Rob Scuderi
Registered User
- Sep 3, 2009
- 3,378
- 2
LW Gary Roberts
6-2, 215 lbs.
Shoots Left
1224 GP 910 points
130 playoff GP 93 points
[QUOTE="One More Chance" Daniel G. Habib - May 27, 2002] With injured teammates falling all around him (10 regulars have been out of the lineup for at least one game since the middle of the second round), Roberts has become the leader of Toronto's march through these Demolition Derby playoffs. After Sunday's 2-1 loss in overtime to the Carolina Hurricanes, in which Roberts set up Toronto's goal and played with gusto, the Eastern Conference finals were tied at one game apiece. Though he was sixth on his team in scoring during the regular season, Roberts was tied for the NHL playoff scoring lead through Sunday, with seven goals and 12 assists. His timing has been equally impressive. In the conference semifinals against the Ottawa Senators he ended Game 2 in the third overtime by snaking a wrister from the slot between goalie Patrick Lalime's pads to even the series. He also scored game-tying goals in Game 6 against the Senators and Game 7 of the conference quarterfinals against the New York Islanders. "Gary has one gear, and it's go," says Toronto coach Pat Quinn. "He plays with a lack of respect for his body."
Roberts's strengthening of his body not only allowed him to make a comeback, which he did successfully with the Hurricanes in 1997-98 (he was traded to Carolina in August '97), but also let him regain the ruthless power-forward style that in '91-92 made him the second player in league history (after Kevin Stevens) to score at least 50 goals and get 200 or more penalty minutes in the same season. Subtle as a sledgehammer and equally as potent, Roberts constantly crashes his 6'1", 190-pound body into defenders and dive-bombs the offensive zone in pursuit of loose pucks.
"The thing to remember when you're trying to defend Gary is that he never takes the long route to anywhere, and when he gets the puck, he's taking the shortest route possible to the net," says Carolina coach Paul Maurice, for whom Roberts played for three seasons before signing as a free agent with the Leafs in July 2000. "You've got to get between him and the net, and that's not fun."
Roberts is at his best around the crease because he's big enough to screen the goal-tender and strong enough to keep defenders from pushing him away. "He's one of the toughest guys to knock out of there or to even move his stick," says Alyn McCauley, who centers Roberts and right wing Jonas Hoglund. "I take the puck wide on a two-on-one, and I look for Gary to go to the net."
"Gary started playing hockey when he was five, and he was big for his age," his father, Herb, a retired steelworker who raised Gary in Whitby, Ont., says with a laugh. "That's why his game is the way it is—he's always been aggressive." That aggressiveness surfaced in Game 5 of the series against the Islanders when Roberts leveled New York defenseman Kenny Jonsson from behind, sending Jonsson crashing into the boards and causing him to sustain a concussion. ( Roberts was assessed a charging major but was not suspended. He said that he was simply finishing his check.) Two games later Roberts plowed into Islanders goalie Chris Osgood on a rush, kneeing Osgood in the midsection. "When you play that intense, stuff like that happens," says Leafs defenseman Nathan Dempsey. "Gary never intends to hurt anybody."
Toronto, though, has the benefit of Roberts's remarkable wrecking-ball act and the inspiration of the hardest-working man in hockey. "He leads by example," Leafs winger Tie Domi says of Roberts. "He plays every shift like it's his last."[/QUOTE]
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1025852/2/index.htm
[QUOTE="Stitches In Time" Michael Farber - Oct 12, 1998]On March 20, 1994, Carolina Hurricanes left wing Gary Roberts, then with the Calgary Flames, had his right thumb shattered in a game against the Toronto Maple Leafs when it was hit by a shot. Trainers stanched the flow of blood, and he didn't miss a shift. Between periods Roberts had the finger put in a splint, and he kept playing in the following weeks while it healed. In the playoffs that spring Roberts, who couldn't lift his right arm above his head because of an injured neck, put on a protective collar for Game 6 of the first round against the Vancouver Canucks. However, he removed it in overtime because he was having difficulty looking down and seeing loose pucks near his skates. Roberts was by far the best player in the series.[/QUOTE]
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1014229/2/index.htm
[QUOTE="10 - Florida Panthers" Brian Cazeneuve - Oc 3, 2005]Roberts's grit and defensive diligence will help..[/QUOTE]
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1105734/index.htm
[QUOTE="Roberts Rises to Occasion for Depleted Toronto" Shawna Richer - May 1, 2002]So the Leafs entered Game 7 with a battered and bruised team and without their usual leaders among the skaters.
Alexander Mogilny scored two goals in the Leafs' 4-2 victory to capture the series, but the best player was arguably forward Gary Roberts, who assumed a leadership role during the entire series but particularly in this decisive game.
As the Maple Leafs stormed the Islanders' net and the puck bounced around goalie Chris Osgood midway through the second period, the hulking Roberts left nothing to chance.
Islanders defenseman Darren Van Impe looked for the puck behind the net, but Roberts skated hard through the zone and slammed his opponent into the boards. The puck sailed past, allowing the Leafs to continue their press.
Roberts, sporting black and blue swelling under his left eye and a small row of stitches on his cheek, was a menacing force in this series, and tonight's game was no exception.
He finished his checks. He nailed his passes. He managed four shots on goal in the first period, scoring Toronto's first goal when he scooped up a tidy drop pass from Tie Domi outside a face-off circle. His goal, at 13 minutes 27 seconds of the first period, tied the score at 1-1. He set up Mogilny for an empty-net insurance goal with 40 seconds remaining.
''I haven't taken the puck to the net in this series like I know I can,'' Roberts said. ''It was nice to score. I tried to do that early in the game. I was just coming off the bench so my legs were fresh, and Tie made a great play to get me the puck.''
On his way through the crease during his scoring play, Roberts tripped over a falling Osgood. His skate seemed to strike Osgood on the leg. It appeared unintentional, but it threw Osgood and the Islanders off their game for at least a period.
Early in the third period, Roberts slid headfirst and hard into Osgood, pushing him inside his net. ''I was just trying to get to the net and be smart and not get any penalties,'' said Roberts, who won a Stanley Cup with the Calgary Flames in 1989.
Roberts was a force against an Islanders club missing its own captain, the injured Michael Peca. Roberts led the Leafs in hits in three games. He scored two goals and contributed four assists. He knocked the Islanders' top defenseman, Kenny Jonsson, out of the series in Game 5 with a punishing check from behind.
''Gary brought a lot of leadership tonight,'' forward Darcy Tucker said. ''He got us back into the game with his goal, and he kept us in with his physical play. We lost a lot of leadership in this series, and because of his Stanley Cup experience all the guys fell in behind him.''
Roberts is no stranger to the role. Roberts, a 6-foot-1, 190-pound Toronto native, notched 11 points in 11 games in the Leafs' postseason run to the conference semifinals last year. And he has been as important if not more to the club this spring.
''He's been really important to us throughout the season,'' forward Alyn McCauley said. ''Even in the loss, he got us a goal in Game 6. That got us going for this game, and then lo and behold, he gets our first goal tonight. It's not surprising, coming from him.''[/QUOTE]
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/01/s...for-depleted-toronto.html?pagewanted=2&src=pm
6-2, 215 lbs.
Shoots Left
1224 GP 910 points
130 playoff GP 93 points
- x1 Stanley Cup winner ('89)
- x3 ASG ('92, '93, '04)
- x1 Top 5 in Goals: 3 ('92)
- AST voting placements: 3 ('92), 6 ('90), 6 ('94) T7 ('93), 8 ('04) T12 ('01)
- Selke voting placements: 9 ('94), T15th ('01)
LoH said:Ready to turn pro, Roberts split his first season between the Calgary Flames, who had drafted him, and the Moncton Golden Flames of the AHL. His stay in the minors was short, however, as he caught on permanently with the Flames in 1987-88, about the same time his childhood buddy, Nieuwendyk, arrived as well.
From that point forward, Roberts established himself as a rambunctious player, known for his hard drives towards the opponent's net. In fact, his first-ever NHL goal was scored against the Vancouver Canucks. He put himself and the puck behind the goal line.
Roberts' second full year with the Flames brought him to the top as the club secured its first and only Stanley Cup victory. After the big win, he only got better as the years progressed. In 1991-92, he reached his height of personal output, scoring 53 goals in one campaign.
Several seasons later, however, all of the hard drives and hits taken from behind caught up with him. He missed most of the 1994-95 season with the hope that a long rest would ease the burning pain in his neck and numbness in his arm. He attempted a comeback the following year, but found that his symptoms got worse. A closer check by doctors revealed bone spurs and nerve damage in his neck. The operation required to correct the situation would be delicate and could offer no guarantee that Roberts would ever play pro hockey again.
He sat out the 1996-97 campaign and embarked on a vigourous reconditioning program. With his new super healthy regime in place, Roberts made a comeback as a free agent with the Carolina Hurricanes. With his neck built up like that of a bulldog's, Roberts was back in the league's goal creases engaged in territorial jousting. Over the three-plus seasons since his operation, he has played solid hockey, netting his usual 55 to 60 points per campaign.
In 2000, Roberts accepted a lucrative offer to sign as a free agent with the Toronto Maple Leafs and during the 2002 Stanley Cup playoffs was the team's leading point getter and its best player. In the summer of 2002 Roberts underwent shoulder surgery and missed the better part of the 2002-03 season, before returning in the latter stages of the season and post season.
In 2003-04, Roberts surpassed the 1,000 games played plateau and notched his 800th point.
Over two injury plagued seasons in Pittsburgh, Roberts managed to notch his 900th career NHL point and would be considered one of the best leaders & mentors the Penguins' ever had. After a magical run to the Cup Finals in 2008, Roberts was acquired by the Tampa Bay Lightning where he would play the final 30 games of his career before retiring in March of 2009.
Joe Pelletier said:Just a youngster with the Flames when they won the Stanley Cup in 1989, Roberts grew to become one of the last great pieces of that team, averaging 39 goals and 200 PIMs from 1990 through 1994. That included a team record 53 goals (and 207 PIMs) in 1991-92.
He was an admirable player. Not a great one based on skill sets, but an opportunistic hard worker who was rewarded, perhaps overachievingly so.
He was a mucker and grinder at heart, a great cornerman and net crasher. He was incredibly intelligent, arriving at the net at the right time and driving through lanes to open up offensive room for his teammates. He was in no way fancy, relying a quick release and banging and crashing to score all of his many goals.
Physically he was scary. He feared no pain and launched his bodies at opponents on nearly every shift. His powerful skating stride punctuated his effectiveness, and made him a natural forechecker and penalty killer.
Strong and determined, he set the tone on many nights in Calgary. If not through his hustle and pursuit game, then by dropping the gloves. He was not a true heavyweight, but he had the mindset of a pit bull.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - May 6 said:Gary Roberts of Toronto didn't have to be the triple-overtime hero in Game 2 of the second-round series between the Maple Leafs and Ottawa Saturday night...But it was Roberts, whose skill level is complemented - overshadowed, for the that matter - by his grit and work ethic, who ended the third-longest game in Maple Leafs history by throwing a wrist shot between the legs of Senators goalie Patrick Lalime at 4:30 of the third overtime.
Of course, he did it only after stumbling toward the middle of the ice, regaining his balance just in time to snap off the winner. "It wasn't pretty," Roberts said. "But if you look at the goals I've scored, they're not pretty, so we'll take them any way they come." The Maple Leafs don't look to Roberts for highlight-tape goals, thought; that's the domain of Mogilny and, when he is healthy, Mats Sundin. Which isn't to suggest that Toronto fails to appreciate his contributions.
"I would think every team in the league would be lucky to have a Gary Roberts," Maple Leafs Coach Pat Quinn said. "He does such a great job for us. He's a great leader, a hard worker and he comes to the rink to play every night." Those are commendable qualities, and prompted the Toronto Star to suggest yesterday that Roberts "has emerged as the de facto captain" of the Maple Leafs since Sundin was forced from the lineup by a broken wrist in Round 1 against the New York Islanders.
"Maybe it's overshadowed a little bit when you have a guy like Mats [who] can do the things he does out there, but in his absence, you takenotice of Gary a little bit more," Maple Leafs forward Alyn McCauley said. "I guess you could say Gary has been thrust into being the captain without the 'C' on his sweater.
The Vindicator - Dec 27 said:Here are two reasons why the Calgary Flames climbed into the first place in the Smythe Division last week: Gary Roberts and Dave King. Roberts, a 26-year old left winger, had 20 goals and 27 assists through the first 35 games as the Flames bolted to an impressive 21-10-4 start.
King, the former coach of the Canadian national team, has made all the right moves with Roberts. Unlike former coach Doug Risebrough, King boosted Roberts' confidence by playing him on the power-play and penalty-killing units.
[QUOTE="One More Chance" Daniel G. Habib - May 27, 2002] With injured teammates falling all around him (10 regulars have been out of the lineup for at least one game since the middle of the second round), Roberts has become the leader of Toronto's march through these Demolition Derby playoffs. After Sunday's 2-1 loss in overtime to the Carolina Hurricanes, in which Roberts set up Toronto's goal and played with gusto, the Eastern Conference finals were tied at one game apiece. Though he was sixth on his team in scoring during the regular season, Roberts was tied for the NHL playoff scoring lead through Sunday, with seven goals and 12 assists. His timing has been equally impressive. In the conference semifinals against the Ottawa Senators he ended Game 2 in the third overtime by snaking a wrister from the slot between goalie Patrick Lalime's pads to even the series. He also scored game-tying goals in Game 6 against the Senators and Game 7 of the conference quarterfinals against the New York Islanders. "Gary has one gear, and it's go," says Toronto coach Pat Quinn. "He plays with a lack of respect for his body."
Roberts's strengthening of his body not only allowed him to make a comeback, which he did successfully with the Hurricanes in 1997-98 (he was traded to Carolina in August '97), but also let him regain the ruthless power-forward style that in '91-92 made him the second player in league history (after Kevin Stevens) to score at least 50 goals and get 200 or more penalty minutes in the same season. Subtle as a sledgehammer and equally as potent, Roberts constantly crashes his 6'1", 190-pound body into defenders and dive-bombs the offensive zone in pursuit of loose pucks.
"The thing to remember when you're trying to defend Gary is that he never takes the long route to anywhere, and when he gets the puck, he's taking the shortest route possible to the net," says Carolina coach Paul Maurice, for whom Roberts played for three seasons before signing as a free agent with the Leafs in July 2000. "You've got to get between him and the net, and that's not fun."
Roberts is at his best around the crease because he's big enough to screen the goal-tender and strong enough to keep defenders from pushing him away. "He's one of the toughest guys to knock out of there or to even move his stick," says Alyn McCauley, who centers Roberts and right wing Jonas Hoglund. "I take the puck wide on a two-on-one, and I look for Gary to go to the net."
"Gary started playing hockey when he was five, and he was big for his age," his father, Herb, a retired steelworker who raised Gary in Whitby, Ont., says with a laugh. "That's why his game is the way it is—he's always been aggressive." That aggressiveness surfaced in Game 5 of the series against the Islanders when Roberts leveled New York defenseman Kenny Jonsson from behind, sending Jonsson crashing into the boards and causing him to sustain a concussion. ( Roberts was assessed a charging major but was not suspended. He said that he was simply finishing his check.) Two games later Roberts plowed into Islanders goalie Chris Osgood on a rush, kneeing Osgood in the midsection. "When you play that intense, stuff like that happens," says Leafs defenseman Nathan Dempsey. "Gary never intends to hurt anybody."
Toronto, though, has the benefit of Roberts's remarkable wrecking-ball act and the inspiration of the hardest-working man in hockey. "He leads by example," Leafs winger Tie Domi says of Roberts. "He plays every shift like it's his last."[/QUOTE]
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1025852/2/index.htm
[QUOTE="Stitches In Time" Michael Farber - Oct 12, 1998]On March 20, 1994, Carolina Hurricanes left wing Gary Roberts, then with the Calgary Flames, had his right thumb shattered in a game against the Toronto Maple Leafs when it was hit by a shot. Trainers stanched the flow of blood, and he didn't miss a shift. Between periods Roberts had the finger put in a splint, and he kept playing in the following weeks while it healed. In the playoffs that spring Roberts, who couldn't lift his right arm above his head because of an injured neck, put on a protective collar for Game 6 of the first round against the Vancouver Canucks. However, he removed it in overtime because he was having difficulty looking down and seeing loose pucks near his skates. Roberts was by far the best player in the series.[/QUOTE]
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1014229/2/index.htm
[QUOTE="10 - Florida Panthers" Brian Cazeneuve - Oc 3, 2005]Roberts's grit and defensive diligence will help..[/QUOTE]
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1105734/index.htm
[QUOTE="Roberts Rises to Occasion for Depleted Toronto" Shawna Richer - May 1, 2002]So the Leafs entered Game 7 with a battered and bruised team and without their usual leaders among the skaters.
Alexander Mogilny scored two goals in the Leafs' 4-2 victory to capture the series, but the best player was arguably forward Gary Roberts, who assumed a leadership role during the entire series but particularly in this decisive game.
As the Maple Leafs stormed the Islanders' net and the puck bounced around goalie Chris Osgood midway through the second period, the hulking Roberts left nothing to chance.
Islanders defenseman Darren Van Impe looked for the puck behind the net, but Roberts skated hard through the zone and slammed his opponent into the boards. The puck sailed past, allowing the Leafs to continue their press.
Roberts, sporting black and blue swelling under his left eye and a small row of stitches on his cheek, was a menacing force in this series, and tonight's game was no exception.
He finished his checks. He nailed his passes. He managed four shots on goal in the first period, scoring Toronto's first goal when he scooped up a tidy drop pass from Tie Domi outside a face-off circle. His goal, at 13 minutes 27 seconds of the first period, tied the score at 1-1. He set up Mogilny for an empty-net insurance goal with 40 seconds remaining.
''I haven't taken the puck to the net in this series like I know I can,'' Roberts said. ''It was nice to score. I tried to do that early in the game. I was just coming off the bench so my legs were fresh, and Tie made a great play to get me the puck.''
On his way through the crease during his scoring play, Roberts tripped over a falling Osgood. His skate seemed to strike Osgood on the leg. It appeared unintentional, but it threw Osgood and the Islanders off their game for at least a period.
Early in the third period, Roberts slid headfirst and hard into Osgood, pushing him inside his net. ''I was just trying to get to the net and be smart and not get any penalties,'' said Roberts, who won a Stanley Cup with the Calgary Flames in 1989.
Roberts was a force against an Islanders club missing its own captain, the injured Michael Peca. Roberts led the Leafs in hits in three games. He scored two goals and contributed four assists. He knocked the Islanders' top defenseman, Kenny Jonsson, out of the series in Game 5 with a punishing check from behind.
''Gary brought a lot of leadership tonight,'' forward Darcy Tucker said. ''He got us back into the game with his goal, and he kept us in with his physical play. We lost a lot of leadership in this series, and because of his Stanley Cup experience all the guys fell in behind him.''
Roberts is no stranger to the role. Roberts, a 6-foot-1, 190-pound Toronto native, notched 11 points in 11 games in the Leafs' postseason run to the conference semifinals last year. And he has been as important if not more to the club this spring.
''He's been really important to us throughout the season,'' forward Alyn McCauley said. ''Even in the loss, he got us a goal in Game 6. That got us going for this game, and then lo and behold, he gets our first goal tonight. It's not surprising, coming from him.''[/QUOTE]
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/01/s...for-depleted-toronto.html?pagewanted=2&src=pm