Puckgenius*
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How good was he in his prime? Was he a #1 dman? How does he compare to Derian? Going back to his Caps days, he posted a couple 74pt seasons.
Would I be completely out of line to compare Kevin Hatcher to Bryan McCabe?
From what I can tell, Hatcher was a tough cookie and could throw a good hit from now and then, not to mention fought with some of the bigger players in his day (Semenko, Kocur, Shanahan, Berube), but was never truly a dominant defensive or physical player like Derian Hatcher or Chris Pronger.
I watched pretty much every televised game he played for the Caps.
There are 2 Kevin Hatchers:
1. Young Kevin Hatcher (first 3 or so years) was a physical beast who had offensive potential and could really lay the wood down. He crushed some fools. He was ornery too and in one game frustrated Lemieux so much with his stickwork that Mario, after the play was dead, just shot the puck at him.
2. Then he became Hollywood Hatcher. He started away from physicality and went more on his offensive instincts. All he worried about was scoring and he simply lost his path defensively.
He was really well liked by the fans in those early years but in later years with them he got the Larry Murphy "whoop whoop" treatment for his utter disdain for physical play.
Like McCabe, but a little better.
Ate up a ton of minutes for very strong teams in his 87-95 prime.
Huge shot. Potential to be devastating physically, and sometimes was, but not always. Assertive, though.
Not great defensively - for a 26 minute, 1st pairing defenseman. which is an important distinction to be made.
if you combined all of kevin's and derian's strengths, that's probably a hall of famer.
i do remember people saying that hatcher was going to replace stevens, when st. louis made the offer sheet. how did he become "hollywood hatcher"? with langway nearing the end of his career and stevens gone, wouldn't the team have put a lot of pressure on hatcher to fill a physical, defensive role?
Hatcher was a guy who just ended up stagnating.
Showed flashes of greatness from about 1988-93, but was prone to brain farts and poor defensive play. Still a young player, though, and you felt that if he could round out his defensive game and be a bit more consistently physical, he’d contend for a Norris eventually.
After his huge 1992-93 season, though, he went the other way. At a point in time where he should have been pulling everything together to develop into a mature, reliable player, he just regressed and went backwards. His physical game disappeared entirely, and his defensive play got worse as his skating deteriorated as he aged. Still good on the PP, but an average at best player at ES through the second half of his career. Was also constantly overplayed which didn’t help matters.
Ultimately a major disappointment given what he promised in his first few seasons in the league – when he broke in, he was billed as what Rob Blake ended up being. Played his last game at only age 34.
As someone else noted, if you could have combined Derian’s defensive game with Kevin’s offensive skills, you’d have ended up with a Larry Robinson-esque HHOFer. Kevin, though, lacked the fire and competitiveness of his brother. Through the first half of his career, coaches could get a mean streak out of him on occasion, but as he aged he just seemed content to play small and contribute on the PP.
When I was a kid I used to love studying the NHL guide, looking up all the prospects each team had...
The Black Hawks had, at the time, the largest player I had ever seen. His name was Mark Hatcher (I believe the oldest brother). I think he was 6'7" and 240 pounds. Huge for the time (I guess still huge). I think he may have gotten in a single NHL game.
Those were some big kids the Hatcher parents were popping out.
A few years later the Flames drafted Peluwa, who was 230+, also very rare...and in a couple years later, there would be a couple of guys that sized drafted yearly.
In my draft yr, the Hockey News had a list of (I think) 500 names of players likely to get drafted along with their hometown and their size (and I realize that those numbers are still often incorrect). I believe out of that group of 500, there was less than 20 that were over 200 pounds.
Born on last day of eligibility to qualify for 1982 NHL Entry Draft, making him the youngest player to be drafted in 1982. ... Was on Niagara Falls (OHL) team that relocated to North Bay prior to 1982-83 season. ... Retired from pro hockey for the first time after the 1984-85 season. He worked as a carpenter for three years before signing with Washington as an unrestricted free agent prior to the 1988-89 season. ... Wore No. 55 at Washington's 1988 training camp, where he was a teammate of his brother Kevin. ... Spent his 1988-89 comeback season in minor leagues before retiring for the final time.
Personal: Older brother of former NHL player Kevin Hatcher and NHL player Derian Hatcher.