I was about six years old and at that time, he was past his goal-scoring heights but was still an effective penalty killer." - Robbie Ftorek on Fleming Mackell

- ''I only had dreams of playing in the league. Winning the Cup was a plus.'' - Fleming Mackell on winning his first Stanley Cup


Sites:
http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SearchPlayer.jsp?player=13469
http://www.sihrhockey.org/member_player_sheet.cfm?player_id=2227&CFID=1956941&CFTOKEN=32966801
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleming_Mackell
http://www.trurodaily.com/Hockey/20...ckey-Hall-of-Fame-candidate-Fleming-MacKell/1
http://www.hhof.com/html/exSCJ05_26.shtml
http://www.canoe.ca/NHLAllStar2000/feb6_old.html
http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Hockey/NHL/2005/08/27/1190604-sun.html
http://www.albanyriverrats.com/news/latest/index.html?article_id=718
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,154
7,284
Regina, SK
With the 245th pick in ATD2010, The Regina Pats are pleased to select:

Dean Prentice, LW

54%20Dean%20Prentice%20-%20Front.jpg


- 5'11", 180 lbs
- Stanley Cup Finalist (1966)
- Memorial Cup (1952)
- NHL 2nd All-Star Team (1960)
- Top-20 in Goals 8 Times (4th, 8th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 17th, 18th)
- Top-20 in Assists 6 Times (8th, 13th, 14th, 14th, 15th, 15th)
- Top-20 in Points 7 Times (10th, 12th, 18th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 20th)
- 2nd in Playoff Goals, 5th, in Assists, 4th in Points (1966)
- NHL All-Star Game Participant (1957, 1961, 1963, 1970, was named to the 1960 game but did not play)

loh.net said:
...Prentice eventually settled onto a line with Andy Bathgate and ***** ******. The trio became the Rangers' most successful unit. Prentice became the two-way standout who excelled at backchecking, killing penalties, working the corners and jumping onto the powerplay. But his quiet, unassuming personality took a back seat to the more colourful Bathgate who was the dipsy-doodler and scorer among the trio. As such, Prentice has been characterized as the most underrated forward of his era.

In his eleventh season with the Rangers, he was traded to the Boston Bruins for Don McKenney in 1963. Prentice was not unhappy to join the Bruins, but he did feel a twinge of regret when, shortly thereafter, McKenney and Bathgate were traded to the Leafs, a lineup he'd wanted to join.

In 1966, Prentice was traded to the Detroit Red Wings where he continued to skate with the league's elite, this time with Alex Delvecchio and Gordie Howe. He also picked up shifts with his old Ranger teammate Andy Bathgate who had also joined the Wings.

Two seasons later, however, Bathgate had moved on to the Pittsburgh Penguins. And in keeping with the program, Pens coach Red Kelly claimed Prentice in the Intra-League Draft to skate along side Bathgate. Prentice clicked in his new setting, leading the team in scoring. He lasted with the Pens until 1971 at which time he was sold to the Minnesota North Stars where he continued to score even at the age of 40.

By 1974, however, at age 41, Prentice finally closed out his 22-year NHL career.

New York Rangers Greatest Moments and Players said:
He's not in the Hockey Hall Of Fame, but many believe that Dean Prentice is a worthy candidate for the shrine. Certainly those who played alongside the left wing would attest to that... Indefatigable, Prentice was known as "Deano the Dynamo" for his tenacious checking and excellent speed. He was as good a two-way forward as the Rangers owned in that era... always one of the best and most reliable Ranger forwards... Prentice's first two years were statistically unimpressive, but the left winger's hard work at both ends of the ice soon paid off... When he was not out on the offensive prowl, Dean found himself playing strong defense - he was even placed as a forward among defensemen when the Blueshirts were playing with a five-on-three disadvantage... A fearless skater, Prentice even played the immortal Gordie Howe so thoroughly that a frustrated Gordie threatened to knock out his teeth... Prentice played the game as it should be played. He wasn't afraid to go into the corners and dig the puck out; he could skate, stickhandle, pass, and shoot. Though Dean may have lacked size, he was always the consummate team player, displaying both grit and determination.

The Trail Of the Stanley Cup said:
Dean Prentice was a strong and aggressive left wing... not a spectacular player, but a solid performer who could be relied on for consistent play. He was a good checker and not intimidated by the "hard rocks" in the league.

Fischler's Hockey Encyclopedia said:
One of the most underrated skaters in NHL history

Heroes: Stars Of Hockey's Golden Era said:
A good skater, although underrated by many... "I did a lot of work and had a lot of dedication to perfect those skills", he says. "I was blessed to stay that long."

The Man They Call... Mr. Goalie said:
Solid wing forward...

The NHL All-Star Game said:
But it was Dean Prentice who stole the show with his determined play. (in the 1957 ASG) He was in on three of the all-stars; setting up the one that led to a tie and scoring the insurance marker on a blistering shot to the top corner.

Hockey All-Stars said:
Although he picked up injuries along the way, Weekend Magazine writer Andy O'Brien noted that Prentice "would bust through a brick wall if he thought it would help him score." Prentice made the 2nd all-star team in 1960. "They once called him punchy and puck-happy," wrote Stan Fischler late that season. "Now they respect him."... When Prentice retired in 1974, only three other players had enjoyed longer NHL careers.

Matt Dibiase on the Hockey History Yahoo Group said:
Both Harry Howell and Andy Bathgate pointedly made a case for Dean Prentice to be inducted into the HHOF.

The New York Rangers: Broadway's Longest Running Hit said:
Prentice Was a Smart Hockey Player who knew what it took to stay in the NHL... became a reliable checking forward and penalty killer... Prentice averaged 18 goals a season, but he was most noted for his defensive play, and that, along with his excellent penalty killing capabilities, is what kept him employed in the NHL for such a long time.

100 Ranger Greats said:
In his typically modest and soft-spoken way, Dean Prentice almost blushes at the mere suggestion, which he hears on a somewhat regular basis. "Dean Prentice," his boosters clam, "is simply the best player not in the Hockey Hall Of Fame."... A sturdy left wing, Prentice was known for his robust bodychecks and his hard shot... Prentice was charged with keeping Bathgate's cannon loaded, providing the ammunition for Andy to become one of the game's best right wings... Durability was a Prentice Trademark, Particularly during his Ranger years.

The Rangers said:
When I was in Boston I was with ******** and Prentice and we played against Beliveau's line or Mikita's line or Delvecchio's line.

Prentice is a better skater and more aggressive than Gaye Stewart:

New York Daily News said:
It's hard to believe any big league team would pay $7500 for a Ranger castoff, but that's what happened when the last place locals yesteray decided not to withdraw veteran LW Gaye Stewart from the waiver list after the Canadiens had claimed him the night before.

No tears have been shed over Gaye's goodbye, because Dean prentice, the 20-year old rookie who beat him out of a regular job, leaves the injured list tonight in time to face the Bruins here tonight.

Prentice missed last Sunday's game because of a wrenched knee, but he had scored three goals in his last six games, so the punch-seeking Rangers will welcome him back tonight. He's more aggressive than the 29-year old Stewart and can skate faster - an important asset with the Rangers, who so often allow the enemy to fast-break against them.

Globe and Mail said:
****** calls Dean prentice one of the most valuable players on the team. The Dean has not only scored 10 goals, but he is also a gifted penalty killer.

Globe and Mail said:
****** will place ***** ****** on right wing, with **** ********* and Dean prentice. They'll be assigned the chore of handling the Beliveau Line.

Globe and Mail said:
Rangers supporters were greatly disturbed yesterday to learn that Dean Prentice, one of the most industrious left wingers in the NHL, will not play with the New Yorkers tonight... Prentice has been one of the Rangers' most consistent players for the past two seasons, while doing a variety of jobs. There are few better checkers, he is a fairly high scorer and he does a commendable job of killing penalties. He is the kind of player you miss most when you don't have him on the bench for emergency chores.

Globe and Mail said:
Out of it all the most industrious player was that honest workman, Dean prentice. He scored the all-stars' clinching goal, assisted on two others and played a robust checking game throughout.

Globe and Mail said:
Prentice, a hard-skating, strong-checking left winger...

Prentice's coach said that he looked even better in games that he didn't score than when he did:

Globe and Mail said:
Dean Prentice, Rangers' hard-skating left winger, has been playing terrific hockey, according to ****. "Funny thing about prentice, he scored two goals in Montreal and was picked as a star. I didn't think he had played as well as he had in other games."

Glowing praise from a man who was years ahead of his time:

Lloyd Percival in Montreal Gazette said:
Dean Prentice of the New York Rangers, who became a top star last season when he scored 32 goals and a total of 66 points to finish in the top ten scorers, is a smooth, smart player who takes care of his left wing spot as if he had been born there. There is much a young player can learn from Prentice but perhaps the key lesson is the way he gets free to take a pass and flash in on a goal scoring threat. Watching Prentice I am constantly reminded of a great pass catching end in football who runs his patterns so well that he is nearly always able to take a pass regardless of the defensive check on him. If you watch the average game of hockey you will notice that most plays made to an open wing are possible because some defensive player lagged or was caught out of the play. It was not because the wing had worked to get free. Prentice is always working, constantly alert for any chance to get free, and is never content, as so many players are, to submit to a close cover. The Ranger star builds his scoring chances, he doesn't wait for them to happen.

Not bad company to be mentioned with:

Globe and Mail said:
Five NHL scouts scoured the area recently. They didn't expect to find another Frank Mahovlich. They'd have been overjoyed to find an Allan Stanley or a Dean Prentice...

What's a forward doing making the save on an empty net?

Globe and Mail said:
Howe scored Detroit's 2nd and 3rd goals and just missed a hat trick in the final minutes of play when, wth Gump Worsley off the ice, Dean Prentice made a spectacular save on Howe's hard shot.

Prentice worth an Olmstead? Not too shabby.

Globe and Mail said:
Rumours persist here that Rangers are also trying to arrange a deal with the Leafs that would see Bert Olmstead go to play with his old Buddy Doug Harvey. but Leaf spokesmen insist Rangers don't have a hope, unless they are willing to part with players like Andy Bathgate or Dean Prentice. And surely Rangers can't be that naive.

Globe and Mail said:
"I'd make any deal I think would help the Leafs," said Imlach last night. "I've named Bathgate or Prentice. I'm interested in anything Muzz can arrange to that end."

It was the forwards' fault the Rangers were bad defensively, but not Prentice's:

Montreal Gazette said:
The Rangers score enough goals, but their goals against record is poor. Whose fault is it? "It's not Worsley's fault and it's not the fault of the defense", says GM Muzz Patrick. "The forwards just aren't checking the way they should. they come back, but they don't come back deep enough. They seem to let up when we're behind our own blue line and leave everything to the defense. Another thing, they're not checking with enough pressure. you have to put some muscle into it if you're going to take away the puck from the other guy."

Was there any particular player or players who are playing well for the Rangers? "Dean Prentice has been the best of the forwards," he said. "Prentice can skate. There are too many slow skaters on the team."

We know Don McKenney is a good defensive player, but Prentice was acquired as a defensive and physical upgrade on McKenney:

Ottawa Citizen said:
Dean Prentice has been acquired by boston for Don McKenney in an effort to get more thump in the Bruins' checks... Retired goal king Maurice Richard said "The two are similar because they're steady and try hard every game."...Boston GM Milt Schmidt tipped his hand on the deal when he said yesterday: "With his style of play he should fit well with ******* and ******. Prentice is strong in the corners and a good passer, and has been one of the better checkers among left wings since he has been in the league."... "Prentice is a durable player", said Rangers GM Muzz Patrick. "But we're desperate for centremen and had to give him to get McKenney."

Globe and Mail said:
Schmidt's aim was to restore a defensive attitude... Don McKenney was sent to New York in exchange for the two-way talents of Dean Prentice.

Globe and Mail said:
Prentice, bleeding freely from a cut behind his right ear, had refused to come off the ice just before he fired home the game's first goal...

Interesting quote about Bathgate's on-ice relationship to Prentice. Bathgate was known to have trouble fitting into Toronto's system, and not having a guy like Prentice probably hurt:

Globe and Mail said:
**** *******'s appearance here last night revived rumours that Dean Prentice, Boston Left Winger, and a former teammate of Bathgate's in New York, would be traded to the Leafs this summer. The Boston GM had no comment, but quipped: "Bathgate needs Prentice, and I've got him."

More evidence that he was desired by other teams:

Globe and Mail said:
The Leafs covet Boston left winger Dean Prentice...

1965-01-06 said:
The Bruins suffered their first major injury of the season when leading scorer Dean Prentice was ruled out for the remainder of the season... Weston Adams described the loss as tragic.

Globe and Mail said:
Prentice gave the Wings the lead on a nice second effort. He appeared to lose control of the puck right in front of the goal and Bower dropped to block the crease. However, Prentice stretched far to his left to regain the puck and slide it past Bower's skate.

Globe and Mail said:
The extra man in a February trade between Detroit and Boston played the commanding role in the Red Wings' dismissal of the Blackhawks from Stanley Cup contention last night.

Hawks, leading 2-1, were fewer than four minutes away from their third win when Prentice deadlocked the score at 18:25 of the final period. Prentice was back 63 second later to lash the winner beyond goalie Glenn Hall's grasp...

Until Prentice struck, the Hawks seemed muscular enough to sustain their lead and force a deciding game in Chicago.

39-year old Prentice, still a scorer:

Toledo Blade said:
What started out as the checking line in training camp turned out to be Minnesota's top scoring line this season... Prentice continued to play last night despite being shaken up by a hard check along the boards... "After we aquired Prentice, we had the three of them together from the start. I might have thought they would be the checking line. But they've been the most consistent line all the way through."

FUN FACTS:

Most Goals by a player 40 or older:

Gordie Howe | 44
John Bucyk | 36
Gordie Howe | 31
Dean Prentice | 26
Mark Messier | 24
Gordie Howe | 23
Mark Recchi | 23
Dave Andreychuk | 21
John Bucyk | 20
Gary Roberts | 20

If Prentice can't play in your top-6, neither can these guys:

Name | G1 | G2 | G3 | A1 | A2 | A3 | Total
Patrik Elias | 93 | 80 | 74 | 81 | 77 | 67 | 472
Pete Mahovlich | 70 | 69 | 69 | 100 | 92 | 68 | 468
Ace Bailey | 105 | 77 | 60 | 87 | 70 | 68 | 467
Woody Dumart | 100 | 80 | 71 | 75 | 69 | 65 | 460
Reg Noble | 68 | 65 | 56 | 100 | 92 | 75 | 456
Charlie Simmer | 100 | 97 | 79 | 60 | 59 | 56 | 451
Kevin Stevens | 100 | 78 | 72 | 79 | 59 | 56 | 444
Dean Prentice | 82 | 67 | 66 | 79 | 73 | 71 | 438
Herbie Lewis | 74 | 64 | 61 | 88 | 84 | 67 | 438
Bill Barber | 89 | 77 | 74 | 87 | 60 | 51 | 438
Baldy Northcott | 81 | 74 | 65 | 81 | 78 | 52 | 431
Sid Smith | 87 | 87 | 71 | 71 | 64 | 49 | 429
John Tonelli | 59 | 55 | 50 | 91 | 82 | 77 | 414
Gary Roberts | 98 | 72 | 63 | 84 | 51 | 43 | 411
Rod Brind'Amour | 69 | 61 | 61 | 75 | 74 | 67 | 407
Bun Cook | 81 | 67 | 60 | 66 | 63 | 61 | 398
Brian Propp | 70 | 69 | 66 | 64 | 62 | 61 | 392
Clark Gillies | 66 | 60 | 59 | 73 | 69 | 55 | 382
Billy Burch | 76 | 73 | 71 | 60 | 53 | 47 | 380
Wayne Cashman | 58 | 56 | 50 | 77 | 76 | 61 | 378
Esa Tikkanen | 59 | 53 | 48 | 61 | 52 | 52 | 325
Brian Sutter | 53 | 53 | 44 | 59 | 51 | 44 | 304

This is a selection of some of the less-talented top-6 wingers in ATD2010. Some are on first lines, some are on second lines. The list shows each player's three best goalscoring seasons, demonstrated as a percentage of the 2nd-place's total (i.e. if 2nd place had 50 and the player had 35, that is 70%) It also does the same for the player's three best playmaking seasons. The final column is the total of the six percentages.

Note that many well-known and well-appreciated players score far below Prentice. Among the players who placed ahead, Pete Mahovlich had his best seasons as Lafleur's center and has very little career value beyond those years; Charlie Simmer and Kevin Stevens also did very little outside of their peaks that were partially manufactured by elite centers. (on the other hand, Prentice played a lot with Bathgate, who was said to "need" Prentice and whose nine best seasons were with Prentice)

This list is made up mostly of two-way players, which Prentice was. Very few had such strong career value, and as you can see, not many had better peak value either. There are only two players I would take over Dean Prentice on the above list, and they are Patrik Elias, who had an excellent two-way game and partially crippled offensive numbers in New Jersey's system, and Reg Noble, whose numbers are just as strong overall (weaker in goals, better in assists) but is absolutely packed with intangibles. Bailey, Barber and Dumart would be close, but they lack Prentice's longevity-driven career value.
 
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seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,154
7,284
Regina, SK
With the 311th Pick in ATD2010, The Regina Pats are proud to select:

Mark Recchi, RW

mark-recchi-boston.jpg


- 5'10", 195 lbs
- Stanley Cup (1991, 2006)
- IHL Turner Cup (1989)
- NHL 2nd All-Star Team (1992)
- Top-7 in All-Star Voting 6 More Times (4th, 4th, 4th, 5th, 7th, 7th)
- NHL Assist Leader (2000)
- 7th, 9th in Hart Voting
- 7-time ASG Participant
- Top-20 in goals Six Times (9th, 11th, 13th, 14th, 19th, 20th)
- Top-20 in assists Eight Times (1st, 4th, 7th, 10th, 13th, 15th, 17th, 18th)
- Top-20 in points Eight Times (3rd, 4th, 5th, 10th, 12th, 12th, 14th, 19th)
- Top-10 in playoff goals 4 Times (4th, 8th, 10th, 10th)
- Top-16 in playoff assists 5 Times (2nd, 3rd, 14th, 15th, 16th)
- Top-16 in playoff points 4 Times (2nd, 5th, 12th, 16th)
- Is completing his 12th injury-free season, and was at one time the NHL's reigning ironman.
- Career adjusted +77 through 2007-08 season

loh.net said:
...The Pittsburgh Penguins were first in line to draft Recchi, in 1988. They sent him to Muskegon of the IHL for some fine-tuning. There, he helped lead his team to a Turner Cup championship. Shortly after the start of the next season, he got the call to join the Pens where he used his opportunity to good effect, finishing second in the rookie goal-scoring race with 30 markers.

Year Two brought even loftier results as he potted a red-hot 113 points topped off with a Stanley Cup victory. His successful stay in Pittsburgh was cut short, however, when the Pens set their sights on acquiring Rick Tocchet from the Philadelphia Flyers with Recchi as part of the collateral.

In Philly, he carried on his usual trend of scoring enormous quantities of goals and assists. But as was the case in Pittsburgh, Recchi's prolific services went up for sale when the Flyers saw a chance to pry Eric Desjardins and John Leclair away from the Montreal Canadiens.

In Montreal, Recchi's numbers declined somewhat although he continued to be a team leader on offense. He lasted with the club until March 1999 when he was unloaded back to the Flyers. Upon his return to Philly, he picked up right where he left off the first time around. In his first full season back, he was voted the team's MVP, having led the team in points scored. He also made his seventh All-Star Game appearance.

But his awards were not only limited to the NHL. With the approach to the millennium, Recchi was named male athlete of the 20th century in his hometown of Kamploops. To commemorate the event, the street outside the local arena was named "Mark Recchi Way."

After parts of six more seasons in Philly, which saw the former WHL Star surpass the 1,200 point mark, Recchi signed as a free-agent with Pittsburgh in the summer of 2004, thus marking a return to his first NHL club. Following a lock out year in 2004-05, Recchi's return to the Pens' lineup lasted for the better part of the season before being dealt to the Carolina Hurricanes at the 2006 NHL trading deadline.

In Carolina, Recchi would go on to win his second Stanley Cup before returning to a youthful Pittsburgh Penguins squad in the off-season. Recchi has since become a leader for the club while continuing to produce offensively. On January 26, 2007 Recchi scored his 500th career goal against the Dallas Stars.

ourhistory.canadiens.com said:
With his speed and his quick and accurate wrist shot, right-winger Mark Recchi brought Canadiens fans to their feet at the Forum and the Molson Centre on countless occasions during his stay with Montreal... In his first year in Montreal, Recchi recorded 43 points in 39 games during a lockout-shortened season. Over the next three seasons, he missed only one game and tallied 94 goals and 138 assists while cementing his role as one of the team’s key players. He finished among the top three in team scoring in each of his seasons in Montreal. The speedy forward appeared in seven All-Star Games over the course of his career, including 1997 when he represented the Canadiens and was named MVP of the game after scoring a hat trick. He recorded three 100-point seasons and joined the 500-goal club in January 2007.

Sports Illustrated said:
It never should have come to this. Montreal right wing Mark Recchi, who was a surprising omission when the Canadian Olympic team was announced in December, was at home in Pittsburgh on Sunday, on standby as the first man to go to Nagano should any of Canada's forwards be unable to play. The speedy wing was dejected. "It's disappointing, but it's done," says Recchi, who, with 25 goals, is the only one of the NHL's top 15 goal scorers not in Nagano. "There's nothing I want to do more than play."

Recchi is unaccustomed to having to sit and watch midwinter hockey games. Since missing a match on March 31, 1991, with an injured right knee, the 5'10", 185-pound Recchi has played in 517 straight regular-season NHL games. Flyers center Rod Brind'Amour (376) is the only other NHL player with a streak of more than 300 games. "The way [Recchi] plays it's amazing he's out there every night," says Islanders winger Mike Hough. "He finishes checks, he battles off the face-off, he goes into the corners. He does things you don't usually see star players do."

With an explosive snap shot that is particularly dangerous because he shoots lefthanded and plays the right side, Recchi has scored 310 goals in nine-plus seasons. He also plays a strong defensive game and throws his diminutive body into any fray he finds. Although his run almost ended this season because of bruised ribs that hurt every time he took a breath, Recchi has maintained his streak through an assortment of muscle tears and broken bones. Before the Oct. 15 game against the Penguins, Recchi got laser treatment and iced his side, all so he could spend the evening on a checking line opposite Jaromir Jagr.

Recchi's craving for ice time hasn't waned since he was Jagr's teammate in Pittsburgh in the early 1990s. In those days Recchi was sometimes on the bench during power plays, and coaches would hear him impatiently shuffling his skates. He was traded to Philadelphia in '91-92, and after a three-year stint with the Flyers that included a 53-goal season in '92-93, he was dealt to Montreal. With the Canadiens, Recchi gets plenty of ice time—he's on the first power-play unit and kills penalties too.

At 30, Recchi is playing the best hockey of his life, and as his linemate ****** ******, now in Nagano, says, "He competes as fiercely as anyone." If he doesn't end up going to Japan, the iron-man will be missed in Canada's push for gold.

Sports Illustrated said:
expect Recchi to be the focus of trade inquiries from contenders who covet his energy

Philadelphia Flyers Greatest Moments and Players said:
the pint-sized right wng won the hearts of Philadelphians because of his tenacity, teamsmanship and tendency to be in the right place at the right time when a big goal was required... His play featured a doggedness that reminded Philadelphians of Bobby Clarke before him. "I got that from my parents," Mark explained. "they would always say, If you want to play, go play hard but don't ever go out there and not give 100%."... "Mark was unbelieveable," said his coach at the time. "He did everything I asked of him and showed real leadership qualities. He had become a complete hockey player in Philadelphia."

Philadelphia Flyers Encyclopedia said:
Being traded from a successful Stanley Cup Champion to the rebuilding Flyers could have caused anyone regression. But that was not the case with Mark Recchi, holding his head up high and establishing a new franchise record for points in a season... Recchi was a popular Flyer, making it difficult to trade him in 1995... Twice, Mark Recchi was traded to the Flyers, and on both occasions he was recognized as team MVP in the next full season... He maintained his constant hustle, and he and his teammates worked their way to the conference finals... Mark Recchi continues to contribute as recently as the 2003 postseason with the best playoff series of his career against Toronto, including a dramatic, triple OT goal.

Best In the Game said:
Recchi was coming off a 40-goal, 113-point season and had established himself as one of the premier right wingers in the NHL. He was neither tall nor large, but played with a controlled fury that earned him the nickname "The Wrecking Ball". There clearly was a market for a player of such caliber... Recchi repeatedly expressed his desire to remain in Pittsburgh... The snag was obviously monetary, but Recchi's frustration was compounded by being kept away from the game he loved. Few people go about their jobs with an exuberance such as his.

Best In the Game said:
Rechi's confidence plummeted, but his teammates didn't lose faith in him. They had seen him do too much to believe that his scoring touch was gone. "He'll turn it around," said Kevin Stevens. "He works hard, and if you keep working hard, it's bound to turn. And Recchs isn't a kid who stops working." No one ever questioned Recchi's work ethic...

Best In the Game said:
Recchi was caught completely off-guard by word that he was being transplanted to the other side of Pennsylvania. He cried openly as he said goodbye to the men who had just become his ex-teammates, and in the words of Ulf Samuelsson, "was just destroyed". Recchi's reaction was not unexpected. He had dedicated every speck of energy, every fiber of his being to the Penguins from the time he joined the team.

Hockey All-Stars said:
Although RWs Jaromir Jagr and Pavel Bure finished ahead of him and denied Recchi 2000 All-Star Honours, his contributions were noted. "Rex has carried this team", John LeClair said. "You watch his play - it's inspiring."

Hockey Scouting Report 1990-91 said:
Recchi is a very talented player who brings a high level of skating, puckhandling, shooting and hockey sense to his game. He is a very dynamic skater with great mobility, the root of which is his quickness and balance. Those qualities combine to give him excellent agility and lateral ability, allowing him to change direction within a step, and his skating makes him very dangerous from the blueline in. Complementing his foot skills are his hand skills. Mark can operate with the puck at his top speed, whether that means carrying it himself or passing it to an open teammate. He uses his teammates well because of his hockey sense - he sees the holes and leads his wingers to them (he is just as able to exploit those holes himself because of his quickness) His shot is very quick released and accurate; his shot creates opportunities... has a scorer's sense of positioning and timing... A consistent defensive player, attentive to his assignments.

Considering his size, Recchi is a pretty tough player. He'll take the poundings necessary to make his plays, and he's unafraid of contact. That's good, because that physical willingness will open space for the finesse game... Has already demonstrated an ability to contribute in all situations.

Hockey Scouting Report 1991-92 said:
Recchi thinks like a choreographer, which makes him such a first rate playmaker. He opens up ice, by drawing defenders to him, then spots the openings and directs linemates to them. He has the footwork to get himself into the holes. Recchi has great agility and quickness, and is able to shift in mid-stride to another direction entirely, leaving his checker baffled. He has excellent hockey sense and vision. he is good under pressure with the puck and doesn't seem to notice if the game is in the first or last five seconds - he works regardless.

He will build up some speed and get a good shot off while in motion... His best weapon is a strong wrist shot from the circle. Recchi is not big, but he steps into his shot and puts everything he has into it. He is a very accurate shooter, picks his best spots and passes when a teammate has the better percentage play. Recchi pursues the puck and maintains the pursuit even if he loses control... Recchi is a strong forechecker who anticipates well. He plays well positionally on defense and always comes back for the puck.

Recchi is a spunky player, with a fireplug build, who plays pinball hockey in the corners. He has a huge heart and works hard every night... Recchi is an intense competitor and a gamer, as he showed in the playoffs.

Hockey Scouting Report 1992-93 said:
Recchi is a give-and-go player. He makes a sharp first pass, then jumps for the hole, ready to receive the return. Sometimes, when he gets the puck back, he'll move to his left across the high slot and catch goalies by surprise with a sharp snap shot back against the grain to his right. Other times he'll hold the puck and look for the late man coming into the rush, which keeps the defense honest because they can't always play him to shoot... Recchi also uses the spring in his legs to beat defensemen to the outside. It isn't great looking - Recchi has short legs and uses a short, choppy stride - but it is effective... He is a marksman in close, an expert finisher because he has good scoring instincts and quick hands and he pulls the trigger quickly.

Recchi gets whacked around pretty much every night. He accepts being hit... has added a layer of scrap to his attitude.

Hockey Almanac 1993-94 said:
A powerful skater, Recchi uses a mixed bag of scoring skills and excellent playmaking creativity to spearhead the attack of the Philadelphia Flyers. While not a big man, he is extremely strong and uses his low center of gravity as a defenseive weapon to thwart bigger players trying to knock him off the puck. After helping Pittsburgh to the Stanley Cup, he was traded, but showed no diminuition of his scoring pace and effort... Recchi's only problem has been finding players who can play up to his grinding, full-out standard. Recchi isn't the dynamic gamebreaker who can do it all by himself... Recchi is a terrific team player, the kind who always looks for teammates to get involved - as opposed to thinking he can do it all himself. He is the Flyers' MVP, Eric Lindros notwithstanding.

WILL - Lead by example
CAN'T - Be underestimated
EXPECT - Many points
DON'T EXPECT - A quitter

Hockey Almanac 1994-95 said:
A great playmaker, Recchi is a good skater, solid on his feet although not blessed with blazing speed. He is smart and has great anticipation. A natural goal-scorer... He is tough but not physical, and an adequate defensive player, but no Selke candidate... Recchi continued to prove why he, not Eric Lindros, is the Flyers' most valuable player - by staying healthy, leading the attack, and playing a steady (often very spectacular) game and providing a balanced offensive spark.

WILL - Be a scoring ace
EXPECT - A team leader
DON'T EXPECT - An ounce of quit

Hockey Scouting Report 1994-95 said:
He excels at the give and go, and is versatile enough to play alongside Eric Lindros, or help out in the middle, as he did when Lindros was injured...

Pro Hockey Play-By-Play 1994-95 said:
One of the five or so guys in the league that I would build a team around... Hasn't missed a game in three seasons and does all this as a small man in a big man's sport. He's got a huge heart and he's a money player... If you took a poll among players, Recchi would show up on a lot of top five lists.

Hockey Almanac 1995-96 said:
Smart and confident, he makes the most of acute anticipation on the ice. He is able to make plays out of broken patterns.

WILL - Jump-start any offense
EXPECT - Lots of points


Hockey Almanac 1996-97 said:
Recchi is a tremendous playmaker, using his passing ability and his anticipation to know just when, and to whom, to release the puck... He is smart and confident. A workaholic, Recchi is always among the best-prepared players on the ice, physically and mentally... Following his trade to Montreal, Recchi took it upon himself to carry the taem on his shoulders. An overachiever, he worked almost too hard... He has changed his nutrition and physical training regimen to help him stay at a higher level.

Pro Hockey Play-By-Play 1997-98 said:
Quietly puts together good year after good year.

Hockey Scouting Report 1998-99 said:
Looking at his ironman streak, you realize how remarkably durable he is, considering the style of game he plays.

Hockey Scouting Report 2000 said:
A little package with a lot of firepower... He's feisty and a relentless worker in the offensive zone. He busts into open ice, finding the holes almost before they open, and excels at the give-and-go... Recchi has a dangerous shot from the off-wing... He follows his shot to the net for a rebound and can make a play as well. He has excellent hands, vision and anticipation for any scoring opportunity... Recchi has worked hard to improve his defensive play. He kills penalties because he hounds the point men aggressively and knocks the puck out of the zone. Then he heads off on a breakaway or forces the defender to pull him down... While other players are coasting, Recchi's blades are in motion, and he draws penalties. He is ready to step into any play. He resembles a puck magnet because he is always going where the puck is. He protects the puck well, keeping it close to his feet... Recchi gets chopped at because he doesn't hang around the perimeter. He accepts the punishment to get the job done. He is a solid player with a low centre of gravity, and he is tough to knock off the puck.

Hockey Scouting Report 2001 said:
Easily the Flyers' MVP... Whatever the Flyers asked of him, Recchi delivered... He is dangerous off the right wing half-boards with his unerring ability to find John Leclair at the left side of the crease... recchi is an unselfish player. The benefit is that defenders have a tougher time playing him and he makes the players around him better. His work ethic just continues to intensify.

Hockey Scouting Report 2003 said:
One of the game's smartest players... an unselfish player and a team leader.

Hockey Scouting Report 2004 said:
His top is now in the 55-point range.

Yeah, nice try. He topped 55 points at age 35, 37, 38, and 40.

The Hockey News said:
Has relentless energy on the ice and is one of the most durable forwards in the league. Is smart with the puck and a capable playmaker from the wing.

The Hockey News said:
At the ripe young age of 42, Recchi still gives his all every shift and can still dole it out as good as he takes it. No time was that more prevalent than his Game 3 tête-à-tête with the Sabres’ Tim Kennedy (by no means a Goliath at 5-foot-9, but still, at 23, he’s almost half Recchi’s age) that led to ******* ********'s game-winner. That play distinctly and abruptly turned this series on its head, giving the B’s all the momentum.

A hardly earth-shattering, but an interesting tidbit of info that illustrates how rare it is for a 40-plus player to contribute the way Recchi has: when he scored Boston's lone goal in a 2-1 Game 1 loss, he became the third-oldest player in Stanley Cup playoffs history to find the back of the net (behind only a 52-year-old Gordie Howe and a 45-year-old Chris Chelios.

A consistent and sturdy contributor with 18 goals and 43 points, while playing 81 regular season games for the injury-plagued Bruins, Recchi has continued to chip in offensively in the post-season with a pair of goals and a trio of points in the five games.

His gritty, give-it-all style leads by example and is exactly the package of traits that at least a handful of a roster must possess if a team is going to make a deep playoff run. As Recchi’s five February or later trades would attest, he is a valuable commodity.

And if he chooses to have one last kick at the can next season, contending teams would be well advised to ignore the number on his birth certificate in lieu of his two Stanley Cups.

FUN FACTS:

Most Points by a player 41 or older:

Gordie Howe | 71
Gordie Howe | 52
Mark Recchi | 43
Mark Messier | 43
Igor Larionov | 43
Igor Larionov | 43
John Bucyk | 43
Gordie Howe | 41
Mark Messier | 40
Mark Messier | 23

In Recchi's best 10-year period (1990-2000), he was 13th in the NHL with 330 goals, 95% as many as 5th-place Teemu Selanne. He was 7th with 534 assists, 96% as many as 5th-place Joe Sakic. And due to his remarkably balanced offence, he was 6th in total points, with 99.5% as many points as 5th-place Steve Yzerman.

In fact, the leader for the decade was Jaromir Jagr with 964 points, and Recchi only came out 94 points short of that, producing 90% as many points as Jagr. Due to his durability, however, Recchi was the NHL's games played leader during the 1990s, and played in more games than Jagr. Still, Recchi managed 85% as many points per game (1.12 to 1.32) as this generational talent while they both enjoyed their finest seasons. Show me a player picked in the 300s who can say that.

Player | GP | G | A | PTS
Jaromir Jagr | 725 | 387 | 571 | 958
Adam Oates | 723 | 226 | 670 | 896
Joe Sakic | 702 | 341 | 555 | 896
Wayne Gretzky | 640 | 217 | 661 | 878
Steve Yzerman | 742 | 336 | 534 | 870
Mark Recchi | 774 | 330 | 534 | 864
Brett Hull | 712 | 464 | 378 | 842
 
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Dreakmur

Registered User
Mar 25, 2008
18,637
6,894
Orillia, Ontario
“A raw, talented center who played top-level hockey in Toronto, Vancouver, and Ottawa over 10 years. He was known as a great digger and a fiery leader.

One game in 1919 speaks volumes about his burning desire to win. In the late stages of the tilt, many oaks like harry Mummery, *** *******, and Rusty Crawford were in particularly rough shape. Mummery was the first one sent hobbling off the ice, followed quickly by *******, who was taken away on a stretcher. As for big Crawford, he was whacked across the forehead by Newsy Lalonde. Goalie Hap Holmes lost a handful of teeth. Adams' head was cut up in a flurry of bodychecks, crosschecks, and high sticks. despite it all, the pudgy pivot played till the end, dashing up and down the boards with blood dripping over his eyes and ears.

...his last year in the NHL as a player was 1926-27, and although he wasn't used on the top line, he was lauded for his guts, brains, and leadership skills. The Senators took the cup and Adams took early retirement.†– Ultimate Hockey

“As a player, Jack was a nuisance to opposing teams and was very crafty in the way he wove through their defenses. He was tough and he got into fights on a regular basis.†– Wings of Fire

“He was also loud, brash, and pugnacious, first as a player and then an executive.†– Legends of Hockey

“Jack Adams carried the puck through the opposing defense with the ease and grace of Cleopatra’s head waiter bringing in the morning java.†– Vancouver Sun

“Adams was well known for his fearlessness on the ice, loyalty as a coach, and ruthlessness as a manager.†– Canadian Sports Hall of Fame

“He was an exceptionally galvanic personality who would do anything to win and rarely concerned himself with the consequences.†– Who’s Who in Hockey

“Jack Adams was an inspiration to me as a player, a coach and a manager, even if he was tough on me as a referee.†– King Clancy

With our 16th round selection, McGuire’s Monsters are pleased to select a player that brings a little bit of everything to the table. The ultimate fourth line player who can also sup in as a glue guy in the top 6, this man should get along really well with our head coach. Please welcome….



Jack Adams!!!

Awards and Achievements:
2 x Stanley Cup Champion (1918, 1927)
4 x Stanley Cup Finalist (1918, 1921, 1922, 1927)

2 x PCHA First Team All-Star (1921, 1922)

Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame (1959)
Member of the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame (1975)

Scoring:
PCHA Points – 1st(1922), 4th(1921), 6th(1920)
PCHA Goals – 1st(1922), 5th(1921), 10th(1920)
PCHA Assists – 3rd(1920), 3rd(1921), 8th(1922)

NHL Points – 4th(1923), 6th(1925), 7th(1924), 9th(1926)
NHL Goals – 4th(1923), 5th(1925), 6th(1924), 7th(1926)
NHL Assists – 7th(1923), 9th(1925), 11th(1926), 13th(1924)

Play-off Points – 2nd(1922), 3rd(1923)
 
Last edited:

DoMakc

Registered User
Jun 28, 2006
1,369
431
Murray Murdoch
iron-man-hit.jpg


Accomplishments:

2x Stanley Cup (1928, 1933)
Selke Trophy (1937*)
Lester Patrick Trophy (1974)
2x Top 3 in Playoffs Goals (1930, 1933)
2nd in Playoffs Scoring (1933)
#98 on Stan Fischler's Top 100 Players List
#39 on Top 100 Rangers of All Time List

*retroactively awarded

Quotes:

Joe Pelletier said:
Before all of them there was Murray Murdoch - hockey's original Iron Man, and an original New York Ranger.
Murdoch played in 11 successive seasons, never missing a single game. In total, he played in 508 straight regular season games, as well as 55 Stanley Cup playoff matches.
[...]
Patrick placed Murdoch on a checking line with Billy Boyd and Paul Thompson where Murdoch utilized his studious understanding of the game. Later Butch Keeling and Cecil Dillon would fill in on the checking line. The 5'10" 180lb left winger scored 84 goals and 192 points in his 508 straight NHL games. More of a playmaker than a goal scorer, Murdoch was an integral part of two Ranger Cup wins in 1928 and 1933.

Murray Murdoch said:
Conacher thought that when he went into the locker room between periods that I was going to go with him. [Along with linemates Paul Thompson and Butch Keeling] We shadowed them pretty good. When that line came on the ice, we had to go on against them.
 
Last edited:

DoMakc

Registered User
Jun 28, 2006
1,369
431
Vic Hadfield
02b.jpg


Accomplishments:

NHL 2nd All-Star Team (1971)
2nd in Goals (1972)
4th in Assists (1972)
2x Top 10 in Playoffs Goals (1971 (7), 1972 (4))
6th in Playoffs Assists and 7th in Playoffs Points (1972)
#20 on the Top 100 Rangers of All-Time list

Quotes:

HHOF said:
Not many players start out with reputations as enforcers and end up with equal billing for their goal scoring and puck handling abilities. While playing for St. Catharines and the Buffalo Bisons, Hadfield regularly posted far more penalty minutes than points. He continued in his tough guy roll for the New York Rangers after they claimed him from Chicago in the 1961 Intra-League draft.
[...]
That was the first year that his point total came close to equaling his penalty minutes. He consistently scored twenty or more goals a season for the rest of his career. However, he still found time to entertain his teammates by "allegedly" nailing a defenseman's shoes to the floor of the dressing room. He also managed to steal Bernie Parent's mask during a game against the Leafs and toss it into the crowd at Madison Square Garden. Hadfield posted a personal best during the 1971-72 season with 50 goals and 106 points. During this same season he was again in triple digits in penalty minutes, with 142, demonstrating that it was possible to do it all. The Rangers made him their captain in 1971, a position he held until being traded to Pittsburgh in 1974.

Joe Pelletier said:
Hadfield came to the Rangers as a Blackhawk's prospect who earned that status due to his abrasive physical pursuits of the enemy. He wasn't known for his finesse, but soon would blossom into a fine scorer, too.

Hadfield idolized Ted Lindsay as a boy, and his style was very similar. In his first year he battled names like Bobby Baun, Tim Horton and Terrible Teddy Green. In his first complete NHL season he led the league in penalty minutes with 151 and even chipped in 25 points.
 

TheDevilMadeMe

Registered User
Aug 28, 2006
52,271
6,981
Brooklyn
LW Jiri Holik

chidlovski said:
One of the best Czechoslovakian players ever. Holds a national record in games played to team Czechoslovakia (319). Was an elegant skater, excellent 2-way player, exceptionally reliable team player.

jiriholik.jpg


- 8th All-Time in scoring in IIHF tournaments (#2 Czech behind Martinec)

- A member of 14 straight National Teams at the World Championships (1964-1977)

- Inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame in 1999

- 4 Olympic Medals (2 Silver, 2 Bronze)

Joe Pelletier said:
Jiri Holik starred the old Czechoslovakia
...
Jiri was an artistic scorer and an elegant skater
...
Holik and national team teammate Jan Suchy were once contacted by the Detroit Red Wings in the early 1970s, with the possibility of defecting. Another Czech named Vaclav Nedomansky already had jumped shipped, but ultimately they could not leave their families behind.
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,154
7,284
Regina, SK
With the 343rd pick in ATD2010, The Regina Pats are pleased to select:

Dany Heatley, LW/RW

images24.jpg


- 6'4", 221 lbs
- Stanley Cup Finalist (2007)
- NHL 1st All-Star Team (2007)
- NHL 2nd All-Star Team (2006)
- Also finished 4th in All-Star Voting Twice (2003, 2008)
- Placed 11th, 12th in Hart Voting
- Top-10 In Goals 6 Times (2nd, 5th, 6th, 8th, 8th, 9th)
- Top-20 In Assists Twice (17th, 19th)
- Top-20 In Points 5 Times (4th, 4th, 9th, 15th, 15th)
- 6th in Playoff Goals, 1st in Assists, 1st in Points (2007)
- Career adjusted +166 Through 2007-08 Season

- World Cup Champion (2004)
- Olympic Gold Medalist (2010)
- World Championship Gold (2003, 2004)
- World Championship Silver (2005, 2008, 2009)
- World Championship All-Star Team (2003, 2004, 2008)
- World Championship MVP (2004)
- 6 Goals, 6 Assists, 12 points in 19 Best-on-Best International Games
- 38 Goals, 24 Assists, 62 Points in 52 World Championship Games

loh.net said:
...In his first full season with Atlanta, Heatley teamed up with Ilya Kovalchuk to become one of the most dangerous tandems in the NHL. Heatley finished the season with 26 goals and 41 assists for 67 points, leading all rookie scorers on his way to the Calder Trophy as the league's top first year player.

Heatley showed no signs of a sophomore jinx in 2002-03 proving that he was not a star on the rise, but a star who had already arrived. Heatley scored more goals, recorded more assists and more total points than his rookie year, cementing him as a top 10 scorer in the NHL. His shining moment however, was the 2003 NHL All-Star game where amongst superstars like Mario Lemieux and Mike Modano, Heatley stole the show scoring four goals and an assist, and adding another goal in a shootout to capture All-Star MVP honours.

Coming off a career year in 2002-03, Heatley was involved in a serious car accident prior to the 2003-04 season which took the life of his Thrasher teammate Dan Snyder who was a passenger in the car at the time. After months of rehabilitation an injured knee suffered in the accident, Heatley returned to the ice in the latter stages of the season.

Following a three-year career with the Thrashers, Heatley was dealt to the Ottawa Senators in the summer of 2005 in a trade that brought Marian Hossa and Greg De Vries to Atlanta. Over the next two seasons with the Senators, Heatley would tally 100 goals and become the first NHL'er to score at least 50 goals in consecutive seasons since Pavel Bure did it in 1999-00. In his 2006-07 season, he recorded 105 points and set a new Senators franchise record. Later that season, he helped lead his club to an Eastern Conference Championship and a shot at the Stanley Cup. However, despite the Senators best efforts, the club finished three wins shy in the finals.

...A two-time gold medalist with Canada's World Championship team (2003-2004) and a two-time silver medalist (2005-2008) Heatley was named the tournament's Top Forward at the 2004 tournament and later that Summer helped Canada capture the World Cup title. Heatley made his first Winter Olympic appearance with Team Canada in 2006.

jockbio.com said:
If you didn't know better, you'd swear Dany Heatley had just time-warped into the NHL from 1980. His smile is vintage Bobby Clarke, his hairstyle reminiscent of *** ******. But Dany's game is well-suited for the modern era. A power forward with quick hands and subtle stickhandling skills, he is the kind of player you build a team around. The Atlanta braintrust is doing just that, and so far Dany is making the Thrashers look like geniuses.

Projections for Dany when the season started were guarded. The Thrashers did not have a legitimate first-line center, which meant he would have to create his own scoring opportunities.... The Thrashers were awful in the early going, prompting Waddell to threaten banishment of anyone willing to accept Atlanta's losing ways. Dany didn't feel the GM's tongue-lashing was directed at him. In fact, he hated losing so much management worried that he would drive himself crazy... In the first half of the year, Dany saw action at left wing, right wing, center, and even handled the point on power plays... After just a few months in the league, Dany was being recognized as one of the top two-way players in hockey. Early comparisons to John LeClair evaporated when it was clear that Dany’s quickness and stickhandling skills were more evolved than the Philadelphia star's.

Dany began the 2002-03 season slowly. The league had adjusted to him, and now it was his turn to readjust. Enemy defenses keyed on his lone weakness, his skating speed, which was below average by NHL standards. Dany responded by becoming more aggressive and driving to the net with more authority. Backliners had no answer for this sudden evolution, and in no time Dany was back as his team's most effective offensive player... What Dany’s fellow Thrashers found most encouraging was that he did not slack off on defense. Adding to his stature as an excellent two-way player, Dany had a strong plus-minus rating, despite playing for a so-so team.

...On the ice, Dany has shown the ability to handle the emotional and physical toll of the Snyder tragedy... Dany is a terrific all-around, end-to-end player. The thing you hear hockey people rave about are his hands. They are quick, supple and strong—and enable him to do some pretty amazing things with the puck when defensemen think they have him bottled up. He shoots hard and with great accuracy, and has become a good playmaker since teaming up with flashy Ilya Kovalchuk.

Dany’s skating has never been a strong point, and may never be better than average for an NHL forward. But where his speed is lacking, his instincts more than make up for it. He can smell a scoring opportunity developing before anyone else on the ice, and he’s big enough to establish prime position in front of the net.

Although he has played all three positions on the front line, he is best suited for left wing because of his lefthanded shot. With a top-tier assist man, Dany could easily become a 50+ goal scorer. In the meantime, his job is to keep improving and convince his teammates that they can win the close games. In the end, that may be his most valuable contribution to a club that some day will go deep into the playoffs.

Kings Of the Ice said:
The scouting reports listed Heatley as a good skater with very strong puckhandling and passing skills, an accurate release, good intensity and mental toughness... He quickly earned the respect of Thrashers coach **** ******, who seemed most impressed by Heatley's instinctive leadership qualities. "He is the kind of player that says, 'Hey, jump on my back and I'll take you there,'" he was quoted as saying.

The Hockey News Player Bio said:
Owns a great shot, but can also set up his linemates. Has the size to compete in high-traffic areas, and is especially effective in the slot area. Is equally effective on either side of center.

Sports Illustrated said:
Heatley resembles a no-maintenance power forward like the Philadelphia Flyers' John LeClair. At 6'3" and 205 pounds, Heatley is leaner than LeClair, but he has the same laconic manner and hard shot.

Hockey Scouting Report 2003 said:
His chief assets are his willingness to shoot and his offensive instincts. He has a big point shot and is already a first unit powerplay man and a player who can take charge... The Thrashers didn't provide much support, so Heatley had to do everything himself. His all-around game is very advanced for a young player... He is a pure goalscorer, with an assortment of shots. He has learned to go get the puck and has to do a lot of the work himself. Just wait 'til he gets someone to get the puck to him... Heatley is rugged and likes to drive to the net... He hates losing.

Sports Illustrated said:
Heatley, a left wing, is a steady, polished playmaker whom many see as Atlanta's future captain.

Sports Illustrated said:
Heatley, who has a zest for the game and a hybrid style that marries superb puck skills with power-forward presence... Heatley's game, by contrast, has no obvious holes. "I've been watching him," says Colorado Avalanche defenseman Rob Blake. "Because of his size [6'3", 215 pounds] and skill, he's a combination of a lot of guys. Obviously, the comparison is to Mario Lemieux because there aren't a lot of guys that big who have that kind of talent with the puck. What amazes me is that it's only his second year in the league, but he wants the puck because he knows he can make plays." The Norris Trophy-winning defenseman had an excellent view of those skills at the All-Star Game, when, on Heatley's first goal, the Thrashers wing beat him with a nifty move that left Blake swimming and Western Conference goaltender Patrick Roy exposed to the subsequent wrist shot... Heatley, the second pick in the '00 draft, comes without bells or whistles but with a heavy shot , defensive smarts, the acute sense of responsibility that allows the Thrashers to use him on the point of the power play, and rare leadership qualities... Flyers coach Ken Hitchcock says that Heatley is the leading candidate to be the next great player—"He's so big and fearless that he can score in traffic but also can go flying down the wing and rip it through you from 45 feet."

Hockey Scouting Report 2004 said:
A second-year player is simply not supposed to have his name up there in the stats with Mario Lemieux and Mike Modano... He is worth the price of admission.

The Hockey News said:
It would take a committee of dozens about a dozen years to find anyone in the hockey world who doesn't believe there's hardware in Heatley's future... Heatley has already amassed a victim list longer than the combined efforts of every Nashville Predator who ever lived... "In between everything he has got going on this year, he came back and he's here, working out every day, he's in tremendous shape. there's not one thing he needs to work at. I can't say he needs to work on his stickhandling or his shooting," says GM Don Waddell...

NY Times said:
The 6-foot-3, 215-pound Heatley, the second pick over all in the 2000 draft, was the point man for the team's power play and a solid defensive player, as well as a potent scorer

The Hockey News said:
Where to begin? Heatley has the size, speed and strength to become an NHL superstar, if he isn't one already. He is the complete package, featuring productivity and competitiveness... All he's missing is a supporting cast...

Sports Illustrated said:
former All-Star Game MVP whose release is so quick it seems as if the puck is barely on his stick... "All three are very smart on the ice," says Philadelphia Flyers general manager Bob Clarke, who considers Heatley among hockey's five top players... "when he came into the room, the chemistry did improve. His personality, his talent, made him stand out. Because of his skill level, he has challenged players to step up with him."

The Hockey News said:
Heatley is in a bonafide hockey market, he is healthy, and he is thriving... "He worked hard at training camp, got in shape right off the bat and he has been successful," ****** says... "I was hoping to play with Dany from the moment I heard we traded for him," Alfredsson says. "I know he's a special player and I knew it would be a lot of fun, especially on offense. He plays with a lot of creativity and he does things on the ice that make life easy for me."..."I thought he was a great shooter and really skilled 1-on-1, but the biggest thing I have found is he can create something out of nothing. His vision on the ice is good."

NY Times said:
he makes the Senators' firepower truly scary, particularly on the power play.

The Hockey News said:
While the star winger is still piling up the points, it's his play at both ends of the ice that has helped the Ottawa Senators re-emerge as a team to beat in the Eastern Conference despite its sub-par first half to the season.

"Because he scores a lot of goals, I think maybe people just look at him as being one-dimensional," Senators centre ***** ****** said Wednesday. "But he's a little more of a complete player than people think."

...But with a defence that's come under fire recently for blowing late-game leads, it's his commitment to being more responsible with and without the puck that has his coach and teammates singing his praises.

"He came here as a goal-scorer and a very good hockey player, but now he's an all-around hockey player," Senators coach ***** ****** said earlier this week.

Without Heatley - who's played all of Ottawa's 70 games, leads the team with 90 points and is a plus-26 - the Sens would likely be fighting for their playoff lives down the stretch instead.

Maybe it's because he's had so much success in front of goal that his other abilities have been overlooked.

However, in the second half of the season, Heatley's as likely to show up on replays for racing back into his own end to break up an odd-man rush as he is for firing off one of his one-timer cannons.

"I've always felt like I had the ability to do that, but you don't get recognized for it or a different part of your game overshadows that," Heatley said Wednesday.

...Heatley scored 10 times and set up 14 more goals in that run. More importantly, he helped the Senators shore up defensively by turning in a plus-17 rating and has continued that way since, even killing penalties in addition to his regular shift and power-play duties.

"As a scorer, you're usually labelled as poor defensively, but I think this year I've definitely tried to be a little better in our own end - especially starting in January, where we had to," Heatley said. "I like playing that way. It's a lot of fun."

NY Times said:
With Dany Heatley parked in front of Brodeur and unwilling to budge, ****** took the puck from near the blue line into the left face-off circle, then fired a shot that clanged off the right post and went in at 12:06

The Hockey News said:
In ******'s absence, Heatley took on more responsibility, establishing himself as much more than just a shooter, showing a willingness to get involved at both ends of the ice...

The Hockey News said:
"He's a real dynamic player with the puck and a real good player without the puck," Senators coach ***** ****** said. "I don't know that I would have said that every day last year. But he's certainly become that."

Sports Illustrated said:
In a modest role reversal Heatley, the only NHL player with 50 goals in each of the past two seasons, had a playoff-leading 15 assists through Monday while Alfredsson, the team's regular-season assist leader, had emerged as the top goal scorer, with 10. The most remarkable statistic belonged to ******, who, like Heatley, now works in all three zones

CBC said:
"Heatley has been successful as a goal-scorer wherever he has been," ****** said. "He is a very competitive guy.

"He is maturing and growing now. He is probably a better man than he was a few years ago — in his game and in his team play."

The Hockey News said:
"Dany's the same way every night," said *******. "He's a great hockey player and a great goal-scorer. He find ways to get that puck to the net.

"I got to find ways to put it on his stick, and most of the time Heater'll put it away."

It's something the Canadian team hopes it can count on moving forward.

Coach Ken Hitchcock was an assistant with the Olympic team in 2006 and has noticed a change in the 27-year-old sniper since. Back then, Heatley might not have had his first and third goals, which he converted from in close.

"He's always been a good offensive player but he's really using quickness in small spaces to score now," said Hitchcock. "To me that's a difference in Dany Heatley from the last time we were together in the Olympics. He's improved a lot since even '06."

The Hockey News said:
Losing to Russia left Dany Heatley in no mood to celebrate being named most valuable player at the IIHF World Hockey Championship.

"Not right now," the Ottawa Senators winger said after Russia downed Canada 5-4 in overtime in the final on Sunday at the Pepsi Colisee.

It was a second world championship MVP honour for Heatley, who also got it in 2004 in the Czech Republic, when he also led the event in scoring.

Active NHL player said:
"Heater's one of the nicest men you'll ever meet, you can't say enough. … I'm so happy for him. A lot of things were said unfairly about Dan [about] the type of person he is — he's just a quality, quality person. He's just a great hockey player that I would have on my team and in my dressing room in a heartbeat."

Sports Illustrated said:
"When the Senators went to the Stanley Cup finals [in 2007], Dany was the leading scorer in the playoffs," Wilson says. "He's Canada's alltime leading scorer at the World Championships.... [Producing in big spots] is not something you just hope he's going to do. He's done it."

The Hockey News said:
"We do an awful lot of research into the people we bring here, and when you talk about Dany Heatley, he was one of the easiest players for me to do research on," Wilson said. "I'm from ottawa and there are a lot of people here in the community who are close friends and who I have great respect for. I was able to talk to people like Bob Nicholson, who's known Dany for a long time, and Steve Yzerman, and Peter Chiarelli."... The results they discovered were consistently positive. "I was consulted by Doug before we acquired Dany and when he asked me, the answer was a very quick yes", Thomas said. "He's had a couple bumps in the road, and when that happened, friends really came together and the sense of the good person came out from everyone you talked to. There's really nothing but good stories about him. What it comes down to is he wants the ball - and maybe that got him into trouble in Ottawa, but he wants the responsibility. You want players who want the responsibility of being the difference between winning and losing... Dany's a good guy. I've gotten to know him at the world championships the past couple of years, and he's a good teammate and a likeable person."

The Hockey News said:
Heatley has emerged from the trade demand as productive and dangerous as ever... When he joined the Sharks, they envisioned he would score most of his goals in two ways - ripping it from the high slot off the rush, and getting passes from Thornton. But in reality, Heatley has becime less Mike Bossy and more Phil Esposito. the majority of his goals have had a fair bit of dirt and grease on them... "He gets his nose dirty. He goes there and he's not leaving. In probably 15 of his goals, the distance of his shot was no more than two feet."... He's perceived as a petulant jerk for demanding a trade from Ottawa last summer, but those who play with him have nothing but praise for him as a teammate... You have to create your own room in the Western Conference, and Heatley has managed to do that this season by being a gritty player and feeding off his linemates.

Most Points since the lockout:

Alex Ovechkin | 517
Joe Thornton | 504
Sidney Crosby | 485
Dany Heatley | 436
Pavel Datsyuk | 428

Most Goals since the lockout:

Alex Ovechkin | 264
Ilya Kovalchuk | 225
Dany Heatley | 217
Jarome Iginla | 191
Vincent Lecavalier | 178
Sidney Crosby | 177

Career Adjusted +/- Leaders, Active Players, through 2007-08

PLAYER | GP | Adj2+/- | /GP
SELANNE, TEEMU | 1067 | 328 | 0.31
LIDSTROM, NICKLAS | 1252 | 247 | 0.20
TKACHUK, KEITH | 1055 | 238 | 0.23
MODANO, MIKE | 1320 | 227 | 0.17
THORNTON, JOE | 754 | 215 | 0.29
(undrafted) | 701 | 211 | 0.30
IGINLA, JAROME | 860 | 207 | 0.24
LEHTINEN, JERE | 769 | 201 | 0.26
KARIYA, PAUL | 903 | 200 | 0.22
ELIAS, PATRIK | 745 | 193 | 0.26
(undrafted) | 527 | 193 | 0.37
PRONGER, CHRIS | 940 | 188 | 0.20
(undrafted) | 609 | 187 | 0.31
CHELIOS, CHRIS | 1616 | 169 | 0.10
ALFREDSSON, DANIEL | 853 | 168 | 0.20
GONCHAR, SERGEI | 904 | 166 | 0.18
HEATLEY, DANY | 425 | 166 | 0.39

Heatley's responsible defensive play appears to have been underrated for much of his career. No one talks about him as anything but a goal-scorer, but he puts up more assists than most pure goal-scorers and already finds himself in some pretty good company for adjusted +/-, with a lot of hockey still left to be played. Whether it has been through controlling the puck in the offensive zone, or backchecking dilligently, Heatley has had a good effect on his team's even strength goal differential.
 
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TheDevilMadeMe

Registered User
Aug 28, 2006
52,271
6,981
Brooklyn
With the 501st pick of the draft, the Swamp Devils select someone who I think has all the qualities to be a very effective #5 in this thing:

Albert “Battleship” Leduc, D

legendsofhockey said:
He was a clever goal scorer who often played rough when protecting his own end.

-Stanley Cups in 1931 and 1932
-right handed shot for the 2nd PP unit

-Paired with Sylvio Mantha as the 2 defensemen of the “All Pre-War Canadiens” Team, selected by Sports Illustrated for the 100th Anniversary of the Montreal Canadiens
Sports Illustrated said:
Speedy, strong and tough, Leduc was known as the Battleship in nine seasons with Montreal, scoring 56 goals. He then became a minor league player-coach, counting a young Hector (Toe) Blake among his charges.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/michael_farber/01/14/prewar.years/


One of the best offensive/rushing defensemen of his era

Canadiens official website said:
As adept with the puck as he was at retrieving it, Leduc scored at least five goals in every full season he played in Montreal, adding double-digit assist totals in most of those campaigns.

During his prime (1925-33), Leduc was:
-6th in regular season points by a defenseman. 1-5 are all in the Hall of Fame
-Tied for 1st (with King Clancy and Hap Day) in playoff points by a defenseman

-6th in playoff points (all players) in 1930

-One of the more notable increases in points-per-game between the regular season and the playoffs in hockey history: http://hfboards.com/showthread.php?t=334791&highlight=leduc (disclaimer – defenseman scoring is a small sample size in this era)


The Ironman blue-liner missed only 15 games over his first eight seasons with the Canadiens. In 1929-30 and 1930-31 Leduc was in the lineup every night, helping the Habs capture consecutive Stanley Cups. The durable defenseman picked up four points in the 1930 championship run, leading the team with three assists.


Fast and hits like a “Battleship”

legendsofhockey said:
"Battleship" spent eight years with Montreal delivering solid hits and making life difficult for opposing forwards. He helped the Canadiens win consecutive Stanley Cups in 1930 and 1931 and was a popular figure with the Forum crowd.

Canadiens official website said:
Always moving at top speed, his devastating body checks made him a fan favorite at the Forum. Cracking the NHL’s top 10 most penalized players list on three occasions, the robust rearguard fittingly earned himself the nickname “Battleship.”

Canadiens official website said:
When he took his first strides on Forum ice, he did so with big skates to fill. Replacing Sprague Cleghorn on the Habs’ blue-line was no easy task, but the Valleyfield, QC native quickly cemented his role as a pillar of the team’s defense corps.

As physically punishing and imposing as his predecessor, this hard-hitting defenceman was equally renowned for his ability to lead the rush, propelling him to a career high 10 goals in his rookie campaign in 1925-26

-Described as a “defensive ace” in newspaper accounts from the Globe and Mail (thanks, LF)
(See newspaper accounts below)

Durability:
Canadiens official website said:
The Ironman blue-liner missed only 15 games over his first eight seasons with the Canadiens. In 1929-30 and 1930-31 Leduc was in the lineup every night, helping the Habs capture consecutive Stanley Cups. The durable defenseman picked up four points in the 1930 championship run, leading the team with three assists.

-After his playing career, he became a minor league coach, helping to develop several players who went on to become all-time greats who played tremendous all-round games (Toe Blake and the Kraut Line among them).
Milt Schmidt said:
Leduc was the one who gave us the name, the 'Kraut Line”

Fun Fact:
Played goalie for 2 minutes, in 1931-32, replacing the penalized George Hainsworth.
http://www.habseyesontheprize.com/2008/12/17/695545/habs-goalies-one-game-wond

__________________

Newspaper Accounts from The Globe and Mail (courtesy of LeafsForever):

A penalty to S.Mantha early in the third period found Leduc in the hero role keeping out four-man Detroit rushes-Globe and Mail

Morenz, Leduc, Sylvio Mantha, Smith, XXX and XXX took turns thrilling the onlookers with masterful all-around work.- Globe and Mail

Joseph Albert Leduc, otherwise known as "Battleship" Leduc, is one of the most colorful figures in hockey. Besides being sturdy and effective defenseman, "Albair" is a scoring threat of considerate ability, and his stenming rush down the ice is sometimes the "piece de resistance" of an otherwise dull game. His legs working like pistons, Albert dashes down uweveres at no defrense. The outer guard combination that Albert has backed up before has not yet been developed, and he dives headlong into opposition when he reaches it. Most of the the time he barges through, and when he does he is deft with a shot or pass.- Globe and Mail

In the last period, "Hooley" Smith of the Maroons lost his temper, and took a swing with his stick at the silvering hari of "Pit" Lepine. He missed, and Leduc, husky Canadiens defenceman, sailed into "Hooley". A major penalty was awarded to Smith, and Leduc drew a minor. After the game was over, both jumped out of the penalty box and staged a hectic one-round fist fight at centre ice while 11,000 fans looked on and cheered.-Globe and Mail

One day overdue, but apparently in good shape, Albert "Battleship" Leduc, former defense ace of the Montreal Canadiens, turned out for the first time last night with the Ottawa Senators. Leduc teamed up on defence in the practice session with XXX, XXX and XXX, in turn, and was going in fine style. He blocked well, and his attacking plays were good.

"Battleship" Leduc was one of the hardest workers on the squad. Keeping up a continuous line of chatter, to the other players on his side, the Frenchman put everything he had into practice, to the delight of the railbirds.
 
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DoMakc

Registered User
Jun 28, 2006
1,369
431
George McNamara
8103818_109933959977.jpg


HHOF said:
He was a big, rugged defenseman and was in demand in those early years. McNamara played with four different clubs in four different leagues between 1908-09 and 1912-13. He was never a real offensive threat but did manage to score 15 goals in 16 games with the Waterloo Colts of the Ontario Professional Hockey League in 1910-11.
[...]
George and his brother, Howard, were known as the "Dynamite Twins" during their playing days because of their bone-crunching body checks.
 

Dreakmur

Registered User
Mar 25, 2008
18,637
6,894
Orillia, Ontario
“Although his playing days were over, his life in hockey was still in its infancy. NHL president Frank Calder suggested to Adams that he coach the Detroit Falcons, a second-year team that had lost money and struggled badly its first year in the NHL.

But the team quickly improved, and in 1934 the Red Wings, as Norris had nicknamed the team, made it to the finals before losing to Chicago. Two years later, 1936, they won their first Stanley Cup, and they repeated as champions in 1937. Adams was not only Detroit's on-ice authority but also its business manager, travelling secretary, and publicist. He was also loud, brash, and pugnacious, first as a player and then an executive. He was famous for storming the officials' room at the Olympia to berate the referee for calls he--Adams--objected to. But in the off-season, he'd fight tooth and nail at the governors' meetings for pay raises for the officials. That was his style--tough and fair.†– Legends of Hockey

“Adams was well known for his fearlessness on the ice, loyalty as a coach, and ruthlessness as a manager†– Canadian Sports Hall of Fame

“Without Jack “Jovial Jawn†Adams, there may not be a Detroit Red Wings franchise today… He was an exceptionally galvanic personality who would do anything to win and rarely concerned himself with the consequences.†– Who’s Who in Hockey

“Because of his success and longevity, the NHL named the coach of the year in his honour, and to this day the Jack Adams Award represents a coach's finest honour. Adams brought pride and joy to Detroit, and will forever be remembered in that city for his lifelong contributions to the game and the Red Wings' success.†– Legends of Hockey

“Although he was known as "Jovial Jawn," Adams liked big, tough players and physical play.†– HickokSports.com

With our 14th round selection, McGuire’s Monsters are pleased to select one of the most successful coached in NHL history. He was known for his loyalty to players and love for aggressive, tough hockey. Please welcome “Jolly Jackâ€â€¦.



Jack Adams!!!

Awards and Achievements:
3 x Stanley Cup Champion (1936, 1937, 1943)
7 x Stanley Cup Finalist (1934, 1936, 1937, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1945)

2 x First Team All-Star (1937, 1943)
Second Team All-Star (1945)
Lester Patrick Trophy (1966)

Canadian Sports Hall of Fame (1975)
Michigan Sports Hall of Fame

Coaching Record:
413 Regular Season Wins
52 Play-off Wins
 

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