ATD 2010 Bios

Leafs Forever

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Jul 14, 2009
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Credit to EB for most of the bio, and Dreakmur for providing some numbers.



Name: Buddy O'Connor
Height: 5'8''
Weight: 142 lbs
Position: Center
Shoots: Right
Date of Birth: June 21, 1916
Place of Birth: Montreal, Canada
Date of Death: August 24, 1977 (Age: 61)

Stanley Cup Champion (1944, 1946)
Stanley Cup Finalist (1947, 1950)
Hart Memorial Trophy (1948)
Lady Byng Memorial Trophy (1948)
Second All-Star Team Centre (1948)
Played in NHL All-Star Game (1949)
Team Captain (1949-1950)
Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame (1988)

Top-10 Scoring (2nd, 9th)
Top-10 Goalscoring (9th)
Top-10 Assist (2nd, 3rd, 4th, 9th)
*0.78 Point per game in the regular season*
Top-10 Playoff Scoring (3rd, 5th, 10th, 10th)
Top-10 Playoff Goalscoring (4th, 6th, 8th)
Top-10 Playoff Assist (5th, 6th, 7th, 8th)
*0.68 Point per game in the playoffs*
Calder Nomination (2nd)
Hart Nomination (1st)
Lady Bing Nomination (1st, 2nd, 4th, 4th)


- When O'Connor broke into the leage in 1942, he was paired with linemates Pete Morin and Gerry Heffernan to form the famous ''Razzle-Dazzle''
- In 1948, O'Connor missed the scoring title by a single point
- He was the first to receive both the Hart and the Lady Bing trophy the same year
- O'Connor was named Canada's athlete of the year for 1948
- He missed a significant part of the 1948-49 season due to injuries sustained in a car accident
- In 1952, he was named Player/Coach of Cincinnati in the American Hockey League
- O'Connor was the first Hall of Fame inductee into the Veteran category
- O'Connor his 22nd All-Time in term of point per game as a Montreal Canadiens (0.860)

Scoring:
1941-1951

6th in Points
3rd in Assists

1943-1950
5th in Play-off Points
5th in Play-off Goals
4th in Play-off Assists

Quote:
Originally Posted by Trail of the Stanley Cup, vol.3
Buddy was a fast and tricky centre with exceptional ability as a playmaker. He could control the puck and his smooth and accurate passes seemed almost effortless. He had a quiet and unasuming manner that enabled him to keep out of trouble, and in consequence he had an extraordinary penalty record.

He played six years with Canadiens but was always under the shadow of the ''Punch'' Line. Finally, when Elmer Lach was forced out of injuries in 1947, O'Connor took his spot between Blake and Richard and the ''Punch'' Line was just as effective. Towards the end of the season, he was injured himself but was back for the playoffs and was a star in the final series against Toronto.[/b]

In 1950, he was a star in the playoffs when the Rangers eliminated the Canadiens and almost won the Cup in a close seven-game series against Detroit.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Montreal Canadiens, our history
A MASTERFUL PLAYMAKER WITH EXCEPTIONAL FINISH, BUDDY O’CONNOR AVERAGED ALMOST A POINT A GAME OVER THE COURSE OF HIS SIX SEASONS IN MONTREAL.

According to conventional wisdom, 5-foot-7, 142-pound Herbert “Buddy” O’Connor was too small to play in the rough-and-tumble NHL. The Montreal native proved the experts wrong, playing six stellar seasons with the Canadiens to begin his Hall of Fame career.

While Morin and Heffernan’s careers were short, O’Connor established himself as one of the most entertaining and talented players in the game. A masterful stickhandler and powerful skater who could control the puck as well with his skates as with his stick, O’Connor often wove his way through entire opposing teams.

In his first three seasons with the Canadiens, the newcomer accumulated over 100 assists, lifting fans from their seats with his artistry before dishing the puck to teammates who almost invariably redirected it to the back of the net.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Habs Heroes
Herbert 'Buddy' O'Connor had to leave Montreal to earn star status in the NHL, but that should in no way minimize what he contributed to the Montreal Canadiens. O'Connor was an important piece in the Canadiens' climb back to responsability in the 1940's. [...] A scoring star with the Montreal Royals before joining the Canadiens, O'Connor posted some pretty impressive numbers for the Habs.

O'Connor had consecutive seasons of 58 and 54 points with the Canadiens, largely because of his playmaking skills.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Pelletier
Buddy was a soft-spoken Irishman who was one of the lightest players in NHL history, only weighing 142Ibs. He was a very skilled puck handler with great passing skills. He rarely picked up a penalty and only received 34 PIMs in 509 games.

He enjoyed a very fine career with Montreal and as a sophomore the fine playmaker managed to score 58 points, including 43 assists, in only 50 games which was good enough to make the top ten in league scoring.

He continued to play some very solid hockey with Montreal, including during the 1946 Stanley Cup championship

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sunlight, les meilleurs joueurs de tous les temps
Très rapide et remarquable instigateur, il se démarquait pratiquement sans effort. À Montréal, il jouait dans l'ombre de la ''Punch Line''. Il fut ensuite capitaine de la formation des Rangers qui acculèrent Detroit au mur lors de la finale de la Coupe en 1950.

- ''He's one of those guys who didn't quite blossom as well as he might have in Montreal becasue they had a lot of stars.'' Eric Zweig, historian

- ''In his first full season, he finished 10th in NHL scoring, which isn't bad. He gave them depth and he was a playmaking, checking centerman who never gave up.'' - Ernie Fitzsimmons, historian
 

Velociraptor

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May 12, 2007
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Big Smoke
LENNART "LILL-STRIMMA" SVEDBERG

080812-lill-strimma-2.jpg


- was born on February 29, 1944 in Östrand, Sweden
- began playing hockey as a forward
- As a senior he made his debut in Wifsta / Östrand (later Timrå) as a 16-year old.
- Svedberg made his international debut on the Swedish national team in a game against Czechoslovakia on December 8, 1961.

Article thanks to, Patrick Houda: http://www.1972summitseries.com/othersvedberg.html

Patrick Houda said:
"He was an exceptionally creative defenseman who was a joy to watch.

His unpredictable moves and effortless skating made him extremely hard to stop. He was a Paul Coffey type of player in regards of skating and offensive play. He didn't score many goals, but he set up a lot and created havoc in the offensive zone. He had his weaknesses in his defensive play, which of course wasn't strange considering the fact that he had been a forward for over 15 years."

After the 1968 Olympic tournament legendary Russian trainer Anatoli Tarasov invited Lill-Strimma to Moscow and the CSKA team. He wanted Lill-Strimma to train with them. Lill-Strimma even played a friendly game for the CSKA team against Dynamo Moscow. Tarasov was fascinated by Lill-Strimma's spontaneous rushes and his creativeness. Lill-Strimma remembered how he was late for one of the training sessions.

Lennart Svedberg said:
"One morning I came late to the training, so they punished me by letting me jump over the boards
back and forth 25 times. You bet that I wasn't late again."

In 1969 he was on Detroit Red Wings training camp, training alongside such legends as Gordie Howe and Alex Delvecchio. Detroit's GM Sid Abel suggested to Svedberg that he should stay in Detroit. But Svedberg and his wife went back home to Sweden.

Svedberg represented Sweden 125 times, scoring 16 goals. He was named to the World Championship All-Star team three years in a row (1968-70). In 1970 he was voted as the best defenseman in the World Championships.

Patrick Houda said:
He was a "Michelangelo" on ice.
 

Leafs Forever

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Jul 14, 2009
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Credit to overpass for providing some of the numbers and the globe and mail quote.

Back in the 1940s few defensemen were tougher than Pat "Boxcar" Egan-Joe Pelletier

But the 5'10" and 190lb defender proved to be one of the most rugged rearguards around. His 185 minutes in penalties led the league. Egan brought his hard-hitting approach east in 1939-40, playing with Eddie Shore's Springfield Indians of the American Hockey League. He also got his first taste of NHL action, participating in 10 games, scoring 4 goals and 7 points. Egan stuck with the Amerks for good in the 1940-41 season. He entered the league with an established reputation for his toughness, which meant he was test with fists and liberal use of sticks with great frequency. The rookie passed the test nicely, earning instant respect from his peers.

As time went on he also developed a reputation as a good skater with a heavy shot. With the weak NY Americans team he was relied on to rush the puck out of the zone and man a point on the power play. By his second season in the NHL the pugnacious Egan was named a 2nd Team NHL All Star on defense.-Joe Pelletier

His offensive numbers would fall off, but he became a fan favorite in Boston for the next five seasons. With his hard-hitting, rambunctious style, he became an all around solid presence. He was unforgiving with his physical play in his own zone. -Joe Pelletier

Martin J. (Pat) Egan, a hard rock hockey product from Blackie, Alberta, who was introduced into the National League a few years back with Brooklyn Americans by “Red” Dutton, tossed fadeaway shots that mystified Frank McCool and hoisted the Boston Bruins to a 5-3 decision over the Leafs here Saturday night.

A turnstile count of 14, 435, one of the largest of the season, saw Egan rifle a high shot past McCool midway through the second period to tie the score at 2-2, and then deliver another buzz bomb at shinbone height a minute later to move the league-leading Bruins into their victory groove.

Hockey’s Hardest Shot?
Six years ago Egan brought into the NHL one of the hardest shots any goaltender had been asked to handle since Charley Conacher was firing ‘em and scoring ‘em from the hip. Two seasons back, with Detroit Red Wings and then Bruins, Martin J. bagged 15. Saturday’s double brought his count to six for the current campaign, best figure credited to a defenseman in a new style game in which rear guards had not been rolling up scores the way many observers predicted..

Like many other high-powered puck drivers, Egan’s shots are as apt to whistle past a goaltender’s ear or wind up in the end blues as find the target. Saturday he was on the beam twice. Critical fans, well out of Egan’s range, opined that McCool fanned on both shots. They were drives from 30 feet out, and from the right wing side. We’ve seen Brimsek, Thompson, Chabot, Mowers, and a dozen others miss the same kind. After all, McCool isn’t Houdini.

Egan’s defensive play was as impressive as his sniping. He tossed out half a dozen jolts, far above par in this season of the “Vanished Body Check”. His blocking on the Metz-Hamilton breakaway was the high defensive spot of the night. Not only did Blackie Pat take care of Nick, but he wound up with the puck. -Globe and Mail, February 4, 1946

The Toronto St.Pats are proud to select, a very tough, offensive defenceman to round out our top-4...


PAT EGAN

Awards and Achievements
1 x NHL Second Team All Star (1942)
2 x NHL PIM Leader (1942, 1945)

Top 20s
Points amongst defencemen- 12th (1941), 3rd(1942), 2nd(1944), 6th(1945), 4th(1946), 1st(1947), 6th(1948), 1st(1949), 10th(1950), 10th(1951)

Playoff Points amongst defencemen- 7th(1945)*, 2nd(1946)*, 6th(1947)*, 6th(1948*,4th(1950)

*- achieved with particularly low numbers due to era's. From 1945-1950, Egan was 2nd in points and 10th in points per game amongst defencemen (playing over 20 more games than some of the defencemen ahead of him hurt him there).

During the 1940s, Egan was:

2nd among defencemen in games played (Jack Crawford)
2nd amoung defencemen in goals scored (Flash Hollett)
3rd among defencemen in points scored (Babe Pratt, Flash Hollett)
4th among defencemen in points per game (Flash Hollett, Babe Pratt, Earl Seibert)
1st among defencemen in PIM
 

Leaf Lander

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#22 Rick Vaive,RW

Vaive was a gritty player who would fight quite a bit early in his career.
Vaive had a deadly shot and was one of the leagues top power forwards before the term was popular. His three 50 goal seasons are particularly impressive when you consider he never had a top playmaker as a linemate in Toronto. His one offensive weakness was that he would often shoot instead of passing to a teammate in a better scoring position. That's just the instinct of a natural goalscorer. Defensively, while never a Selke contender, Vaive was more defensively responsible than most 50 goal scorers of the 80s. His reputation as the hardest worker on the Leafs was well earned.

During a 3 yr period in the nhl only Bossy and Gretzky scored more goals then Ricky Vaive.

Interesting question: I wonder how differently Vaive's career would be judged if he had those exact same 50 goal seasons in the 80s as a member of the Islanders or Oilers instead of the hapless Leafs
RS:876 441 347 788 1445
PO:54 27 16 43 111
NHL Seasons 13
Played in NHL All-Star Game (1982, 1983, 1984)
20 Goal Seasons - 12
30 Goal Seasons -10
40 Goal Seasons -4
50 Goal Seasons -3
50 Point Seasons -10
60 Point Seasons - 8
80 + Points -2
90 + Points -1
Top 5 Goals Rick Vaive 81-92 -Toronto 54
Top 7 Goals Rick Vaive 82-83 Toronto 51
Top 5 Goals Rick Vaive 83-84 Toronto 52
Best Season :1983-84 Toronto Maple Leafs 76 52 41 93
Role-Sniper/Power Forward
 

Leaf Lander

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#21 Bobby Baun, D
His game? Look up the term "hard rock" in the dictionary and there would be a picture of #21. Also check out "irrepressible".

A prototypical defensive defenceman, Baun's overtime goal in game six of the 1964 finals gave the Leafs a new life, and they beat the Wings in the final game, at home, 4-0 to win their third straight Stanley Cup. His overtime goal was scored on a fractured ankle. Earlier that game, Baun was taken off on a stretcher after being felled by a slapshot. He returned, ankle frozen and taped, to score what Sports Illustrated ranked as the 17th greatest sports moment in the 20th century. However to me what was even more amazing than coming back in that game as he was likely running on adrenalin at that point, was that two nights later he would play Game 7 and help the Leafs win the Cup without missing a shift

His philosophy was "You don't have to kill every forward coming down the ice, just slow them up a little." Few opposing players coming into the Leafs end of the rink ever came in with their heads down against Baun.Baun played a lot of minutes for a very long time, he could hit like Scott Stevens !! As for his fighting, he always showed up for the fight, he was fearless.

The only thing I could add was that Baun was one of the most courageous players the Leafs had in the 60's. For a time, Baun was the only player to stand up to John Ferguson. And, when Baun left the Leafs the first time, the Leafs' downhill slide started.
RS 964 37 187 224 1493
PO 96 3 12 15 171
17 NHL seasons
4 Stanley Cups
Best Season
Played in NHL All-Star Game (1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1968)
10 Point season 13
20 Point seasons -2
Best Season:1970-71 Detroit/Leafs 69 1 20 21 147
Defensive Defenceman/SparkPlug Hitter
 

Leaf Lander

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#99 Wayne Gretzky,C

Each season his skills increased dramatically and he soon set scoring records that seemed preposterous, notably a 378-goal season in his last year in pee wee in Brantford.


Wayne "the White Tornado" Gretzky later known as "the Great one" . Waynes game was unique and almost impenetrable. The area behind the opposition goal was dubbed "Gretzky's office" because it was from there that he made so many perfect passes for goals. He was equally known for using the trailing man on rushes rather than a man skating ahead of him. Gretzky would come in over the blue line and then curl, waiting for a defenseman, often Coffey, to join the rush and create a great scoring chance. When on the ice to kill penalties, Gretzky wasn't looking to ice the puck in a defensive role; he was looking to take the other team by surprise, to take advantage of their defenselessness to score shorthanded. The result was goals and more goals - the Oilers scoring 400 a season as a matter of routine - and Gretzky won the scoring race virtually every year in the 1980s.-HOF

Gretzky sees a picture out there that no one else sees," Boston Bruins General Manager Harry Sinden would say.
Era Late 70's -Early 19990's
Seasons 20
RS 1487 894 1963 2857
PO 80 46 64 110
Stanley Cups 4
NHL All-Star Team (2nd)1979-80, 1987-88, 1988-89, 1989-90,1993-94, 1996-97, 1997-98
NHL All-Star Team (1st) 1980-81,1981-82,1982-83, 1983-84,1984-85,1985-86,1986-87 1990-91
All-Star Games 80-86 AND 88 TILL 99
NHL Hart Memorial Trophy 1979-80,1980-81,1981-82, 1982-83, 1983-84, 1984-85, 1985-86,1986-87, 1988-89,
Lady Byng Memorial Trophy 1979-80,1990-91, 1991-92, 1993-94, 1998-99,
NHL Art Ross Trophy 1980-81,1981-82, 1982-83, 1983-84,
1984-85, 1985-86, 1986-87, 1989-90, 1990-91, 1993-94,
Lester B. Pearson Award 1981-82,1982-83, 1983-84, 1984-85, 1986-87
Conn Smythe Trophy 1984-85 1987-88
Role: Franchise Player/Generational Talent
 

BillyShoe1721

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Mar 29, 2007
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D Valery Vasiliev

vasiliev.jpg


International Awards and Acheivements:
Member of the IIHF Hall of Fame (1998)
National Team Captain

2 x Olympic Gold Medalist (1972, 1976)
Olympic Silver Medalist (1980)
Canada Cup Gold Medal (1981)
9 x World Championship Gold Medalist (1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982)
Olympic Silver Medalist (1980)

3 x IIHF Best Defenseman (1973, 1977, 1979)
5 x IIHF All-Star (1974, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1981)

Represented Russia in the following events:
1972 Summit Series
1976 Canada Cup
1979 Challenge Cup
1981 Canada Cup

Soviet League Awards and Acheivements:
Order of the Red Banner of Labour (1978)
Merited Sports Master (1973)

8 x Soviet League All-Star (1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1981)

Russian League MVP Voting: 5th(1973), 3rd(1974), 6th(1975), 12th(1976), 7th(1977), 14th(1978), 4th(1980)
Golden Stick (presented to best player in all of Europe): 3rd(1980), 8th(1981), 8th(1982)

Soviet League Scoring:
Among Soviet Defensemen – 6th(1968), 4th(1969), 2nd(1970), 4th(1971), 5th(1972), 4th(1973), 1st(1974), 3rd(1975), 1st(1976), 3rd(1977), 5th(1978), 3rd(1979), 4th(1980), 7th(1981), 4th(1982), 5th(1983), 5th(1984)

Considered by many to be the toughest and most physical defenseman in Russian hockey history, Valeri Vasiliev was a punishing hitter who loved the physical play. Valeri reminded people of Hall of Famer Tim Horton.

He didn't have the offensive flair like xxx or Vyacheslav Fetisov but was better defensively. Opponents hated to play against him because it could be painful. As a surprise to many opponents Valeri was only 6'0" and 190 Ibs but played like a much bigger player. He put several opponents on the injury list during his career.

Valeri was a born leader and was a longtime captain of the national team. He was a two time Olympic Gold medalist (1972 and 1976). He was a eight time World Champion, being voted the best defenseman three times (1973, 1977 and 1979) and being named to 5 WC All-Star teams. Valeri represented his country 284 times and scored 44 goals. He was a member of the "super five" together with his partner on the blue line xxx and behind the troika of Kharlamov-xxx-xxx, the predecessors of the xxx-xxx-xxx unit with xxx and Fetisov.

Because of his physical style he loved to play against NHL opposition. He thrived in that environment, and because of that the Russian Strongman was one early Russian player who likely would have excelled in the NHL.

He played in the 1972 Summit Series as well as the 1979 Challenge Cup. Valeri had a big part in neutralizing Wayne Gretzky, Guy Lafleur, xxx and the other Canadian superstars in the 1981 Canada Cup final. That was the only year the Soviets won the Canada Cup. Vasliev, as team captain, accepted the famous trophy.

Vasiliev was also a very efficient and speedy skater, despite looking quite awkward. He had an unusual way of propelling himself down the ice. He did not lift his skates off the ice while rapidly accelerating. This allowed him incredible stability. He was almost impossible to knock him off his feet.

Valeri has never been replaced on the national team by someone who could match his physical play and toughness. It's an element that has been sorely missed on the Russian national team over the years.

-Joe Pelletier

Valeri Vasiliev was a slick skater and passer, but also known for his physical play, which was sometimes frowned upon back in the Russian leagues. That opinion seemed to change after 1972.

Considered by many to be the toughest and most physical defenseman in Russian hockey history, Valeri Vasiliev was a punishing hitter who loved the physical play. Valeri reminded people of Hall of Famer Tim Horton.

He didn't have the offensive flair like XXXXXXXX or Vyacheslav Fetisov but was better defensively. Opponents hated to play against him because it could be painful. As a surprise to many opponents Valeri was only 6'0" and 190 Ibs but played like a much bigger player. He put several opponents on the injury list during his career.

Valeri was a born leader and was a long-time captain of the national team. He was a eight time World Champion (1970, 73,74,75,78,79,81 and 82) and a two time Olympic Gold medallist (1972 and 76). In 1973,77 and 79 he was voted as the best defenseman of the World Championships. He also made the All-Star team in 1974,75,77,79 and 81. Valeri represented his country 284 times and scored 44 goals.
Because of his physical style he loved to play against NHL opposition. He thrived in that environment. He played in the 1972 Summit Series as well as the 1979 Challenge Cup. Valeri had a big part in neutralizing Wayne Gretzky, Guy Lafleur, XXXXXXX and the other Canadian superstars in the 1981 Canada Cup final.

Many experts on Soviet hockey would name Valery Vasiliev as one of the most successful Russian players in the history of the game. Born in Gorky (Nizny Novgorod), Valery was brought to Dynamo Moscow in 1967 for his promising results in the junior teams. The young prospect impressed Moscow recruiters with his strength, skating skills and passing. Like his teammate XXXXXXXXX, Vasiliev spent his hockey career with Dynamo Moscow and, though he received plenty of gold medals and awards on the international level, he wasn’t able to capture gold in the USSR Championship. Vasiliev established himself as a flashy blueliner that loved to play physical game with effective and seemingly effortless bodychecking and impressive scoring results.
-1972 Summit Series

We knew that Vasiliev was a rough and tough player. He had been criticized by the media for some 'dirty tricks'. But comparing him with Canadian players, he looked like one of the cleanest hitters in the world.
-Yuri Vanyat

“He has never been replaced on the national team by someone who could match his physical play and toughness. It's an element that has been sorely missed on the Russian national team over the years.” – A September to Remember

“He didn't have the offensive flair like Alexei Kasatonov or Vyacheslav Fetisov but was better defensively. Opponents hated to play against him because it could be painful. As a surprise to many opponents he was only 6'0" and 190 Ibs but played like a much bigger player. He put several opponents on the injury list during his career.” – A September to Remember

“He was a slick skater and passer, but also known for his physical play.” “He was a born leader and was a long-time captain of the national team.”– A September to Remember

“Considered by many to be the toughest and most physical defenseman in Russian hockey history, he was a punishing hitter who loved the physical play. He reminded people of Hall of Famer Tim Horton.” – A September to Remember
 
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BillyShoe1721

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Mar 29, 2007
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Philadelphia, PA
C Vladimir Shadrin

vladimirshadrin2.jpg


Soviet League top-5 scoring finishes: 4th (72-73)
Soviet League MVP voting finishes: 6th (70-71), 6th (75-76), 7th (72-73), 11th (69-70), 15th (76-77), 16th (74-75)
Olympics top-5 scoring: 1st (1976)
1972 Summit Series: 4th points

Shadrin was second in team scoring, 4th overall in the tournament. He centered a line featuring Alexander Yakushev, perhaps CCCP's best player. His job was to set up the Big Yak. Yakushev emerged as a Soviet superstar in this series, and that, according to sports writer Yuri Lukashin is directly related to the play of his center - Shadrin

"The excellent performance of Alexander Yakushev can in part be attributed to Vladimir Shadrin. Aside from averaging one point a game, Shadrin was the best Soviet defensive forward in the series."

There is little doubt that most of the Soviet players from this 1972 team could have played in the NHL. Shadrin would have been an a star.

http://www.1972summitseries.com/shadrin.html

In Austria, the USSR team, surely wins the match for the match goes to the finals of the tournament, where it awaits a crucial match with a team of Czechoslovakia - traditionally "inconvenient" rival.

In the first period, the Czechs secured quite a good start, going ahead 2:0. "Moment of Truth" in the game came when two Soviet forwards were sent off with penalties, and the Czechs had almost a 2 minute power play.

Coach of the USSR, XXXXX walked slowly along the narrow corridor between the players and the rink. With defenders he determined rather quickly - XXXXX and XXXXX. The forward remained. XXXXX looked each of the players in the eye... Despite the fact that the "battle" exploded Kharlamov, Mikhailov, Yakushev, in the eyes of Vladimir Shadrin he read the determination to take the game itself ... And this unit did not let him down - indeed, the rivals almost failed to create real threats to Tretyak's goal in these dramatic moments. And soon the game was perelomlen, and we eventually won 3-2.

The heroes of this game traveled to the locker room almost on all fours. Team trainer Oleg Belakovsky then quite seriously said: "For all health indicators, guys, you need to put in intensive care ..."
-Shadrin's penalty killing prowess

Soviet hockey has had many wonderful forward trios in its 30 year history. The lines of XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, Starshinov before, links Petrov's line and Shadrin's line today. And in each such great unit, a weighty role belongs to the center-directing role.

In this sense, it is difficult to overestimate the contribution to the successes of the USSR national team - European champion, world and Olympic champion, as well as the Moscow club Spartak - now the champion of the USSR - Honored Master of Sports, a Knight of the Order of Honor and medals "For Labor Valor" Komsomolets Vladimir Shadrin.
-Intro to an interview with Shadrin

Vladimir Shadrin as a hockey player was not an outstanding figure - specific, pronounced physical qualities did not differ. However, for Spartak and for the USSR national team he has been extremely useful. What is Shadrin’s secret?

First of all, it should be noted he had brilliantly developed hockey sense. In Shadrin’s game no big drops, disruption. For his linemates, he provided the puck and subtly and skillfully, and most importantly, on time. Hockey valued - from Shadrin’s stick it very rarely went to the opponent.

A man of high culture, there was no need to make him train. There was no need to monitor the behavior of Vladimir in the home - he valued his reputation. Coaches always appreciated Vladimir Shadrin for high degree of organization, for understanding the role of the Frontline in the link. He was a long-time partner of Alexander Yakushev and in his own club and the USSR national team.
-Russian Hockey Stars

The Soviet hockey factory has been able to churn out replacements for such stars as Viacheslav Starshinov, Anatoli Firsov, Vladimir Shadrin, the incomparable Rags Ragulin - just to name a few who would have been welcomed by any coach in the NHL
-Milt Dunnell

We went to Canada without such important men as Boris Mikhailov, Vladimir Petrov, Valeri Kharlamov, Vladimir Shadrin, and Alexander Yakushev, using untried players instead...Now we have a more orderly process for replacing our most famous players without losing good results.
-Boris Mayorov

The Soviet Ice Hockey Federation is prepared to start giving its older players permission to play in North America, and several - including national team star Vladimir Shadrin - could be playing in the World Hockey Association within the next year.

The negotiations were so successful that only three months ago the Edmonton Oilers thought they had made a deal that would have made the 30-year-old Shadrin a playing coach with the club.

Oiler vice-president Larry Gordon said that they were extremely close to a deal when the Soviets said they would have to wait another year.
-Toronto Star

Aggie Kukulowicz tells the following story from his vantage as the NHL's interpreter in the box: "Redmond came in and said Shadrin was a son-of-a-*****. I asked him why didn't he tell Shadrin that. He said it was a good idea and I passed the message on. Shadrin answered "but he's a professional and I'm only an amateur" to which Redmond replied "tell the...he's no more an amateur than a ..." Shadrin told me to tell Redmond he only makes $200 a month and wanted to know how much Redmond makes. By this time they were looking at each other and smiling. Redmond then said "tell him he's not very smart, but he's all right anyway."

Shadrin, 27, actually is very smart. He is a petro-chemical engineer, specializing in mathematics.

For 11 years Shadrin has been centring for the big, loping Wing forward Alexandre Yakushev. Shadrin said he'd like to retire soon.
-Globe & Mail

The excellent performance of Alexander Yakushev can in part be attributed to Vladimir Shadrin. Aside from averaging one point a game, Shadrin was the best Soviet defensive forward in the series.
-Yuri Lakushin

Vladimir Shadrin established himself as a premiere top ranked Soviet center in the 1970's. He was a slick passer with a powerful and accurate shot on goal. Shadrin was a driving force behind the success of the famous Spartak's line in Team USSR. Most of his goals and assists came as a result of his team work with Alexander Yakushev. Shadrin showed a top level performance at both ends of the ice. He was a distinguished master of penalty killing. His remarkable mastery became a subject of hockey books when Shadrin, XXXXX and XXXXX managed to overcome a 2-men advantage of Czechoslovakia in a key game at the Olympics in 1976.
-Arthur Chidlovski

“Shadrin showed a top level performance at both ends of the ice. He was a distinguished master of penalty killing”

“There is little doubt that most of the Soviet players from this 1972 team could have played in the NHL. Shadrin would have been a star.”

“He was a slick passer with a powerful and accurate shot on goal”

“Aside from averaging one point a game, Shadrin was the best Soviet defensive forward in the series."
 

BillyShoe1721

Terriers
Mar 29, 2007
17,252
6
Philadelphia, PA
W Vsevolod Bobrov

a093953.jpg


7x Soviet League Champion
1956 Olympic Gold Medalist
2x World Champion (1954, 1956)
254 goals in 13 career Soviet League games
89 goals in 59 career national team games
Member IIHF Hockey Hall of Fame
Was an amazingly elite soccer player, participated in Winter and Summer Olympics
Carried the 1954 Soviet World Championship team on his back

Even the legendary Maurice "Rocket" Richard was very impressed by Bobrov: " Bobrov is an outstanding individual and a great player. I consider him being one of the ten best players in hockey history" Richard said in an interview in the late 1950's.

Vsevolod "Seve" Bobrov was nicknamed the Russian Rocket as he was compared to the best player in the world at that time, Rocket Richard. He never displayed Richard's temper or intensity, but was every bit as explosive and hungry for goals.

At this time Bobrov was more interested in ice hockey though. He played hockey for CDKA Moscow between 1945-49 and 1953-59. In between (1949-52) he played for VVS Moscow (as a playing coach).

In 1948 Bobrov scored 52 goals, compared to the runner-up who had 23. He also won the league scoring crown in 1951 (41 goals) and 1952 (34 goals). Bobrov (mostly a left wing) scored a total of 243 goals in 130 games. Other Russian hockey players soon started to look up to him and he became the leader and "icon" for them.

Bobrov led the Russians to world championship Gold medals in 1954 and 56. He won the Silver in 1955 and 57. He also won the Olympic Gold in 1956. All in all Bobrov played 59 international games for his country and scored 89 goals

Bobrov's strength was that he always gave it all, no matter what the score was. It was a rare treat but valuable. He was a captain in both soccer and ice hockey (on the national teams).

In December 1951 Bobrov scored 10 goals in a league game, which still is a league record. One season he scored 2,18 goals per game, a record as well.

A lot of his success was due to his strong mentality. He formed one of the most devastating lines in Russian hockey together with Yevgeny Ba***** (140 goals in 170 games) and Viktor Suvalov (220 goals in over 150 games). They trained harder than anybody else. At that time they only played and trained outdoors, many times in freezing winds and horrible conditions. Despite that they kept on training whatever the conditions might have been. This was the key to their success. When others had gone home, they were still working on small details in the rink.

http://www.1972summitseries.com/otherbobrov.html
 

Leaf Lander

Registered User
Dec 31, 2002
31,968
551
BWO Headquarters
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#12 Andy Hebenton, RW
We are very pleased to add the perfect team player to our ATD Squad. He was a quite leader who lead by example.Andy was a NHL ironman who played 630 straight games.Hebenton was a hard-working, clean player who averaged only nine penalty minutes per season. He won the Lady Byng trophy for gentlemanly play in 1957.

He was a phenomenal hard worker who was never afraid to do the dirty jobs and those jobs always got done.He was considered to be one of the leagues best back checkers and penalty killers during his playing era.
RS 630 189 202 391 83
PO 22 6 5 11
Seasons 9
Era Mid 50's - Mid 60's
Lady Byng Trophy (1957)
Played in NHL All-Star Game (1960)
Role: 2 Way forward Checking/ Penalty Killing Specialist
 

Leaf Lander

Registered User
Dec 31, 2002
31,968
551
BWO Headquarters
tmlfanszone.blogspot.com
# 32 Kelly Hrudey,G
Kelly Hrudey is one of the golden boy's of hockey. Everyone who ever meet him , played with him or watched him on HNIC likes the guy.

Hrudey was selected in the 2nd round of the 1980 NHL Entry Draft, 38th overall, by the New York Islanders.

He saw a lot of pucks with the always gunning kings teams in the Gretzky era and because of that he often had to be brilliant if they stood a chance to win. Hrudey played hockey as a stand up goalie ,a superb skater, very talented puck-handler. Excellent concentration through screens. Kelly possessed very a quick glove hand recovers well for rebounds. He had great lateral movement which allowed him to get a piece of the pucks being shot his way. He was one of the best goalies in the late 80's till the mid 1990's.
RS: 677 271 265 88 17 3.43
PO:85 36 46 0 3.29
Seasons 15
Era Early 1980's -mid 1990's
Best Season 91-92 Los Angeles Kings 60 26 17 13 1 3.37
Stanley Cup Finals 1
Wins 271 - 31st all time
Since 1980 19th in wins
All time Saves- 11th -18154 Saves
All Time Shots Against - 9th -20328 Shots
Games Played -16th All time- 677
Role:Back Up Goalie / Team Glue
 
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Leafs Forever

Registered User
Jul 14, 2009
2,802
3
Off the ice you'd have trouble finding a kinder, easy-smiling and soft spoken man, the kind of person who is easy to get along with.

One the ice he was a mean and miserable S.O.B., not afraid to bend the rules using to stop him from using his hands, feet, a well positioned stick and his nasty high elbows to stop an opponent.

Awrey was the consummate team player who always put the team's fortunes go ahead of any personal accomplishments. He was a classic defensive defenseman who got the same kick out of blocking a shot as of scoring a goal.-Joe Pelletier

Awrey was paired together with the legendary Bobby Orr from time to time. As a "stay at home" defenseman, Awrey's attention to the back end allowed Orr to visit the offensive zone frequently.-Joe Pelletier

A great boost to Don's morale was that he was paired together with the tough Ted Green on the blue line. Don became a meanie on defense. He made it his business to get a piece of every opposition puck-carrier.-Joe Pelletier

This great shot blocking defenseman wasn't flashy but he was very tough to get around and he did his job admirably. Don Awrey was a classy and classic defenseman.-Joe Pelletier

The Toronto St.Pats are proud to round out our defense with a man we feel is perfect to play with Phil Housley..


DON AWREY

Awards and Achievements
2 x Stanley Cup Champion (1970, 1972)

Top 10s
Playoff Points amongst defencemen- 3rd(1970), 8th(1972), 7th(1975)
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,366
7,691
Regina, SK
With the 589th pick in ATD2010, The Regina Pats are pleased to select:

John Vanbiesbrouck, G

beezer.jpg


- 5'8", 176 lbs
- Stanley Cup Finalist (1996)
- Vezina Trophy (1986)
- NHL 1st All-Star Team (1986)
- NHL 2nd All-Star Team (1994)
- Placed 1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 6th, 6th, 7th, 7th in Vezina Voting
- Placed 3rd, 5th in Hart Voting
- Top-10 in sv% 7 Times (2nd, 4th, 5th, 5th, 6th, 9th, 10th)
- Top-5 in playoff sv% Twice (1st-1996, 5th-1996)
- Played in the 1987 and 1991 Canada Cups

loh.net said:
He stayed the Rangers' number one goalie until Mike Richter arrived on Broadway and established himself as an equal but younger talent. The two became the best duo in the game, but Beezer was left exposed in the Expansion Draft in 1993 by Vancouver after the Rangers had traded him to the Canucks for future considerations. The Panthers selected him first in that roster-building draft, and Vanbiesbrouck almost single-handedly legitimized a talent thin team in Florida with his consistent brilliance.

Mature and on his own again in the Florida net, Vanbiesbrouck established himself as one of the best goalies in the game. He was with the team for five years and led them to an improbable run to the Stanley Cup finals in the spring of 1996 before losing to Colorado in four games.

...His last full season was 2000-01, which was split between the New York Islanders and New Jersey Devils. After a brief retirement, Vanbiesbrouck played five more games with the Devils before calling it a career on May 22, 2002. He was the 15th goalie, and only the second American-born goalie, a month after Tom Barrasso, to win 300 NHL games.

Without Fear said:
The secret to John Vanbiesbrouck's success might have been that the player he believed in the most was the one he viewed in the mirror while shaving every morning. "When he first came to the Rangers, he was pretty arrogant," recalls former teammate Tom Laidlaw. "But to his credit, he really backed it up." Vanbiesbrouck's faith in himself was probably more valuable to him than his superb technique or his competitiveness. His inner strength often seemed contagious to teammates. NHL players often take a team's temerature based on how harried a goaltender looks, and Vanbiesbrouck always lookd as if he were master of the house.

"When John would make a key save, he made it seem routine, like he was in complete control. There were no wild rebounds, and his angles were covered. You would look at Beezer and say, "OK, we are fine here."... "His mental preparation in 1996 was as good as any goaltender I've ever seen," says Doug MacLean, the Panthers' coach at the time. "He was so confident that even when he had the odd rough night, it was a non-issue about whether he was going to come back and play well. I can still remember him stoning Mario and Jagr, and I'm thinking, man, how hot is this guy going to get?"

"John had the swagger about him that he allowed the tough saves to look easy,"says ESPN analyst Bill Clement... The Panthers wanted him because the team's first coach, Roger Neilson, said he had the right temperament for the expansion job. "The one thing about him is that he coems back from a bad goal, a bad game, or a bad season."... "I know I don't have the talent of a Fuhr or a Roy, but I've learned to scratch and claw back," Vanbiesbrouck says. MacLean always felt as if Vanbiesbrouck's composure stemmed from his knowledge of how to play goal. His style was like a training video. "Fundamentally, he was so sound that it was easy to look composed. For a small guy to be as good as he was, he had to have outstanding fundamentals."

hockeygoalies.org said:
Strong technical game, lightning-quick reflexes, anticipation and confidence. Very agressive. Plays breakaways very well. Very active and competent with stick. Good conditioning, good attitude.

Hockey All-Stars said:
Short, but strong positionally with a quick glove hand... "Respect was utmost on my mind when I came to Miami," says Vanbiesbrouck. "The new group of us was united in wanting to prove to the rest of the league that we could play at a competitive level with the rest, even though we were an expansion team."

New York Rangers Greatest Players and Moments said:
His size was never a detriment, and in some ways was actually an asset. Vanbiesbrouck boasted excellent lateral speed, and his competitive drive was equaled by few... Hockey savants recognized the improbability of the Panthers' run and attributed it in large part to Vanbiesbrouck... One of the few bright spots of the 1980s New York team, Beezer made hockey eminently watchable for Rangers fans in that decade.

Firewagon Hockey: The Game In the Eighties said:
A small goalie, Vanbiesbrouck used the butterfly style and was good at cutting down the angles. He had a terrific glove hand and a knack for playing well in big games.

thegoal.com said:
In the back streets and alleys of Detroit, Michigan, John Vanbiesbrouck learned how to defend himself from the big guys with sticks.

Almost every day his older brothers would place him in front of a hockey net and fire blistering slapshots at him. "They both wanted to beat me up, which led to shooting things at me." Laughs John. "I guess that's where the goalie in me came out."

Protecting himself from his brothers' screaming shots turned John into an outstanding goaltender.

100 Rangers Greats said:
Vanbiesbrouck had quick reflexes and an aggressive style... ferociously competitive and opinionated... almost singlehandedly legitimized Florida by leading them to the 1996 Finals.

Johnny Bower said:
You can't play goal in the NHL without confidence, and Vanbiesbrouck has always had his fair share. He has always been known for being strong on his angles, and he certainly challenged shooters. I like that in a goaltender. You didn't see John make the first move often. He seems quite patient. Once a goaltender commits to a move, that's like opening the door for a shooter.

John Davidson said:
John was always very energy efficient with his movements. He would always just make a series of small movements that were designed to let the puck hit him. He always had a lot of compusure.

Sports Illustrated said:
In a weekend of upsets and near upsets, the Washington Capitals became the NHL's latest playoff casualty, falling four games to two to the New York Rangers—they of the sub-.500 record and the sublime goalie, John Vanbiesbrouck. "Vanbiesbrouck was incredible," said Washington forward Craig Laughlin after New York's 2-1 win Sunday night in pandemonious Madison Square Garden. "He stopped everything we threw at him. The guy was standing on his head." As Vanbiesbrouck smothered rush after rush, the Capitals' spirits sagged...

Sports Illustrated said:
It worked in Game 4, a 2-0 Rangers shutout that, if nothing else, gave New Yorkers one last chance to salute their own splendid goalie, John Vanbiesbrouck, for his near miraculous work in the playoffs. Vanbiesbrouck's was the only artistry to be seen on this night.

Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1987 said:
If Rangers' season was a TV show, it would have been called "Leave it to Beezer" because of his marvelous year...

Hockey Scouting Report 1986-87 said:
Vanbiesbrouck is excellent at cutting down the shooter's angle, making the first save simply by being in the way of the puck... a consistent goaltender who stays away from personal slumps... Has good concentration and doesn't carry bad games in his memory... poised and confident, to the point of being aggressively cocky... his importance to the Rangers last year was incalculable... He is a talker in the dressing room and has little use for any player that doesn't work as hard as he does...

Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1988 said:
A workhorse...

Hockey Scouting Report 1987-88 said:
If he is playing his game, just letting it hit him, then he is in the game... not often out of position... very quick to recover from flopping... contact from the opposition doesn't rattle him at all... very tough mentally... he thrives on work.

Hockey Scouting Report 1988-89 said:
More so than any other goaltender in the league, Vanbiesbrouck excels at squaring himself to the puck... excellent catching hand, probably second only to Grant Fuhr... will jab at opposing forwards who come too close... consistency is the hallmark of his game... poised and confident... the team's hardest worker... one of the top five goaltenders in the league...

Hockey Scouting Report 1989-90 said:
The strength of John's game comes from his ability to stand up and square himself to the puck... He is an excellent skater with exceptional balance, which usually puts him in good position for the second save... very good hand skills, his glove is among the NHL's best... usually ready to play every game. He certainly has big save capability... one of the few goalies who can win games by himself... he's a proud and very driven athlete.

Sports Illustrated said:
Vanbiesbrouck's picture should be featured in the chapter on positioning in the goaltending textbook... Reflexes, of course, are still a job requisite. Vanbiesbrouck has outstanding quickness... Vanbiesbrouck, though, likes to roam. "I'm more likely to beat myself trying to poke-check somebody on a breakaway than Mike would be," Vanbiesbrouck says... Vanbiesbrouck, 27 years old and now in his seventh full season, has learned how to maintain his focus even when he's going badly... Vanbiesbrouck, the veteran, has matured and doesn't resent Richter's intrusion...

quote=Hockey Scouting Report 1990-91]Makes the most of his ability and size by challenging most every shooter... he's generally in good position for follow-ups to the initial save.[/quote]

Hockey Scouting Report 1991-92 said:
An extremely aggressive goaltender. He may get beaten, but it will not be from lack of effort... among the most mobile goalies in the game... has matured extremely well...

Hockey Scouting Report 1992-93 said:
Does a very good job of staying square to the puck and always knows where the net is... virtually never gives up a goal because he is doing too little... Has great trust in the poke check and uses it very effectively on breakaways and cut-ins. And he uses his stick to block any pass he can reach from the corners, end boards, or side boards... fundamentally strong... extremely patient and confident... can play, and excel, in big games... has a good grasp of when his team needs a faceoff... one of the mentally tough competitors in the league.

Hockey Almanac 1993-94 said:
Experience and maturity have helped him develop into an excellent positional player. He uses angles to beat shooters... Still very quick, he is able to rely on agility and reflexes to survive in goalmouth scrambles... very involved, Beezer is a fierce competitor who hates to lose and works hard to maintain a high level of play.

WILL - Win with the angles
EXPECT - Consistency

Hockey Scouting Report 1993-94 said:
Near the top of the list of goalies we would want on the ice in a big game... plays breakaways very well and is patient even against one-on-one stars like Pavel Bure... tops in his approach to the game... a fighter... If a game starts off badly, he digs in, and bad goals don't seem to bother him...

February 7 said:
After Beezer, whose .934 save percentage through Saturday led the league, it is impossible to pinpoint Florida's best player.

Hockey Almanac 1994-95 said:
Vanbiesbrouck is a fighter, albeit a good-natured, smart fighter who uses his vast experience and knowledge rather than the fat end of his stick to make a point. He concentrates on the puck, plays long stretches of mistake-free hockey, and can infuse teammates with confidence when he's on, and impress them with his competitive drive during those times when he's fighting the puck... was on his way to a season that would earn him consideration for the Vezina when he was accidentally slashed by a skate...

WILL - Be a team leader
EXPECT - Excellent showings

Pro Hockey Play-By-Play 1994-95 said:
Another excellent season for Beezer. He singlehandedly kept the Panthers in several games they probably shouldn't have been in.

Hockey Almanac 1995-96 said:
A fierce competitor. He plays the same way if he's winning 1-0 in a crucial game or losing 7-0 in a meaningless one... Concentrates well...

WILL - Give teammates confidence
EXPECT - Total dedication

Sports Illustrated said:
Panthers executives thought they smelled a Colorado rat. They intimated that the Avalanche had somehow orchestrated the tape crackdown in an effort to upset Vanbiesbrouck, whose game-day concentration makes him look like a Stepford husband. (Once when Florida owner Wayne Huizenga tapped him on the shoulder to wish him luck before a start, Vanbiesbrouck responded with the kind of elbow rarely thrown at employers.)

Hockey Almanac 1996-97 said:
Smart and confident, Beezer simply doesn't get rattled anymore... quick-footed in the crease... can get hot and carry a team... rarely costs the team points with bad mistakes...

WILL - Show confidence
EXPECT - All-star work

Hockey Scouting Report 1996-97 said:
Vanbiesbrouck is unapproachable on game day, because his intensity and concentration is an all-day process. He is highly competitive, which was never more dramatially illustrated than by Vanbiesbrouck's superb effort in a losing cause in game 4 of the Stanley Cup finals against Colorado, which went three overtimes. Even though his team had almost no chance of coming back from a 3-0 series deficit in the series, Vanbiesbrouck made one brilliant save after another until long into the next morning, and deserved a far better fate than the 1-0 loss.

Sports Illustrated said:
Do you think the Miami Heat players held an NHL fantasy draft? "To be honest," says Panthers right wing *** ********, "I doubt the guys on the Heat know who we are."

But what if the Heat players, the Panthers' co-tenants in the Miami Arena, were to have an NHL draft anyway? Which Florida players—other than goalie John Vanbiesbrouck, the NHL Player of the Month for October—would they select?

Hockey Scouting Report 2000 said:
There are few goalies who play a better positional game... He doesn't make wild, diving saves, because he doesn't have to. He blends a strong technical game with good reflexes, anticipation, and confidence... makes himself look like a much bigger goalie... He reads wraparound plays well and seldom gets beaten... Active with his stick, he likes to use it to poke check, guide rebounds, break up passes or whack at any ankles camping out too close to his crease... He won't surrender a centimeter of his ice... keeps himself in superb condition...

From Hockey Outsider's "Adjusted sv%" Thread: (covers 1983-present)

Career average:

Goalie|Save Percentage
Dominik Hasek | 92.5%
Patrick Roy | 92.0%
Roberto Luongo | 91.7%
Martin Brodeur | 91.3%
***** ****** | 91.3%
John Vanbiesbrouck | 91.3%
*** ****** | 91.2%
****-******** *******| 91.2%
Ed Belfour | 91.2%
Andy Moog | 91.1%
Kelly Hrudey | 91.1%
***** ***** | 91.1%
Curtis Joseph | 91.1%
Ron Hextall | 90.9%
Mike Richter | 90.9%
****** ***** | 90.9%
Tom Barrasso | 90.9%

^^Note that the only three goalies ahead of JVB are two generational talents, and a 31-year old who hasn't gone into decline yet.

Best Peak (5 Best Years):

Goalie|Save percentage
Dominik Hasek | 93.3%
Patrick Roy | 93.1%
John Vanbiesbrouck | 92.4%
Curtis Joseph | 92.2%
Ed Belfour | 92.2%
Tom Barrasso | 92.1%
Martin Brodeur | 92.1%
Roberto Luongo | 92.1%
Kelly Hrudey | 91.9%
 
Last edited:

Leaf Lander

Registered User
Dec 31, 2002
31,968
551
BWO Headquarters
tmlfanszone.blogspot.com
#8 Baldy Cotton,LW
Harold was a intelligent forward who was a predominantly a defensive player. Early on in his career he did possess keen passing skills and a willingness to score a timely goal when his team needed the edge.Cotton played a courageous feisty game and performed beyond expectations when the pressure was on. He was always willing to throw a body check. One of the top defensive forwards of his era he was often found on the penalty kill when the game was on the line.
Seasons 12
Era-Mid 20's -mid 30's
RS:503 101 103 204
PO:43 4 9 13
30+ point seasons -1
20+ point seasons - 5
10+ point seasons -8
20 goal seasons -1
10 goal seasons- 4
Adjusted points 182 317 499
A scout for 30+ years He is credited with first discovering Bobby Orr when he was just 13 years old
Played in NHL All-Star Game (1934)
Stanley Cup Finals 3
Stanley Cups 1
Role: Defensive Forward
 
Last edited:

DoMakc

Registered User
Jun 28, 2006
1,551
687
Per HÃ¥kan Loob
n44747771231_9368.jpg


Accomplishments:

Stanley Cup (1989)
Olympic Champion (1994)
NHL 1st All-Star Team (1988)
NHL 1st All-Rookie Team (1984)
SEL Golden Puck ("Hart") (1983)
2x SEL Golden Helmet ("Lester Pearson") (1991-92)
5x Swedish World All-Star Team (1983, 1985, 1990, 1991, 1992)
Helds SEL season records for goals (42 (1983)) and points (76 (1983))
Led SEL 4 times in Goals and Points (1983, 1991-93)
First member of the Triple Gold Club
Top 10 in Goals (1988 (6))
Top 10 in Points (1988 (9))
Top 10 in Playoffs Goals (1989 (9))
Top 10 in Playoffs Assists (1986 (8))
Scored 8 Playoffs SHG in 76 games

Quotes:

HHOF said:
Once again the skeptics wondered whether this player who was slight of build could hold his own in the NHL, where tough bodychecking was the rule and rinks were smaller than those in Europe.

But Loob fooled them all. In the 1987-88 season, he became the first Swedish player to score 50 goals in the NHL regular season. Besides that, he had 56 assists to his credit, racking up a total of 106 points?an achievement that the present generation of Swedish players in the NHL can still be proud of. A year later, "Lucky Loob" was able to hold up the cherished Stanley Cup won by the Calgary Flames. Loob played 450 games for the NHL, scoring 193 goals.

For Loob and all Swedish hockey fans, 1987 was an especially memorable year. At the World Championship in Vienna, Tre Kronor won the gold after a hiatus of 25 years, largely thanks to the efforts of Hakan Loob.

The Swedish nationals, under the leadership of senior coach Tommy Sandlin, were a well-balanced and powerful team with an excellent lineup of players that year. Hakan Loob was a standout.

seiza said:
I remember when he was challenged by a Swedish pro skater (not sure what the sport is called in english, but you skate round and round on a track). HÃ¥kan beat the crap out of the skater in full equipment, he even had his stick. Another great moment I recall, is when he scored two goals in the same PK.

riddarn said:
Best [swedish] pure goal scorer: HÃ¥kan Loob
 

TheDevilMadeMe

Registered User
Aug 28, 2006
52,271
6,988
Brooklyn
Hodge is one of those goalies who is perfect for the role of backup. He spent most of his career stuck behind the likes of Jacques Plante and Gump Worsley, but when he actually got a chance to play, he was good enough to be a 2nd Team All-Star twice.

I'm not sure how much he'll need to play. Gardiner will obviously play every playoff game. In the regular season, Gardiner only missed 4 games in his 7 year career, but seasons were only 44 or 48 games long back then. Hodge is the kind of guy who will play well if called upon, but won't complain if he doesn't play much.

Charlie Hodge, G

-Vezina Trophy in 1964, 66
-Second Team All-Star in 1965, 66
-3 NHL All Star games (1964, 65, 67)
-Led the League in Shutouts in 1964

-Stanley Cups in 1956, 58, 59, 60, 65, 66
-Played in the Stanley Cup Finals in 1955 (lost) and 1965 (won)

Joe Pelletier said:
Hodge would turn professional in 1953, and would dominate the minor leagues. Unfortunately for Hodge and other goalies like him, most famously Johnny Bower, the NHL standard practice in those days was still to carry one goalie, and there was only 6 NHL teams. Big league jobs were hard to come by, especially when Jacques Plante was the incumbent in Montreal.
...
When Montreal Canadiens goalie Jacques Plante was injured in 1954-55, Hodge was called up and did well in the 14 games as his replacement, and was even tried in the playoffs.

He was sent to the minors again for two seasons before Plante was again out of action in 1957-58, and Hodge was again sharp in 12 games for the Habs.
..
In 1960-61 Plante was injured again and Hodge took over in goal. He played so well that some writers suggested that Plante may have trouble displacing him. The Habs finished first that year and Hodge made a substantial contribution. In 30 games he was 18-8-4 with 4 shutouts and 2.47 GAA in his first real stint in the NHL.

legends of hockey said:
Early in 1963-64, he was starting his third consecutive season with the AHL's Quebec Aces when the tide finally turned in his favor. Hodge was called in to replace injured Gump Worsley as the Canadiens' first-string netminder. He stepped in admirably by registering 33 wins and an NHL best eight shutouts. His stellar work was recognized at the conclusion of the season when he was named the winner of the Vezina Trophy and selected to the NHL Second All-Star Team.

Despite being a part-time veteran of the NHL, many wondered if Hodge's success in 1963-64 was a fluke. These reservations proved inaccurate as the plucky netminder put up a 26-16-10 mark in 1964-65. His fine work contributed to the Habs' first Stanley Cup win since 1959-60.

Hodge and Worsley worked superbly together in 1965-66. The shining duo led Montreal to a repeat Stanley Cup performance and shared the Vezina Trophy after recording the stingiest goals-against mark in the NHL. But the very next year things began to unravel for Hodge. He appeared in 37 regular-season games but was the odd man out after young phenomenon Rogie Vachon was called up late in the schedule and played superbly.

When asked if he resented Jacques Plante for preventing him from playing in the NHL:

Charlie Hodge said:
I always got along good with Plante. He helped me, in all honesty he helped me in some of the things that he pointed out to me. Plante was more of a student of the game, in other words he used to calculate everything out and he helped – in that way. We weren’t friends off the ice, he was in a world of his own but on the ice I feel that Plante helped me let’s put it that way I didn’t mind him.
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,366
7,691
Regina, SK
With the 609th pick in ATD2010, The Regina Pats are pleased to select:

Phil Russell, D

philrussell.jpg


- 6'2", 205 lbs
- Stanley Cup Finalist (1973)
- Placed 13th, 15th, 18th among defensemen in scoring
- 10th in Playoff Defense scoring (1981)
- 10th in Norris Voting (1979)
- Placed 13th, 14th in All-Star Voting
- Top-10 in PIMs 3 Times (3rd, 4th, 6th)
- 3-time All-Star Game Participant (1976, 1977, 1985)
- Career Adjusted +72

loh.net said:
When the Chicago Blackhawks drafted Phil Russell in 1972, there was no mystery about the kind of player they were about to usher into their organization. The big rearguard had just completed a two-year stint with the Edmonton Oil Kings where he led the WCJHL in penalty minutes while showcasing an abundance of hockey skill.

Russell made the leap directly onto the Hawks' blueline corps in 1972-73. From the moment he hit the ice in training camp, the rookie defender made a strong impression on the minds of management and on the bodies of his teammates and opponents.

He arrived in the big leagues as a soft-spoken but hard-nosed type who could skate well for his size, play with muscle, handle the puck with confidence, and contribute to the power play.

Russell remained a bellicose mainstay on the Hawks' defense for almost seven seasons. In 1979, his club couldn't resist the opportunity to land the star potential of Tom Lysiak. The trade, one of the larger in league history, displaced a wagonload of players, including Russell who went south to Atlanta.

Initially, the big blueliner was not happy to be dispatched to the Flames. He was fiercely loyal to the Windy City and its team. He considered the move to be a rap on his reputation. But upon further reflection, he eventually recognized that the change had brought a renewed spirit that raised his level of play.

Russell continued to play his game of solid defense for a season and a half and then joined his team in its move to Calgary. He remained in Alberta until his trade to the New Jersey Devils in 1983. By then, he was at the tail end of a lengthy career and the Devils were at the tail end of the league's standing. Nonetheless, he toiled on for three seasons until his trade to the Buffalo Sabres in 1985.

Joe Pelletier said:
Phil Russell was one of the most physical defensemen in the NHL through out the 1970s and mid 1980s. He played the game like he woke up on the wrong side of the bed. Some called him exuberant, while others called him just downright nasty.

But everyone called him valuable.

Phil wasn't valuable just because he was so feisty. Yes he intimidated more than a few opposition forwards to be sure, but 6'2" 200lb monster was also a very good skater - which is a bit unusual for defensemen of this sort, especially in that era. As a result, Phil was a standout on the blue line as his mobility proved to be a real asset. He could cover a lot of ice without the puck, and was able to do more than just fire the puck out of the zone once he gained possession.

Phil was never much of an offensive threat. He scored a career high 45 points in 1976-77 and a career high 13 goals in 1982-83. But this didn't prevent him from earning recognition as one of the game's best rearguards as witnessed by his 3 inclusions in the mid season all star game (1976, 1977 and 1985).

Phil, who was as nice a guy off the ice as he was mean on it, was drafted in the 1st round, 13th overall, by the Chicago Black Hawks after terrorizing the Western Junior Hockey League with his hometown Edmonton Oil Kings. He was able to step into the NHL immediately and contributed nicely in Chicago for almost 7 years.

The Hawks weren't going anywhere by the late 1970s and were looking to make a major shake-up. The accomplished this by trading Phil ... to Atlanta in exchange for a host of players, most notably Tom Lysiak.

Phil was a steadying influence on the Flames blue line for 5 seasons before he was again on the move, this time to New Jersey. Those were some pretty lean years in Devil-ville, but Phil kept his teammates hustling and his opponents honest.

...The most telling stat of Phil's career is 1016 games played in the NHL. In most of those games Phil was a key player who was counted on heavily by the coach and his teammates. In those games Phil scored 99 times, assisted on 325 others and had 424 points. He earned 2038 minutes in the penalty box in that time as well. He added 4 goals and 26 points in 73 post season affairs.

Unsung Hawks said:
Breaking into the NHL ranks right from junior hockey is no easy feat; even the great Gordie Howe began his career in the minors. It's even more notable when you can do it with a team that finished first in its division the three previous seasons.

Phil "Rusty" Russell made such a jump, coming to the Blackhawks in 1972 after being selected 13th overall in the entry draft. Phil was regarded even then as a potential NHL enforcer, having led the WCHL in penalty minutes in both of his seasons with the league's Edmonton squad. He was known as a hard-nosed defender who skated well for his size and was also a smart puck handler.

Even with a team that included the likes of Keith Magnuson and Jerry "King Kong" Korab, Russell made an immediate impact in Chicago, most often on the bodies of Blackhawks opponents.

Players: The Ultimate A-Z Guide Of Everyone Who Has Ever Played In the NHL said:
Not only was Russell a big and strong defenseman, he was also durable and a survivor... Despite playing his best hockey in Calgary the team couldn't go very far in the playoffs.

A quote from the 2nd game of Russell's NHL career:

Globe and Mail said:
Russell looks like the perfect accomplice for Magnuson and Korab when it comes to mauling the opposition. In fact, every time a leaf was bounced it seemed that Russell was doing the punishment.

Russell was very highly ragarded right from the start:

Sports Illustrated said:
Stapleton's departure places extreme pressure on 21-year-old Phil Russell, last season's fine rookie who was the Hawks' best defenseman in the final Stanley Cup series. Russell is the only Chicago defenseman with any natural puck-carrying ability.

Montreal Gazette said:
Reay has confidence in his young rearguard too. Russell has been paired with veteran Bill White and is one of only four defensemen the Hawks use regularly. "If you're not doing anything, you never make mistakes," was Reay's philosophy. "We know that he can carry the puck." Russell can also bodycheck - and fight. He collected 156 minutes in penalties last year, five of that total for a lengthy punch-up with **** ****** - which ended with Russell shaking ****** like a rag doll... "Hitting's my game. If you're going to hit, you'll get into these things. But I've been trying to concentrate on being a defensive defenseman. You can't go roaring around like a crazy, hoping to get a bushel of goals. I've got a job to do on defense."

Sports Illustrated said:
Despite poor positions in the draft, two years ago Chicago plucked Phil Russell, the best young defenseman in the game,

The World Almanac Guide to Pro Hockey 1974-1975 said:
HARDEST HITTER

5th - Phil Russell, CHI - 6 pts

Some of the older GMs may remember that for a while, Phil Russell was talked about as straight-up compensation for the Hawks signing Bobby Orr:

The Telegraph said:
Coach Don Cherry has said he would be happy if Chicago compensated with just one player, big defenseman Phil Russell.

A good example of Russell's "on the edge" play and the abuse that comes with it:

Pittsburgh Press said:
Chicago defenseman Phil Russell caught **** with what Russell called a "clean bodycheck", knocking **** into the boards at the penalty box. The next time Russell was in the corner, Stan Gilbertson ran him into the boards. The two scrambled on the ice, and Russell grabbed Gilbertson in a leg lock. "I must be getting stupid in my old age," Gilbertson said. "I thought I threw a clean check, just like he said he hit **** with a clean check."

Another example of Russell injuring a player. note that it is not mentioned to be a dirty play.

Anchorage Daily News said:
Defenseman Claire Alexander suffered a broken right arm in Sunday night's game against the Black Hawks. The 31-year old Alexander was injured when he hit the ice after being bodychecked by Phil Russell and is expected to be out of action for the remainder of the season.

A quote from the 1977 World Championships:

Montreal Gazette said:
The Canadians claim that most of their chippy play is retaliation. After the game, the right side of Russell's face was a swollen, bloody mess. by yesterday, he was almost unrecognizable as discoloration had begun. "the guy had crosschecked me," grunted Russell through his swollen lips. "I was going to slide my hand down on my stick about six inches and do the same thing to him but I decided that because this is international competition, I'd be sportsmanlike so I just knocked him down."

Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1978 said:
One of the league's most robust defenders... one of hockey's most prized young defensemen... Rival GMs mention his name automatically when asked about trades they'd like to make... big, strong, and tough... Fiery competitor who plays with a mean streak... Commands great respect on ice and specializes in slamming opponents into boards... in 1976-77 was Chicago's only plus regular.

For a while, Phil Russell was very high in fan voting to be named to the NHL team to face the Soviets:

Globe and Mail said:
Defense:
Denis Potvin, 18,772,
Ron Greschner, 16,273,
Larry Robinson, 15,318,
Phil Russell, 12,803,
Robert Picard, 11,502,
Brad Park, 10,472,
Borje Salming, 10,458,
Guy Lapointe 7226,
Barry Beck, 5416,
Jim Watson, 4887.

Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1979 said:
Gives opponents their Phil... tough, mean, and nasty... Injuries cut into his season but didn't diminish his enthusiasm... Sometimes is too exuberant... good skater... outstanding checker...

Russell's trade to Chicago shocked him, but he was a very coveted player, not only by Atlanta, but also by Montreal:

Globe and Mail said:
"Russell is the kind of defenseman that we have needed to compete consistently with the premier teams in the NHL," said Flames GM Cliff Fletcher.

the Palm Beach Post said:
Russell, an all-star caliber defenseman...

Sports Illustrated said:
Grundman's detractors claim that while he may well be a shrewd businessman, he is not a "hockey man." A hockey man, a Pollock, would have obtained a No. 4 defenseman for the Canadiens by now, or so they insist. "Would Sam Pollock have let Phil Russell be traded from Chicago to Atlanta when Phil Russell was exactly the defenseman the Canadiens needed?" they ask.

Sports Illustrated said:
Reinhart feels that he, too, is in the right business. "Without sounding like I'm bragging, I always knew I'd wind up in the NHL," he says. Maybe so, but Reinhart still had to learn a basic fact about life in the NHL. "The very first day of practice, within 30 seconds, I had my head down and I got decked," he says. "Phil Russell, my teammate, taught me that very important lesson: keep your head up."

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1980 said:
Philled a hole for the team... Was principal player in eight-man trade with Chicago... Highly sought-after player for whom Canadiens once offered three players... Young and tough... Excellent bodychecker... Fiery competitor who can turn a game around... Does not score a lot but does not have to...

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1981 said:
Good bodychecker... good skater... aggressive...

Globe and Mail said:
Edberg broke his jaw when checked by Flame defenseman Phil Russell.


A couple of quotes from the classic Calgary/Minnesota series of 1981:

Globe and Mail said:
The Flames let up on their strong checking game in the second period and invited disaster. If not for the brilliant work of ****** and the bold shot blocking of Phil Russell, they might have lost their lead.

Globe and Mail said:
Crunching checks came from Phil Russell, ******* and *******. they were purposely aimed at key performers such as Bobby Smith and Brad Maxwell.

Argus-Press said:
CALGARY UPSETS SOVIETS... Calgary threw up a wall at its blueline and frustrated the Soviets. The flame defense, anchored by captain Phil Russell, restricted the Soviets to 29 shots, only a few of which were good opportunities.

Although Russell wasn't what he once was in New Jersey, he was still pretty well regarded as a shot blocker, defensive player, and the classic wily veteran leader:

Globe and Mail said:
"We've been on the lookout to get two seasoned NHL players without too much age on them to go along with our younger players," New Jersey GM MacMillan said. "Russell has a reputation for being really good with young players. It's what we need to be competitive. They're not going to turn us into winners, but we're going to be competitive."

Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1984 said:
The Devils can be outmuscled in front of the net. Getting Phil Russell from Calgary should help in this area.

Montreal Gazette said:
A flood of Devils played extremely well, led by goaltender Resch and defensemen Phil Russell and *** *******.

Reading Eagle said:
With ***** ****** providing the offense and Ron Low and Phil Russell taking care of the defense, the Devils shocked the Flyers 2-1.

Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1985 said:
Classy, sharp-witted old pro type... never an all-star but always a consistently good defenseman since joining the NHL in 1972... can play right or left defense... Blocked 51 shots last season, one off the team lead.

by this point, Russell was only a bit player on the international scene, but he went to represent Canada, and he sure wasn't happy with those who didn't. I bet these comments ruffled a few feathers around the NHL:

Montreal Gazette said:
Phil Russell, at 33 the 2nd-oldest member of the team, was grumbling. He was not upset at his lack of ice time but at the who-cares approach Canada takes at this annual affair. "I mean, after all, this is the world championship," said Russell. "It's the biggest thing there is for every country but our own." What ticked off Russell was what he terms the lack of cooperation and interest in the event around the NHL. "Maybe it should be a mandatory thing that, if you are available, you should have to come here," he said. "As it stands now, there are guys who are needed who don't show up. There are agents and GMs who discourage players from coming. I mean the rewards in life, in this game, shouldn't always be monetary. The reward here comes after the game when you hear your anthem and they raise your flag."

Phil Russell: Always a top Defenseman on a Playoff Team:

Many defensemen have been selected already who were supporting members of their teams - role players. Phil Russell was an integral member of his team's defense corps every season of his career.

I created an ice-time estimation model based on GF and GA in different situations. I ran this model for all defensemen on Phil Russell's teams throughout his career. PPGA were used to approximate SH time, PPGF were used to approximate PP time, and ESGA+ESGF were used to approximate ES time. I them integrated each player's percentage into realistic models of situational ice time for a team (46 minutes at ES, 14 on special teams) to get their situational ice times. (I'm sure something like this has been done before, and better, but this worked remarkably well for a rough guess.)

What I found is that Russell was in every one of Russell's full seasons (1972-73 through 1984-85), he was in the top-3 on his team in ice time. (exception is his rookie season, when he was behind ATD staples Pat Stapleton, Bill White, and Keith Magnuson) And for 11 straight seasons, prior to joining New Jersey, he was playing these big minutes for playoff teams. In fact, in six of these seasons he was actually a more relied-upon defenseman in non-PP situations while a "specialist"-type defenseman with fewer ES and PK minutes got all the PP minutes, taking his total TOI above Russell's; these seasons are denoted with a star:

Year | Team | Rank | Team Pts | Playoffs?
1973 | CHI | 4 | 93 | Y
1974* | CHI | 3 | 105 | Y
1975 | CHI | 3 | 82 | Y
1976 | CHI | 2 | 82 | Y
1977 | CHI | 1 | 63 | Y
1978 | CHI | 1 | 83 | Y
1979* | CHI | 3 | 73 | Y
1980 | ATL | 1 | 83 | Y
1981 | CGY | 1 | 92 | Y
1982* | CGY | 3 | 75 | Y
1983* | CGY | 3 | 78 | Y
1984* | NJD | 2 | 41 | N
1985* | NJD | 3 | 54 | N

edit: I got a hold of a file from the hockey analysis group on yahoogroups, where someone used a formula much more sophisticated than mine and calculated for all players from 1968 to 2008. Russell's icetimes and rankings on his team by this method are as follows:

Year | Team | Rank | Icetime
1973 | CHI | 4 | 21.98
1974* | CHI | 3 | 23.79
1975 | CHI | 3 | 25.11
1976 | CHI | 2 | 27.16
1977 | CHI | 1 | 29.21
1978 | CHI | 1 | 25.68
1979* | CHI | 1 | 23.47
1980 | ATL | 1 | 23.27
1981 | CGY | 1 | 26.59
1982* | CGY | 3 | 23.22
1983* | CGY | 3 | 21.67
1984* | NJD | 2 | 23.01
1985* | NJD | 2 | 22.32

It appears I underestimated how much Russell was used in 1978 and 1985.

Why Raw Point Totals Are Not Always the Best Way To Judge Defensemen Offensively

Phil Russell scored over 400 points in his career, which was a decent total, good for 64th post-expansion to 2008. However, Russell was not often used on the PP as his teams often had "offensive specialists" on defense. Only 61 of these points were scored on the power play. Among the 28 defensemen with 400+ points during this period, this is the lowest PP total. (Only Serge Savard, Kevin Lowe, and Brad McCrimmon approach this total)

Looking up the list of defensemen, you actually have to go all the way to Carol Vadnais at 34th with 584 points, before you find a defenseman with more ESP than Russell. To find a defenseman on the list with fewer PP points than Russell, you have to look down to 90th, a guy with 358 points.

I did some calculations to determine which defensemen post-expansion have done the best job of putting up points at even strength. Since this is a 40-year period adjustments for era had to be done. This is the calculation: (adjusted points 1968-2008)/(points 1968-2008)*(career ESP)/(career GP, plus 30 if the player played a full 1995 season because pts are adjusted, therefore, GP must also be.) = career adjusted even strength points per game. Under this metric, Russell's offensive ability begins to show through:

Career Adjusted Even Strength Points Per Game, Defensemen, 400+ Points, 1968-2008:

Name | Adj GP 68-08 | Pts 68-08 | ESP 68-08 | PPP 68-08 | SHP 68-08 | Adj P 68-08 | Adj ESP 68-08 | Adj ESPPG
ORR, BOBBY | 596 | 874 | 515 | 319 | 40 | 834 | 491 | 0.82
COFFEY, PAUL | 1439 | 1531 | 822 | 666 | 43 | 1347 | 723 | 0.50
POTVIN, DENIS | 1060 | 1052 | 575 | 442 | 35 | 882 | 482 | 0.45
BOURQUE, RAY | 1642 | 1577 | 787 | 745 | 45 | 1424 | 711 | 0.43
PARK, BRAD | 1115 | 896 | 520 | 355 | 20 | 788 | 457 | 0.41
ROBINSON, LARRY | 1384 | 958 | 665 | 273 | 20 | 800 | 555 | 0.40
TURNBULL, IAN | 628 | 440 | 293 | 136 | 11 | 373 | 248 | 0.40
HOWE, MARK | 802 | 597 | 384 | 247 | 45 | 492 | 316 | 0.39
LAPOINTE, GUY | 884 | 622 | 392 | 213 | 17 | 550 | 347 | 0.39
LEETCH, BRIAN | 1235 | 1028 | 464 | 542 | 22 | 1039 | 469 | 0.38
HOUSLEY, PHIL | 1525 | 1232 | 606 | 616 | 10 | 1148 | 565 | 0.37
LARSON, REED | 904 | 685 | 408 | 256 | 21 | 555 | 331 | 0.37
SALMING, BORJE | 1148 | 787 | 495 | 265 | 27 | 662 | 416 | 0.36
(undrafted) | 1143 | 752 | 421 | 314 | 18 | 728 | 408 | 0.36
MURPHY, LARRY | 1645 | 1216 | 650 | 542 | 24 | 1097 | 586 | 0.36
REINHART, PAUL | 648 | 559 | 287 | 260 | 12 | 449 | 231 | 0.36
WILSON, DOUG | 1024 | 827 | 443 | 363 | 21 | 672 | 360 | 0.35
LIDSTROM, NICKLAS | 1282 | 938 | 422 | 481 | 35 | 987 | 444 | 0.35
MacINNIS, AL | 1446 | 1274 | 530 | 709 | 36 | 1200 | 499 | 0.35
OZOLINSH, SANDIS | 905 | 564 | 286 | 271 | 7 | 609 | 309 | 0.34
ZUBOV, SERGEI | 1088 | 767 | 344 | 405 | 18 | 822 | 369 | 0.34
BLAKE, ROB | 1157 | 702 | 335 | 349 | 18 | 806 | 385 | 0.33
GONCHAR, SERGEI | 934 | 615 | 286 | 320 | 9 | 664 | 309 | 0.33
NIEDERMAYER, SCOTT | 1131 | 633 | 345 | 276 | 12 | 675 | 368 | 0.33
STEVENS, SCOTT | 1665 | 908 | 586 | 297 | 26 | 831 | 536 | 0.32
(undrafted) | 889 | 459 | 324 | 123 | 13 | 403 | 284 | 0.32
VADNAIS, CAROL | 1076 | 584 | 369 | 196 | 19 | 528 | 334 | 0.31
HARTSBURG, CRAIG | 570 | 413 | 221 | 183 | 9 | 328 | 176 | 0.31
(undrafted) | 681 | 402 | 195 | 197 | 10 | 430 | 209 | 0.31
(undrafted) | 771 | 445 | 264 | 174 | 7 | 398 | 236 | 0.31
SAVARD, SERGE | 1038 | 439 | 347 | 73 | 19 | 396 | 313 | 0.30
IAFRATE, AL | 829 | 463 | 292 | 154 | 17 | 396 | 250 | 0.30
RUSSELL, PHIL | 1016 | 424 | 348 | 61 | 15 | 358 | 294 | 0.29
CHELIOS, CHRIS | 1646 | 948 | 506 | 392 | 50 | 908 | 485 | 0.29
DESJARDINS, ERIC | 1173 | 575 | 323 | 234 | 18 | 600 | 337 | 0.29
HATCHER, KEVIN | 1187 | 676 | 353 | 298 | 25 | 650 | 339 | 0.29
(undrafted) | 716 | 404 | 244 | 155 | 5 | 330 | 199 | 0.28
(undrafted) | 777 | 584 | 233 | 339 | 12 | 539 | 215 | 0.28
SUTER, GARY | 1175 | 845 | 345 | 476 | 24 | 795 | 325 | 0.28
SCHNEIDER, MATHIEU | 1227 | 702 | 324 | 371 | 7 | 732 | 338 | 0.28
(undrafted) | 838 | 410 | 213 | 190 | 7 | 442 | 230 | 0.27
CARLYLE, RANDY | 1055 | 647 | 356 | 270 | 21 | 523 | 288 | 0.27
PRONGER, CHRIS | 970 | 558 | 245 | 298 | 15 | 602 | 264 | 0.27
(undrafted) | 899 | 423 | 295 | 116 | 13 | 348 | 243 | 0.27
PATRICK, JAMES | 1110 | 639 | 330 | 292 | 17 | 579 | 299 | 0.27
(undrafted) | 1179 | 599 | 329 | 255 | 15 | 576 | 316 | 0.27
KORAB, JERRY | 975 | 455 | 302 | 137 | 16 | 392 | 260 | 0.27
(undrafted) | 1015 | 468 | 270 | 175 | 23 | 468 | 270 | 0.27
(undrafted) | 955 | 433 | 304 | 114 | 15 | 354 | 249 | 0.26
NUMMINEN, TEPPO | 1345 | 620 | 334 | 268 | 18 | 638 | 344 | 0.26
(undrafted) | 1225 | 723 | 361 | 349 | 13 | 611 | 305 | 0.25
(undrafted) | 1008 | 514 | 307 | 191 | 15 | 420 | 251 | 0.25
(undrafted) | 860 | 439 | 266 | 154 | 19 | 352 | 213 | 0.25
(undrafted) | 674 | 421 | 196 | 219 | 5 | 358 | 167 | 0.25
HUDDY, CHARLIE | 1047 | 453 | 302 | 133 | 19 | 380 | 253 | 0.24
(undrafted) | 1097 | 420 | 323 | 83 | 14 | 344 | 265 | 0.24
(undrafted) | 948 | 486 | 250 | 223 | 13 | 439 | 226 | 0.24
(undrafted) | 1106 | 531 | 244 | 268 | 19 | 571 | 262 | 0.24
(undrafted) | 1052 | 581 | 262 | 310 | 9 | 553 | 249 | 0.24
JOHANSSON, CALLE | 1139 | 535 | 269 | 252 | 14 | 532 | 267 | 0.23
RAMAGE, ROB | 1044 | 564 | 295 | 257 | 11 | 458 | 240 | 0.23
(undrafted) | 917 | 418 | 195 | 210 | 13 | 447 | 209 | 0.23
(undrafted) | 1201 | 435 | 277 | 140 | 18 | 427 | 272 | 0.23
(undrafted) | 914 | 464 | 253 | 200 | 11 | 378 | 206 | 0.23
(undrafted) | 1201 | 484 | 249 | 230 | 5 | 524 | 270 | 0.22
(undrafted) | 977 | 402 | 206 | 192 | 4 | 426 | 218 | 0.22
LOWE, KEVIN | 1284 | 431 | 332 | 63 | 36 | 365 | 281 | 0.22
(undrafted) | 1115 | 471 | 225 | 229 | 17 | 491 | 235 | 0.21
(undrafted) | 1159 | 568 | 272 | 276 | 20 | 508 | 243 | 0.21
McCRIMMON, BRAD | 1252 | 403 | 307 | 69 | 26 | 332 | 253 | 0.20
SVOBODA, PETR | 1077 | 402 | 232 | 162 | 8 | 364 | 210 | 0.20
(undrafted) | 1101 | 528 | 221 | 293 | 14 | 477 | 200 | 0.18
(undrafted) | 1487 | 537 | 267 | 252 | 18 | 521 | 259 | 0.17

As you can see, many defensemen with similar career point totals, drafted and undrafted, were simply not the offensive producer that Russell was at even strength. This also demonstrates that Russell was an offensive producer at even strength in the neighbourhood of Scott Stevens, Carol Vadnais, Craig Hartsburg, Serge Savard, Al Iafrate, Chris Chelios, Eric Desjardins, Kevin Hatcher, Gary Suter, Mathieu Schneider, Randy Carlyle, and Chris Pronger.
 
Last edited:

VanIslander

20 years of All-Time Drafts on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
36,149
6,839
South Korea
The Fusiliers select the 1923 WCHL all-star, 1927 NHL retroSelke winning, fast and feisty left winger Charley "Rabbit" McVeigh. The tough little 5'6 superpest wasn't a scorer per se but was a scoring line role player, having played nine full NHL seasons mostly on one of the top lines after four years in the Western league, having four times scored double digits in NHL goals, his last six years double digits in assists.

rabbitt.jpg


from TIME magazine, March 10th, 1941:
A star forward, the scrappy little fellow made a name for himself as a rough-&-tumble player, who never minded how big they came.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,790048,00.html

from the Montreal Gazette, Nov 30th 1931:
the pestiferous Rabbit McVeigh
http://www.google.ca/search?hl=en&q=rabbit+McVeigh+americans&start=10&sa=N

One of the smaller players in the league, he was known for his agility and speed which saw him play every position on the front line
http://webcache.googleusercontent.c...eigh+kenora+thistles&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca

Ottawa Citizen, Oct.16 1928, after being traded from the Blackhawks to NY:
"McVeigh is a colorful player and will be well liked by the fans"

rabbit.jpg


Here he ties up the game with 5 seconds remaining in a come from 0-4 behind 5-4 victory for the Chicago Blackhawks over the Montreal Maroons in 1927:
http://books.google.ca/books?id=COb...esnum=1&ved=0CAUQ6AEwADgU#v=onepage&q&f=false
 

Dreakmur

Registered User
Mar 25, 2008
19,214
7,637
Orillia, Ontario
â€He was one of the first players to jump from the NHA to the PCHA, joining Victoria for the league's inaugural season in 1911-12. Rowe went on to become a fixture in Seattle, playing in all nine of the Mets' seasons and ranking second on the all-time games played list with the team at 201.

Despite his small size Rowe was known as a tough customer, willing to drop the gloves and go at it whenever the need arose. He was also well known for playing through constant shoulder and leg injuries. During the 1919 Stanley Cup finals his ankle was injured so badly that he sat out the fourth game of the series under doctors orders, but when the game went into overtime and his banged up teammates began to falter he took to the ice and helped to hold of the Canadiens to preserve the 0-0 tie.†– Seattle Hockey

With our 23rd selection, McGuire's Monsters are pleased to select a spare defesemen who we believe can easily step in and contribute. He's a well-rounded player who can play with skill or toughness. Please welcome "Stubby"...

... and the mad leading this congo line...



Bobby Rowe !!!

Awards and Achievelents:
Stanley Cup Champion (1917)
3 x PCHA Champion (1917, 1919, 1920)

3 x First Team All-Star (1918, 1919, 1923)
2 x Second Team All-Star (1917, 1920)

Scoring:
Points among Defesemen – 2nd(1919), 3rd(1917), 3rd(1920), 4th(1918), 4th(1924), 5th(1923)
Goals among Defensemen – 2nd(1918), 2nd(1919), 3rd(1924), 4th(1920), 5th(1917), 5th(1923)
Assists among Defensemen – 1st(1919), 2nd(1916), 2nd(1917), 3rd(1920), 4th(1918)

Penalty Minutes – 1st(1923), 2nd(1921), 4th(1922), 9th(1924)
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,366
7,691
Regina, SK
With the 672nd pick in ATD2010, The Regina Pats are proud to select:

Bernie Nicholls, C

nicholls9192score.jpg


- 6'0", 185 lbs
- Top-15 in Goals 3 Times (2nd, 10th, 15th)
- Top-20 in Assists 4 Times (5th, 6th, 12th, 19th)
- Top-15 in Points 5 Times (4th, 6th, 13th, 15th, 15th)
- Top-15 in Playoff Goals 3 Times (5th, 13th, 13th)
- Top-15 in Playoff Assists 4 Times (9th, 9th, 15th, 15th)
- Top-15 in Playoff Points Twice (8th, 14th)
- 4th in All-Star Voting (1989)
- Career Adjusted +63
- 8th in Points from 1984-1993
- Only non-generational talent, non-Oilers ahead of him were Hawerchuk and Yzerman
- 6 Straight PPG Playoffs from 1987-1992, for 3 Teams
- During this time, only Gretzky, Lemieux, and Messier had higher than Nicholls' 1.33 PPG in the playoffs
- According to The Hockey Compendium, Nicholls' 1989 season was the 42nd-highest "ideal points" total of all-time (1909-2001). Only 17 individual players ever had a better season: Gretzky, Lemieux, Esposito, Weiland, Orr, Morenz, Jagr, Conacher, Howe, Keats, Boucher, Ratelle, Primeau, Lafleur, Cowley, Yzerman, Selanne.
- Was the NHL's leading scorer for much of the 1988-89 season
- 3 Time All-Star Game Participant (1984, 1989, 1990)

loh.net said:
Centre Bernie Nicholls was an explosive scorer who accumulated over 1,200 career points while playing for six NHL teams. During his prime the talented pivot was one of the more dangerous scorers in the league and, as he aged, his savvy and natural talent allowed him to remain a multi-faceted contributor to his team.

...Nicholls continued to be a consistent scorer for the Kings and one of the NHL's most dangerous threats while shorthanded. In the aftermath of the acquisition of Wayne Gretzky in 1988-89, Nicholls set career-highs with 70 goals and 150 points while finding the net 21 times on the power play.

...Early in the 1991-92 season, Nicholls was the key player acquired by the Edmonton Oilers for Mark Messier. Injuries reduced his participation to 49 games during a disappointing regular season but the veteran responded with 19 points in 16 playoff games when the Oilers reached the semi-finals.

By the start of the next season, Edmonton was rebuilding and traded Nicholls to the New Jersey Devils. He adapted his game to the tight-checking system of Jacques Lemaire and helped the club come within one game of reaching the finals, in 1994. A few weeks later he signed with the Chicago Blackhawks and averaged over a point per game for the first time since 1990-91. He was at his best once again in the post-season when the Hawks reached the semi-finals. Nicholls played one more year in the Windy City before signing with the up-and-coming San Jose Sharks in August 1996. The veteran forward added experience and playmaking ability to the young team before retiring at the end of the 1998-99 season.

Joe Pelletier said:
This three time all star was one of the NHL's best kept secrets for much of the 1980s as he played in relative anonymity in Los Angeles until Wayne Gretzky's arrival. He clicked with The Great One for one of the greatest seasons in NHL history, but then was surprisingly traded to Manhattan.

...Bernie made a big impression in his first stint in the NHL too. He scored 14 goals and 32 points in the final 22 games of the season, plus added 4 tallies in the playoffs.

In his first full NHL season Bernie couldn't quite keep up his dazzling pace, but by 1983-84 he really caught on fire as he and linemates ***** ********* and *** *** gelled nicely. Bernie blasted in 41 goals and had 95 points. The following year he had what looked like would be his career year - 46 goals and 100 points, followed by a 36 goal, 97 point campaign in 1985-86.

After 5 consecutive 30+ goal seasons and constant flirting with the 90-100 point a season mark, Bernie, who celebrated goals with his patented arm-pumping "Pumper-Nicholl," teamed with Wayne Gretzky in 1988-89 - the Great One's first season in Los Angeles. In some respects it was a coming out party of sorts for Bernie too. He finally got recognition as a top player in the league after years of toiling in obscurity. Now he was in the bright lights and excelling at an unbelievable pace. With lots of help from Gretzky to be sure, Nicholls exploded to score 70 goals in 1988-89, as well as 150 points. He is one of just eight players in league history to score 70 goals in a season.

He was on a torrid pace the following season as well (27 goals and 75 points in 47 games - that would translate to 46 goals and 128 points over a full 80 game slate) but curiously the Kings felt it was necessary to trade their long time popular star to add more depth now that Gretzky had arrived. He was sent to New York in exchange for Tomas Sandstrom and Tony Granato on January 20, 1990. It was curious because one complaint in Los Angeles was that there wasn't enough players who were good enough to play with Wayne, so why would they trade away the one who excelled with him?

Though he had over a point a game in New York and became popular with the fans (they nicknamed him Broadway Bernie), he was quickly sacrificed in one of the NHL's biggest and most influential trades. The Rangers sent Broadway Bernie... to Edmonton in exchange for their Messiah - Mark Messier.

...Bernie Nicholls was a very skilled player, but was more of a goal scorer than playmaker, particularly in his prime. He relied on his linemates to set him up to use his strongest hockey talent - his shot. His shot wasn't the most powerful but both his wrist and slap shots were deadly accurate and released quickly. His release was the key to his goal scoring. He was an excellent one touch shooter and often had the puck flying towards the net before the goaltender could get set. His skating was not exceptional but his anticipation and puck sense were extraordinary.

Firewagon Hockey: The Game In the Eighties said:
Nicholls was exceptionally talented with the puck, and had the ability to hold the disk until the last possible second. He was not afraid to play in traffic, which meant he could be involved in plenty of offensive action.

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1983 said:
Big, free-wheeling center with good attacking skills.

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1984 said:
With size, speed and belligerent approach is a big part of Kings' future... Extroverted, flamboyant youngster who is a big favourite with LA fans.

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1985 said:
Quick skater for his size with great shot... Has a nose for the net which makes him dangerous on the attack...

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1986 said:
Tall, rangy center with fluid skating style and better than average speed... Emotional, high-strung young athlete who doesn't hide his emotions on the ice...

Hockey Scouting Report 1986-87 said:
A deceptive skater because of his size... his anticipation is evident on the powerplay, where Nicholls is a given, and on the penalty killing unit, where Nicholls led the team with 4 SHG... will play a physical game and, in fact, probably plays better under physical circumstances... Has been called cocky and arrogant, but confident would be a better word. He knows he is good, and since he is very emotional, can't help but broadcast his joy at being good... Has matured since his hot dog days and his improved defense is a sign of that... Bernie has an enthusiasm for the game that is always evident, as when he played in pain with a broken jaw. he works hard to be a good two-way player and is a true competitor.

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1987 said:
The Kings' best player and the man around whom the team should be built... the Kings' most dangerous player... Manages to find room in heavy traffic to make a creative play... Fights off checks well and responds with his own, often at the expense of the opponents' biggest or best... Rated as the Kings' most popular player by LA fans

Hockey Scouting Report 1987-88 said:
Nicholls is a very skilled player, but his skating is not necessarily one of his strengths... He does have good quickness and balance... Has expanded his playmaking game... always aware of where he is on the ice, relative to the puck, his teammates, the opposition and the net, and has begun to incorporate those talents into his defensive game... He is playing his position better and sticking with his check down-ice as he has become an effective backchecker... Will play a physical game... uses his strength well in traffic areas... not afraid to take abuse in front of the net... His growing maturity will help him in his new role as team leader, as will his enthusiasm and work ethic. He works hard to be a good two-way player and is a true competitor.

The Complete Handbook Of Pro Hockey 1988 said:
Plays some of his best hockey in the clutch... When scoring chances are needed most, he finds a way to create one or two.

Hockey Scouting Report 1989-90 said:
Nicholls is the antithesis of the theory that says to succeed in the NHL you must be a great skater. A touch of quickness and good balance are highlights of Nicholls' skating, which could best be described as "getting the job done"... reads the offensive zone very well to pick off that errant pass or that puck along the boards... once he has the puck he's extremely strong on it... his anticipation and quickness make him a penalty killer par excellence... can play sound defense when he puts his mind to it... he is the team's best athlete... great aerobic capacity... loves to play 25 minutes a game... very casual in manner, very laid back, but don't let that fool you, he's a competitor who lives for pressure situations. He loves big games, the playoffs - any crucial situation.

Hockey Scouting Report 1989-90 said:
Nicholls reads the offensive zone almost as well as teammate Wayne Gretzky. He picks off passes, takes the puck off the boards, and gets into scoring position exceptionally well... among the NHL's very best players.

NY Times said:
He will, of course, be the Rangers' top center. He is also capable of playing a number of other positions and large segments of individual games. He can, if double-shifted late in a game, play right wing. And whether on the point or elsewhere, he can lend imagination to the Rangers' power play, which has been moribund for much of the season.

''He always wants the puck,'' said Roger Neilson, the coach of the Rangers. ''The guy's durable. And he's got great endurance.''

Hockey Scouting Report 1990-91 said:
For all his finesse skill, Nicholls is not an exceptional skater... But because he has such high levels of anticipation and hockey sense - and the other physical finesse skills necessary to utilize that anticipation and sense - Nicholls leaps from ordinary to extraordinary. Now add his superior hand skills, and you begin to see how Nicholls succeeds. He's very patient with the puck along the boards, getting the puck under control before making a play, and Bernie can slip the puck to a teammate through the smallest opening. His puckhandling is excellent. His favourite play is to fake a slapshot and then deke to his forehand. That slapshot is an excellent one, among the league's best, and Bernie makes it better by being an excellent one-touch shooter. All his talents make him not just a special teams regular, but a special teams star.

Nicholls is extremely strong on the puck, so don't try the old stick lifting trick, it won't work. That strength and balance combine to make him an exceptional traffic player, and he not only accepts checks and the physical game, but initiates contact as well. That hitting helps him get into the game. His big, strong hands power his wrist shot and help him win faceoffs, and his wiry strength complements his size.

Nicholls is among the NHL's very best players... He's a great competitor who loves the pressure to perform.

Hockey Scouting Report 1991-92 said:
An interesting, creative player, Nicholls does an extremely effective job as "side man" on the Rangers' potent power play. He acts like a second quarterback to Brian leetch, setting up his office at the boards-side hashmarks of the left wing circle, looking for a one-time pass. He creates space for himself in that little quarter of the zone by letting the defense think he's going to make a certain play, by holding the puck while they react to what they think he's going to do, then doing something else.

At even strength, Nicholls throws a nice "area" pass and lets his teammates skate into it with good speed. He attacks the blueline, then pulls up to buy time for his wings or a defenseman coming in late; he does the same thing in the left wing corner, after sliding down the boards.

Nicholls will pick up a man and backcheck. He even will get an occasional piece of an opponent, even will bump and battle in the corners - usually on the power play. There is a truly obnoxious side to Nicholls' game, one that reaches full flower if he has a heavyweight puncher on his line. There is a wild streak to him. He can be infuriating to opponents. He can be a filthy, chippy player who can be a real distraction and can win a mental war when he wants to.

He clearly enjoys life, enjoys the game, seems to love playing it and draws the top checkers because he averages a point per game.

Hockey Scouting Report 1992-93 said:
Nicholls is an equal opportunity center; the right wing is going to get as many passes as the left wing. There are centers in the league who look more for the "natural" pass, to the linemate on their forehanc; in Nicholls' case, that would be the left wing. When he has time and space, though, he positions his body in such a way that the forehand pass to the right side is not a problem. And when he doesn't have time and space, he can brick the hard forehand pass to the left wing or still flip a fat, soft saucer pass on the backhand to his right wing.

He can bat pucks out of the air easily, which always makes him a threat to deflect shots. Rather than plant himself in front of a goaltender, Nicholls will feed the point for a shot, wait until the defenseman is committed to the windup, then drive to the net so he can arrive at the same time as the puck does - improving his chances of a tip or a rebound.

He wouldn't qualify as a fast skater necessarily, but he is strong on his feet. Nicholls can absorb a big hit in the corner and not go down. He is also fairly shifty. Nicholls handles the detail work with ease, if not consistency. He finds the proper passing option, makes a sharp first pass out of the zone. He covers the point when one of his defensemen rushes deep. He pays attention to his point man when killing penalties. He locks up his opposing center after winning a faceoff.

Nicholls will pay some attention on defense and tends to stay on the plus side of the ledger. Generally, he will tie up an opponent's stick or simply stand in front of him - winning through positioning - more than taking the player out with a shoulder hit. He has a nasty side. He isn't much of a battler, although he spends a fair amount of time in the corners and wins some pucks. He checks more with the stick than with the body, but he will shove a guy - or shove back.

Nicholls is so creative, has such good hockey sense. He just KNOWS things some people never seem to learn. Whether he knows as much as he thinks he knows is another question, but Nicholls certainly knows how to get goals, how to set up goals, how to see the big picture and focus it.

Hockey Almanac 1993-94 said:
A natural goalscorer, Nicholls has a hard shot and capable hands. His passing is precise and graceful. He was Edmonton's leading playmaker and point producer before the trade... Not the fastest or most elegant skater, Nicholls relies on quickness and balance, and the ability to change speeds and directions without tipping his hand (or losing the puck). He can unleash his shot from anywhere and is always a threat to fire the puck... Once a pure offensive threat, Nicholls has quietly rounded into an excellent two-way player. By no means bruising, he is nonetheless willing and able to compete in rugged surroundings and will take his lumps to make a play. His instincts and puck sense will serve him well no matter where he plays... a highly valued player.

WILL - score goals
EXPECT - a powerplay sniper

Hockey Scouting Report 1993-94 said:
A loose and loopy personality off the ice, Nicholls exhibits some of those tendencies on the ice. Sometimes this is a plus, as Nicholls can be wonderfully inventive with the puck, especially when creating plays from behind the net... Nicholls is an excellent passer, equally deft on the forehand or the backhand... The Devils employed Nicholls on the point on the powerplay not for his slapshot, but for his vision and ability to hit the open man with a pass... Nicholls is good down low.

Nicholls is strong for his side and has a real nasty streak... When playing with a bodyguard, he can becme an outrageous opponent. He will needle, nettle and intimidate with his words and his stick.

Hockey Almanac 1994-95 said:
Nicholls was dealt some difficult cards last year, during which he suffered a knee injury and, much more devastating, the loss of his young son after a long illness. It was a monument to his psychological strength that he was able to compete at all... Nicholls has a hard, accurate shot and soft hands. He has a nose for the net and is not shy about unleashing his shot whenever possible. He skates well enough and is a smart and clever playmaker, finding his teammates with neat passes. He plays a mistake-free style... New Jersey reduced him to a part-time player limited to penalty-killing and checking.

CAN'T - Be counted out yet
EXPECT - A strong comeback
DON'T EXPECT - A quitter

Pro Hockey Play-By-Play 1994-95 said:
He's not New jersey's future, but he filled an important role for the team this year.

Hockey Almanac 1995-96 said:
Will pull the trigger whenever possible... A competitor who'll win games...

WILL - Be a leader
DON'T EXPECT - To push him around

Hockey Scouting Report 1995-96 said:
Nicholls has turned into an excellent penalty killer... He blocks shots better than many defensemen. While he is not fast, he does pay attention to his conditioning... Strong for his size and has a real nasty strreak... intimidates with his words, but he's so funny it's a wonder he doesn't just leave opponents doubled over in laughter...

Hockey Almanac 1996-97 said:
Nicholls has terrific finesse skills, but he's also rugged. He is a sniper with soft hands. He can go top shelf or feed a pass through a defender's legs... Nicholls helps keep his teammates loose and enthusiastic... A dedicated player who can turn his focus to the game.

WILL - Keep mates loose
CAN'T - Turn your back
EXPECT - A brilliant passer
DON'T EXPECT - A Lady Bynger

Not Quite a Fine Wine, But a Mid-Grade one at Least:

Nicholls was remarkably productive as he aged. In the 1994-95 to 1996-97 seasons, he was 33-35 years old. Here are the top-10 in points per game during this three-year period, among players a year younger than Nicholls or older, Minimum 100 games over these three seasons. Also listed are three other star forwards who didn't age as gracefully, for illustration purposes:

Name|GP|Pts|PPG
Mark Messier | 191 | 236 | 1.24
Wayne Gretzky | 210 | 247 | 1.18
Adam Oates | 150 | 174 | 1.16
Paul Coffey | 178 | 166 | 0.93
Raymond Bourque*| 190 | 175 | 0.92
Bernie Nicholls | 172 | 156 | 0.91
Igor Larionov | 170 | 151 | 0.89
Dino Ciccarelli | 183 | 146 | 0.8
Chris Chelios | 201 | 158 | 0.79
Mike Gartner | 202 | 137 | 0.68
| | |
Denis Savard | 176 | 100 | 0.57
Jari Kurri | 191 | 109 | 0.57
Joe Mullen | 136 | 74 | 0.54
Neal Broten | 144 | 75 | 0.52

Right Places, Wrong Times:

Nicholls was with a few teams (NY Rangers, Chicago, New Jersey, Los Angeles, Edmonton) shortly before or after long cup or finals runs. He missed out on the team success they enjoyed, but this was not his fault. He always performed well individually for these teams in the playoffs. As such, he has the dubious distinction of arguably the best playoff performer to never play in the finals.

Name | GP | Pts | PPG
Nicholls | 118 | 114 | 0.97
Stastny | 93 | 105 | 1.13
Federko | 91 | 101 | 1.11
Turgeon | 109 | 97 | 0.89
Gartner | 122 | 93 | 0.76
Sundin | 91 | 82 | 0.90
Wilson | 95 | 80 | 0.84
 
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BillyShoe1721

Terriers
Mar 29, 2007
17,252
6
Philadelphia, PA
C Alexei Guryshev

admin_content_retriever-4.jpg


- 6'0", 185 lbs
- Olympic Gold (1956)
- World Championship Gold (1954)
- World Championship Silver (1955, 1957, 1958, 1959)
- Soviet League Leading Scorer (1949, 1955, 1957, 1958)
- Top-4 in Russian League Scoring seven more times (3rd-1950, 4th-1951, 3rd-1952, 3rd-1953, 2nd-1954, 3rd-1956, 4th-1961)
- Soviet League All-Star (1949, 1955, 1956, 1957)
- 379 goals in 300 league games (1.26/game, Bobrov had 1.80/game but in a shorter career in an easier-to-score-in league)
- 35 goals in 41 international games
- 71 goals in 92 games with the national team

Although often forgotten by modern generations, Alexei Guryshev is a legend of Russian hockey, particularly with the Soviet Wings team (Krylja Sovetov).

Described as the "Phil Esposito of the early decades Russian hockey," Guryshev is the third highest scorer in Soviet hockey history with 379 career goals, trailing only Boris Mikhailov and Vyacheslav Starshinov. He was a scoring machine, adding 35 goals in 41 Olympic/World championship games. Like Esposito, Guryshev often scored on rebounds and in the slot. He teamed expertly with ******* ******** on a line with ******** *******.

Guryshev was a member of the Olympic gold medal team in 1956 and WC gold medal in 1954. After retiring as a player he served as an international referee.

Guryshev is a legend in Russia, but would be even bigger had he played with other Moscow teams.

-1972SummitSeries.com

to this day, Guryshev is synonymous with the name Soviet Wings... spearheaded their forward line for 15 years and was the top scorer five times... Tall, well-built and resilient, his superb stickhandling and skaing resulted ina style that was both elegant and strategic. A player of exceptional control, he never resorted to battering ram-style charges or frenzied scuffles for the puck. his specialty was cutting through the confusion with split-second timing and sending the puck into the net... An uncanny instinct for goalscoring and a superb finishing shot were his trump cards, but Guryshev may best be remembered for his unusual slapshot - matched only by ****** ******* and Viktor Shuvalov. With no windup, it was a short, quick slap causing the puck to sail straight through midair like a bullet. Guryshev's control of the stick, holding it with a short grip in an almost horizontal position, enabled him to slap the puck on the fly with amazing speed. Guryshev's strength as a forward and leading goalscorer depended on wingers ***** ***** and ****** *****, who drew opposition defensemen away from Guryshev while feeding passes to him as he positioned hmself near the net. Wings coach ******** ******* consciously built the game around Guryshev's exceptional scoring ability, freeing him from defense duties... the opposition's greatest challenge was to neutralize Guryshev... the strongest and most experienced defensemen were assigned teh job, but they were rarely successful... even compared to bobrov's line, Guryshev's troika chalked up impressive scores during the '55 and '57 WCs. During the 1954 WC game against Canada, it was Guryshev who scored the significant first goal...always remained in control of his game, never losing his cool despite constant attempts to neutralize him. His skill lay in being able to soze up the goalie's position and stance, the possibility of the enemy's defense line blocking his shot and the precision of his reammate on teh ice with instant precision. Then, with split-second accuract, Guryshev would take advantage of his opponents confusion to fire the puck into the net...even after his former partners had hung up their skates, Guryshev continued to play and score goals. At age 30, he scored 41, then 36, 32, and 40. Even at 36, Guryshev scored an impressive 19 goals during the 1960-61 season.
-Kings of the Ice

A big centre-man who hogged the slot area and got a lot of heavy traffic goals for his wings club...one of only three players to average more than a goal a game...second on the Russians in 1956 Olympics with 7 goals
-The Red Machine
 

TheDevilMadeMe

Registered User
Aug 28, 2006
52,271
6,988
Brooklyn
D/RW Marty McSorley.

Joe Pelletier said:
Originally a winger, Marty is best known for playing defense where he cleared creases and intimidate attacking opponents on a nightly basis. He did possess a heavy shot.

legendsofhockey said:
Since debuting in the NHL in 1983-84, defenceman Marty McSorley has developed into one of the toughest customers in the game. His ability to rush with the puck and utilize a quick shot from the point has made him a prominent member of several NHL clubs.
...
In 1985, he was picked up by the Edmonton Oilers and was an important physical deterrent when the club dominated the NHL through the regular season. The next year, he experienced the euphoria of a Stanley Cup win and contributed four playoff goals in addition to muscle. In 1987-88, McSorley scored nine goals and played in a variety of situations for the Oilers when they repeated as Cup Champs.
...
McSorley was part of the monumental trade of Wayne Gretzky to the L.A. Kings in August 1988. He spent five years providing offense, grit, and a winning attitude on his new club.

-Led the league in +/- in 1991
-6th in PPGA in 1993. (on LA's first PK unit)
-4th All-Time in career penalty minutes
 

EagleBelfour

Registered User
Jun 7, 2005
7,467
63
ehsl.proboards32.com
With the 20th selection, the 586th overall in this year All-Time Draft, the Detroit Falcons are very please to select George Owen Jr.

008115266.jpg


Name: Harvard George
Height: 5'11''
Weight: 190 lbs
Position: Defence
Shoots: Left
Date of Birth: February 12, 1901
Place of Birth: Hamilton , Ontario, Canada
Date of Death: March 04, 1986 (Age: 85)

Stanley Cup Champion (1929)
Stanley Cup Finalist (1930)
Team Captain (1931-1932)
Olympics (1924)
USA Hockey Hall of Fame (1973)

Top-10 Scoring Among defenseman (1st*, 2nd, 7th, 10th)
Top-10 Goalscoring among defenseman (1st*, 2nd, 5th, 6th, 7th)
Top-10 Assist among defenseman (2nd*, 3rd, 5th)

Top-10 Playoff Scoring Among defenseman (8th)
Top-10 Playoff Assist (4th, 6th)
Top-10 Playoff Penalty Minutes among defenseman (6th)
Top-10 Playoff Scoring Among defenseman (1st, 3rd)
Top-10 Playoff Goalscoring among defenseman (1st)
Top-10 Playoff Assist among defenseman (1st, 2nd)
Top-10 Playoff Penalty Minutes among defenseman (6th, 10th, 10th)

- In 1921, George Owen Jr was elected captain of the University hockey team
- In 1923, Owen graduated from Harvard and was awarded Harvard's Wingate cup for best all around athletic ability
- In 1923, he outhomered a certain Columbia first baseman by the name of Lou Gehrig on the diamond
- At first, Owen was acquired by the Toronto Maple Leafs, but never played for them. On January 8th, 1929, his rights traded to Boston by Toronto for Eric Pettinger and the rights to Hugh Plaxton
- The first player to wear protective headgear was George Owen of the Boston Bruins in 1929. Owen had also played football and wore his leather football helmet on the ice. Early hockey helmets that followed were skimpy leather affairs
- It is alleged that Owen received 16 000$ for his first year as a professional and received a record bonus of 25 000$ to sign with the Boston Bruins
- During his playing days, he was one of Boston Globe sports writer
- From 1923 to 1942, he worked as an investment broker
- Owen managed the Hadley Special Tool Company during World War II
- From 1953 to 1963, Owen was a teacher and coach at Milton Academy
- He was later a scout for Philadelphia Phillies and Pittsburgh Pirates
- In 1983, he was also elected into the College Football Hall of Fame
- Owen played the banjo, violin and saxophone


HHOF said:
Defenceman George Owen was a fine offensive player on the Boston Bruins between 1928-33. His 44 goals in 183 games was a fairly high ratio for the time and was invaluable to the Beantowners' transition game.

Trail of the Stanley Cup said:
A free-for-all developped after Hib Milks was heavily checked by the Boston defence player George Owen.

1931 playoffs:
[Against the Canadiens:] - March 28th: Boston came right back to tie the series at two games each when they defeated Canadiens 3-1 in the fourth game. Eddie Shore and George Owen starred of defence.

[In 1932]Art Ross, in desperation to get some life into his Bruins was trying a few experiments such as using big George Owen on a forward line with Art Chapman and Percy Galbraith. The big fellow performed quite well but was obviously better on defence.

College Football Hall of Fame said:
He played every minute of rugged hockey games.

Globe and Mail; January 21st 1929 said:
The United States, since the increase in hockey's popularity along the line, is starting to develop really good players, as witness the signing of Myle Lane by the Rangers and George Owen by Boston.

Globe and Mail; March 30th 1930 said:
George Owen went in for Hitchman and performed so well that the Bruins rangy leader was not missed. Owen was all over the ice and early in the third period he led the rush that ended when Bill Carson beat ''Flash''Walsh.

Globe and Mail; April 8th 1931 said:
Like a flash, Owen passed out to ''Cooney'' Weiland who slapped it into the twine of Hainsworth's unprotected side.

Chapman rushed to the defence and passed across to George Owen on left wing. George was uncovered and found the corner on a rising shot.

Globe and Mail; October 28th 1932 said:
The former Harvard star was not a holdout. He was unable to decide weither or not hockey interfered with his brokerage business until late today, when he threshed out his problem with the Buins' head. As in former years, his play will be restricted to the home games and the short midweek trips.

Globe and Mail; February 11th 1937 said:
George Owen Harvard University and Jerry Geran of Darmouth University were easily the most efficient professionals who ever graduated from United States intercollegiate company.


- ''As Hib Milks came down the ice and met the defences of the Bruins, he was handed a handsome body check by George Owen. Harvard George is a peaceable fellow and very pleasant. Milks, however, wanted to get a shot at the goal and resented being blocked off. So he took a swipe at Owen with his hockey and George flattened him with a beautiful tackle.'' - Arthur Siegel, Boston Herald

-''Look over the good players you know or have seen, make exception of men like Hobey Baker of Princeton and George Owen of Harvard, and you'll come to the conclusion that most of the good hockey men are no fast in baseball, football or tracks.'' - Manager Jack Slattery


Sites:
http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SearchPlayer.jsp?player=13907
http://www.sihrhockey.org/member_player_sheet.cfm?player_id=2890&CFID=1956941&CFTOKEN=32966801
http://www.collegefootball.org/famersearch.php?id=20016
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1921/3/3/owen-elected-hockey-captain-for-1921-22/
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1923/11/2/owen-to-play-on-american-1924/
http://www.900chml.com/Sports/HockeyNation/HamiltonHeroes/Story.aspx?id=1040532
http://www.sihrhockey.org/public_xmas_1930.cfm
http://harvardmagazine.com/1997/09/pump.html
http://www.boston.com/news/local/ar.../?rss_id=Boston+Globe+--+Today's+paper+A+to+Z
 

EagleBelfour

Registered User
Jun 7, 2005
7,467
63
ehsl.proboards32.com
With our 22nd selection, the 680th overall in this year All-Time Draft, the Detroit Falcons are very happy to select left winger Ed Sandford

edsandford.jpg


Nickname: Sandy
Height: 6'1''
Weight: 180 lbs
Position: Left Wing
Shoots: Right
Date of Birth: August 20, 1928
Place of Birth: New Toronto, Canada

Stanley Cup Finalist (1953)
Conn Smythe Trophy (1953)
NHL Second All-Star Team (1954)
Played in NHL All-Star Game (1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955)
Team Captain (1955)

Top-10 Scoring (8th)
Top-10 Assist (10th)
Top-5 Team Scoring (1st, 2nd, 5th)
Top-5 Team Goalscoring (3rd, 4th, 5th)
Top-5 Team Assist (2nd, 2nd, 4th, 5th)
Top-5 Penalty Minutes (3rd, 3rd, 4th, 4th)

*0.50 Point per game in the regular season*
Top-10 Playoff Scoring (1st, 8th)
Top-10 Playoff Goalscoring (1st, 7th)
Top-10 Playoff Assist (8th, 10th)
Top-10 Playoff Penalty Minutes (4th)
Top-5 Team Scoring (1st, 1st, 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th)
Top-5 Team Goalscoring (1st, 1st, 3rd, 4th, 4th)
Top-5 Team Assist (1st, 1st, 2nd, 2nd, 3rd, 5nd)
Top-5 Penalty Minutes (2nd, 2nd, 4th)

*0.57 Point per game in the regular season*

Lady Bing Nomination (5th)

- In 1947, Sandford signed a three year contract worth 9000$ per season with the Boston Bruins
- Ed Sandford received a second All-Star nomination in 1954, after notching a 16 goals season. This is the lowest total a Left Winger All-Star ever put on since the 1931-32 season (Aurel Joliat with 15), which speak about Sandford all-around abilities
- On June 4th, 1955, Sandford was traded to Detroit by Boston with Gilles Boisvert, Real Chevrefils, Norm Corcoran and Warren Godfrey for Marcel Bonin, Lorne Davis, Terry Sawchuk and Vic Stasiuk
- On October 24th, 1955, Sandford was traded to Chicago by Detroit for Metro Prystai
- After his retirement, Sandford served in various off-ice capacities for the Bruins, as a goal judge, official scorer and eventually supervisor of off-ice officials
- Later in his life, Sandford became a curling enthusiast


HHOF said:
[1953 Playoffs]Great in the victory over Detroit scoring six goals in the last four games. He had three first goals and an assist on the series winner. Against Montreal he had the winner in the only Bruins win. Led the playoffs in goals and points (8-3).

Sanford's formal education was put on permanent hold in the wake of the Boston Bruins desire to integrate the young sniper into their line-up.

He evolved into a steady performer who was good for about 30 points per season.

Wikipedia said:
He proved to be an effective and tenacious defensive left winger, and was named to play in the NHL All-Star Game in five consecutive seasons starting in 1951.

Trail of the Stanley Cup said:
1949 Playoffs
[Against Toronto] - Sandford also played well for Boston.
1952 Playoffs
[Against Montreal] - Ed Sandford equalize with a nice goal before the period ended.
1953 Playoffs
[Against Detroit] - The line of Klukay, Dumart, Sandford was outstanding
- They established a two-goal lead in the first period on smart plays by Sandford and McIntyre

1953-54 Parkhurst Ed Sandford said:

1954-55 Parkhurst Ed Sandford said:

1954-55 Topps Ed Sandford said:

The Globe and Mail; March 17th 1947 said:
Ed Harrison and the smooth-moving Ed Sandford in particular, laid siege to the Galt net.

The Globe and Mail; March 26th 1947 said:
The only goal of the game was scored one minute 25 seconds after it started. It was caged by shifty Ed Sandford.

Ed Sandford was St.Mikes top forward performer. Not alone becasue of his game-winning goal, but because he was a going concern all the way.

April 23rd 1947 said:
It was Sandford, a superb hockey player, who set up Irish first goal.

June 12th 1947 said:
Ed Sandford, dynamic playmaking team captain of the Memorial Cup Champion. Sandford, one of the greatest junior star developed in Canada

The Globe and Mail; January 22nd 1948 said:
Rookie Eddie Sandford gave a battling display, looked better than at any time this season against Toronto. He duelled most of the game with Kennedy and it ended up with Kennedy getting thumbed with a minor penalty.

The Globe and Mail; March 15th 1948 said:
Bruins Wallop Wings 5-1, To Clinch Playoff Spot; Babando, Sandford Star.

The Globe and Mail; March 28th 1949 said:
It was Dumart who scored the Winning goal: it was Sandford whose important tally was the most cleverly executed play of the evening.

The Globe and Mail; April 6th 1953 said:
Big Ed Sandford, policeman of the playoff for Boston.

The Globe and Mail; March 30th 1955 said:
The second lead was provided by Eddie Sandford at 8:52 of the third period. Sandford dug the puck out of the corner, back to Leo Boivin, and was in front of the crease to deflect Boivin's shot from the point into the corner.


Sites:
http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SearchPlayer.jsp?player=14216
http://www.sihrhockey.org/member_player_sheet.cfm?player_id=3355&CFID=5863307&CFTOKEN=59210716
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed_Sandford


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