Brent Burns – 900 career points

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Chet Donnelly

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Mar 31, 2023
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Brent Burns on Saturday scored his 900th career NHL point, becoming the 13th defenseman in NHL history to do so.

The 12 other defensemen to reach this mark include: Ray Bourque, Paul Coffey, Al MacInnis, Phil Housley, Larry Murphy, Nicklas Lidstrom, Denis Potvin, Brian Leetch, Larry Robinson, Chris Chelios, Bobby Orr, and Scott Stevens.

Every defenseman to reach this milestone has been inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Does Burns buck the trend or follow suit?
 
Brent Burns on Saturday scored his 900th career NHL point, becoming the 13th defenseman in NHL history to do so.

The 12 other defensemen to reach this mark include: Ray Bourque, Paul Coffey, Al MacInnis, Phil Housley, Larry Murphy, Nicklas Lidstrom, Denis Potvin, Brian Leetch, Larry Robinson, Chris Chelios, Bobby Orr, and Scott Stevens.

Every defenseman to reach this milestone has been inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Does Burns buck the trend or follow suit?
Don't see why he wouldn't make the HoF. Peaked very high and was elite for a long time. Also has some incredible longevity playing later in his career. Unique player in that he played at forward as well. Not sure what they case against him would be.
 
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Don't see why he wouldn't make the HoF. Peaked very high and was elite for a long time. Also has some incredible longevity playing later in his career. Unique player in that he played at forward as well. Not sure what they case against him would be.
Lack of awards, really. He did win the one World Mens Championship.

Based on the current criteria for membership, I would say Burns will eventually get in.
 
Lack of awards, really. He did win the one World Mens Championship.

Based on the current criteria for membership, I would say Burns will eventually get in.
Ya it's too bad he didn't get an olympic gold but his career and peak really took off literally right after 2014. He's got a norris and two other top 3 finishes. End of year all-star nod. Seems to be enough based on his full resume to get in.
 
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A season or two at forward in your prime helps!
Eh, I don't know about that. I'd argue that he really only hit his prime when he was finally moved back to defense full-time by the Sharks. He put up higher single-season point totals as a defenseman than he ever did as a forward. '13-14 was his last year playing forward, and he went from being a 40-50 point forward to being a 70-80 point defenseman for the next handful of years.

In his time with the Wild, he was also at his best offensively when playing defense full-time. Playing forward actually seemed to depress his numbers for both teams that chose to utilize him that way.

Regardless, he deserves a HHoF induction, in my opinion.
 
1 world cup gold, 1 world championships gold, 1 norris trophy. And add on his longevity at being a top offensive defensemen. And he is as close to being a lock as you can be.
Completely missed he got a Norris. Always thought he was one of the "Always a bridesmaid" kind of d-men.

Definitely a lock. Will depend on others in his "class" as to whether it's 1st ballot or not.
 
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Brent Burns on Saturday scored his 900th career NHL point, becoming the 13th defenseman in NHL history to do so.

The 12 other defensemen to reach this mark include: Ray Bourque, Paul Coffey, Al MacInnis, Phil Housley, Larry Murphy, Nicklas Lidstrom, Denis Potvin, Brian Leetch, Larry Robinson, Chris Chelios, Bobby Orr, and Scott Stevens.

Every defenseman to reach this milestone has been inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Does Burns buck the trend or follow suit?
Don't forget Sergei Fedorov, another F/D hybrid. :sarcasm:
 
A season or two at forward in your prime helps!
You might want to fact check yourself. His seasons at forward were some his lowest scoring season after he was traded from the Wild, both due to the 2012-2013 lockout and him being injured for a portion of 2013-2014.

On the topic at hand, Burns has garnered a number of awards, and his high level of play coupled with his longevity should make him a lock for the HHOF.
 
He's got a Norris, longevity and the raw career numbers. If he retired today he would get into the HHOF eventually without a doubt. Anything he keeps adding at this point would only make it easier for him to get in sooner post-retirement. He's somewhat within striking distance of both the ironman record and the record for most games played, and he could still add a Cup win.

His play has fallen off a bit this year, but he absolutely still belongs in the NHL at his current level if he wants to keep playing, either as a mid-tier 2nd pair or top tier 3rd pair D and PP2 specialist. That could obviously change next year at his age, but it wouldn't surprise me at all to see him stick around for a while and have a veteran impact like Chara did recently with the Isles and Caps.
 
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Winning a Norris alone is as close to a guarantee of HoF induction as it gets. Burns is an absolute lock, and it's insane to maintain otherwise.

I just never saw him as a hall of famer. Yea, winning a Norris really helps your case, I just never thought he was legitimately the best defensemen in the league.
 
Last year there was still a bunch of jobbers saying that Burns will never make the hall of fame. It's incredible how many unknowledgeable posters just post shit without thinking first.

Wonder if there's still any jobbers on here who still think Jamie Benn won't make the Hall of fame?
 

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