NHL draft trivia

wetcoast

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Nov 20, 2018
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I was looking at the 1981 NHL draft and realized that the Vancouver Canucks had 4 first rounders from that draft play for them at some point.

Has any team ever had 5 or more first rounders from the same draft year play for the same franchise at any point in their careers.

It's still not as odd as the Maple Leafs having 3 first round picks in the 89 draft using all 3 picks for players from the same junior team in the OHL.

And they weren't very good players in their careers.
 

Staniowski

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Jan 13, 2018
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There were 5 1st rounders from the 1974 draft all playing for the Habs in the same season.

Doug Risebrough
Pierre Larouche
Cam Connor
Mario Tremblay
Rick Chartraw
 

vadim sharifijanov

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Oct 10, 2007
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canucks and the 94 draft—

from 2003 to 2006, their top two defensemen were jovo (the first overall pick) and ohlund (their own pick and arguably the best pick of the first round), their starting goalie was cloutier (the last pick of the first round), and their first farmhand call up on d was nolan baumgartner (the tenth overall pick).

and the fifth guy from that first round who once played for the canucks, overlapping briefly with jovo and ohlund in the spring of 2000, was the 25th pick... vadim sharifijanov.
 
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vadim sharifijanov

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2003 draft has a 7, a 6, and a 5

burns, suter, parise, vanek, staal, fehr, and shawn belle for the wild

LA had three picks that all played—their longtime captain and all time games played leader dustin brown, 34 games of brian boyle, and 4 games of jeff tambellini—plus carter and richards and phaneuf’s corpse

and the human garbage pile of horton, stewart, bernier, vanek’s corpse, and the great hugh jessiman
 

kaiser matias

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Mar 22, 2004
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canucks and the 94 draft—

from 2003 to 2006, their top two defensemen were jovo (the first overall pick) and ohlund (their own pick and arguably the best pick of the first round), their starting goalie was cloutier (the last pick of the first round), and their first farmhand call up on d was nolan baumgartner (the tenth overall pick).

and the fifth guy from that first round who once played for the canucks, overlapping briefly with jovo and ohlund in the spring of 2000, was the 25th pick... vadim sharifijanov.

They did even better at the 1999 draft, with 6 first rounders playing for them at one point, including 4 of the top 8 (Sedins, Kris Beech, Taylor Pyatt).
 
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vadim sharifijanov

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They did even better at the 1999 draft, with 6 first rounders playing for them at one point, including 4 of the top 8 (Sedins, Kris Beech, Taylor Pyatt).

there's still time for the 2008 draft haul to grow.

in a draft with doughty, pietrangelo, karlsson, and carlson, the canucks got luca sbisa, del zaster, luke schenn, and now tyler myers. plus our own pick of cody hodgson, who didn't know how to play defense, and bonus points for the 31st pick, jakob markstrom, who was the only reason our defense almost looked NHL calibre last year.

at least we didn't just kill our cap this summer and jake gardiner to a $30 million contract.... oops.
 

VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
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The WHA had a secret draft of two rounds by conference call early in 1974 to allow its GMs to offer loads of cash to persuade players to not choose the NHL.

Edmonton chose Clark Gillies,
Winnipeg selected Danny Gare,
Vancouver selected Ron Greschner.

Imagine if their stealth recruiting efforts had worked.

No Trio Grande Line,
no #18 retired jersey in Buffalo,
no 16-year Rag dman (ranked 12th in 100 Ranger Greats).
 
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wetcoast

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Nov 20, 2018
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The WHA had a secret draft of two rounds by conference call early in 1974 to allow its GMs to offer loads of cash to persuade players to not choose the NHL.

Edmonton chose Clark Gillies,
Winnipeg selected Danny Gare,
Vancouver selected Ron Greschner.

Imagine if their stealth recruiting efforts had worked.

No Trio Grande Line,
no French Connection,
no 16-year Rag dman (ranked 12th in 100 Ranger Greats).

I thought Richard, Robert and Perreault were the French Connection, Gare is from BC.

Speaking about guys that I sorta forgot about Rene Robert is one, kind of the early 70's version of Charlie Simmer who hit it big playing with already established superstars.
 
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Normand Lacombe

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Jan 30, 2008
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6 first rounders from 1979 suited up for the Flyers.

Rob Ramage: 1993-94
Doug Sulliman: 1988-90
Brian Propp: 1979-90
Brad McCrimmon: 1982-87
Jay Wells: 1988-90
Ray Allison: 1981-85, 1987
 
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wetcoast

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Nov 20, 2018
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In the 75 draft the first 7 players selected were from the WHL and 10 of 18 overall in the first round.

Pat Price would make it 11 as he was playing in the WHA but was a WHL product and undoubtedly would have gone in the top 3 if he had stayed in the WHL for his draft year.
 

Johnny Engine

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Jul 29, 2009
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I thought Richard, Robert and Perreault were the French Connection, Gare is from BC.

Speaking about guys that I sorta forgot about Rene Robert is one, kind of the early 70's version of Charlie Simmer who hit it big playing with already established superstars.
You're correct that Gare wasn't on the French Connection - but it was Rick Martin, not anyone with the last name Richard, that joined Perreault and Robert. That's probably who you meant.
Gare had a great line of his own on the Sabres - adding some jam and scoring ability to Craig Ramsay and Don Luce's line.
 

crobro

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Aug 8, 2008
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The Canucks had 3 1st rounders in 1990

Petr Nedved
Shawn Antoski
Jiri Slegr

All played in 93
 

wetcoast

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Nov 20, 2018
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You're correct that Gare wasn't on the French Connection - but it was Rick Martin, not anyone with the last name Richard, that joined Perreault and Robert. That's probably who you meant.
Gare had a great line of his own on the Sabres - adding some jam and scoring ability to Craig Ramsay and Don Luce's line.

Yes you are right, at my advanced age sometimes the thought doesn't match what is reality.

And yes you are right Buffalo's top 6 was an incredible mix, too bad it was in the era of Orr and the /bruins, the Habs dynasty and Bernie Parent and the Flyers.
 

vadim sharifijanov

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Oct 10, 2007
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if we look at the long game, washington is probably ahead. i think i’d rather have mike ridley and kevin miller than one single playoff series win, john cullen, zz, handing pittsburgh two cups, and a move to north carolina.
 

Dennis Bonvie

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Dec 29, 2007
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canucks and the 94 draft—

from 2003 to 2006, their top two defensemen were jovo (the first overall pick) and ohlund (their own pick and arguably the best pick of the first round), their starting goalie was cloutier (the last pick of the first round), and their first farmhand call up on d was nolan baumgartner (the tenth overall pick).

and the fifth guy from that first round who once played for the canucks, overlapping briefly with jovo and ohlund in the spring of 2000, was the 25th pick... vadim sharifijanov.

Did you have injury problems?
 

vadim sharifijanov

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Oct 10, 2007
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Did you have injury problems?

the problem was somewhere on the spectrum of sandlak—brendl—jessiman—virtanen, only with some PEDs mixed in there.

Sharifijanov burst onto to the international hockey scene in 1992, when he was named a tournament all-star after scoring 8 goals in 6 games at the European U18 Championships at the age of only 16. After two solid seasons with Salavat Yulaev Ufa of the Russian Super League, he was selected in the first round (25th overall) of the 1994 NHL Entry Draft by the New Jersey Devils. He spent one more year in Russia with HC CSKA Moscow before coming to North America, and also turned in a stellar performance at the 1995 World Junior Championships, recording 10 points in 7 games.

Sharifijanov joined the Albany River Rats, New Jersey's AHL affiliate, after the Russian season ended in 1995, and scored 2 points in his first North American professional game. However, his progress to the NHL would be slow in a deep New Jersey system, and his first three full seasons were spent almost entirely in Albany, appearing in only 2 NHL games during the 1996–97 campaign.

In 1998–99, Sharifijanov was finally promoted to the Devils and turned in a highly successful rookie season, recording 11 goals and 27 points in just 53 games. Stocky and strong on the puck, he displayed a well-rounded all-around game and a solid touch around the net.

However, in 1999–00 his play fell off considerably. After scoring just 3 goals in 20 games for the Devils, and showing a marked drop-off in his defensive play, Sharifijanov was shipped to the Vancouver Canucks for a draft pick. In Vancouver, he made an instant impact, scoring a goal on his first shift as a Canuck, but it was all downhill from there as he quickly became a healthy scratch and earned a reputation for lazy play. He finished the season with just 5 goals and 10 points in 37 games, as well as a +/- rating of a dismal -13.

The 2000–01 season would prove no better, as Sharifijanov failed to crack the Canucks' roster out of training camp and was assigned to the Kansas City Blades of the International Hockey League, where he spent the entire season. Released by the Canucks, Sharifijanov returned to Russia. He would continue to struggle in Russia, however, and would suit up for 6 different Super League teams in the next three seasons without making any significant impact for any of them. After brief stints in France and Sweden, Sharifijanov signed on with Torpedo Nizhny Tagil of the Russian 2nd division in 2005, and has played there since.

In 92 NHL games, Sharifijanov recorded 16 goals and 21 assists for 37 points, along with 50 penalty minutes. His sudden decline in ability while still a young player remains unexplained - at age 23, he was a key young player on an elite NHL team, and by the time he turned 26 he was already unable to hold down a regular job on low-level RSL teams. In 2005, Sharifijanov admitted to using steroids early in his career when he was with the Russian league, Russian National junior team, and New Jersey Devils. He said he stopped using them in 2001 and shrunk from his 205 lb. weight to 170 lb. weight. Sharifijanov also stated that it helped rise as a young player in the Russian league when he was a teenager and when began play with the New Jersey Devils.
 

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