Best Czech Centers All-Time

Pick the TWO best ones. Rank the rest.

  • Hrdina (Jiri)

    Votes: 1 3.3%
  • Ruzicka

    Votes: 3 10.0%
  • Reichel

    Votes: 5 16.7%
  • Pivonka

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Holik

    Votes: 6 20.0%
  • Straka

    Votes: 7 23.3%
  • Krejci

    Votes: 17 56.7%
  • Prospal

    Votes: 1 3.3%
  • Lang

    Votes: 4 13.3%
  • Nedomansky

    Votes: 6 20.0%

  • Total voters
    30

ESH

Registered User
Jun 19, 2011
5,449
3,692
He played plenty of center.
The only seasons where he took a significant amount of faceoffs were early in his career in Ottawa, and a little bit one season in New York. If you look at his linemates since that’s been tracked he usually played wing alongside a center.

All of his best seasons seem to have come playing on the wing.
 

HabzSauce

Registered User
Jun 10, 2022
1,808
2,486
Turtleneck

1000012000.jpg
 

Calderon

Registered User
Mar 24, 2006
1,205
815
Surprisingly unimpressive bunch tbh. Winger depth doesn't seem that much greater (judging by the highest scoring czechs all time on NHL.com, also sorted by PPG) but having Jagr and Pastrnak there makes the winger beat the centers quite convincingly. Seems as though much of the best centers played their careers in the dead puck era, though.
 

vadim sharifijanov

Registered User
Oct 10, 2007
29,902
18,185
The only seasons where he took a significant amount of faceoffs were early in his career in Ottawa, and a little bit one season in New York. If you look at his linemates since that’s been tracked he usually played wing alongside a center.

All of his best seasons seem to have come playing on the wing.

prospal and straka both entered the league as centers but found their footing as left wingers, both most famously on the opposite wing of a superstar RW.

but i think both guys kept getting acquired by other teams thinking they could outgrow that role and transition back to center but it never really stuck, so both guys kept moving back to the wing. and weirdly both guys also kept get reacquired by their main team (tampa and pittsburgh, respectively) to fill their old second/third option role.

i believe reichel had the opposite trajectory, starting on LW because he had nieuwendyk, gilmour, and otto all ahead of him, but eventually establishing himself as a fulltime center.
 
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Gerulaitis

Registered User
Apr 19, 2024
186
107
Surprisingly unimpressive bunch tbh. Winger depth doesn't seem that much greater (judging by the highest scoring czechs all time on NHL.com, also sorted by PPG) but having Jagr and Pastrnak there makes the winger beat the centers quite convincingly. Seems as though much of the best centers played their careers in the dead puck era, though.

Slovaks had arguably more impressive centers:

Mikita
Stastny
plus Pasek, Stumpel... Maybe someone else?
 

vadim sharifijanov

Registered User
Oct 10, 2007
29,902
18,185
Nedved had his moments .

Actually he represented Canada at the Olympics

iirc, nedved’s time with the canada olympic team was because he was holding out and needed a place to play. my memory of it is that as an asylum seeker after defecting, he was eligible to gain canadian citizenship, which he did solely for the purpose of playing for canada. what i’m not sure of, but maybe someone else knows/remembers, is whether as a defector there would have been any issues with playing for the czechs in 1994.

fwiw, he did end up playing for the czech republic over the entire rest of his international career, beginning as early as the 1996 world cup and as recently as the sochi olympics.
 
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