The best forward lines of all-time

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tarheelhockey

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Feb 12, 2010
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Seattle's line of Frank Foyston between Jack Walker and Bernie Morris seemed to be the prototype of a line with a classic blend of complementary skills: versatile, playmaking center with a tenacious forechecking winger on one side and pure sniper on the other. Like an early version of Trottier, Bossy & Gillies. Maybe there were earlier examples of this type of combo?

It’s not earlier, but the Cook-Boucher-Cook line was an early line built along similar principles. Slick playmaking center, elite goal scoring sniper, glue guy with enough skill to clean up chances. Marinate for a generation till they mind-meld.
 

Sentinel

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May 26, 2009
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Some lines that, for some reason, nobody mentioned yet:

The Russian Five, Kozlov-Larionov-Fedorov, terrorized thr league in 1995-97. Alas they were split for the 97 playoffs, as Fedorov started on D, and was later given Kozlov and Brown, while Larionov centered Lapointe and Shanahan.

The A-Line, Elias-Arnott-Sykora, was superb at the turn of the century.

The Euro Twins, Holmstrom-Datsyuk-Zetterberg, we're excellent for most of the last decade.
 
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LuckyDay

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Mar 25, 2011
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Macke showing some rare emotion on that line.
 
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tinyzombies

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Dec 24, 2002
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I think a pretty good argument for either of the Habs top 2 lines of the 50s could be made. Olmstead/Bonin-Believeau-Geoffrion and Moore-Richard-Richard: both lines had scoring champions during the 5-Cup run in Believeau and Moore (x2), and Geoffrion was the scoring leader the yrs. that bookended the dynasty (though the lines weren't the same the yrs. he won). 5 HOFers between the two lines.

For the first ten years of his career Henri was the NHL leading even strength scorer.
 
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VanIslander

20 years of All-Time Drafts on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
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For the first ten years of his career Henri was the NHL leading even strength scorer.
There is a huge difference between:

A) Being the leader EVERY season for ten years; and,

B) Being the leader in amassed stats over a particular 10-year span.

Heck, Marcel Dionne was the NHL's most prolific scorer over a 10-year span!
 

ChiTownPhilly

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Feb 23, 2010
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Even though I agree with the general consensus that, for the purpose of this thread, we shouldn't consider Lemieux- Francis- Jágr as a thing [and folks, it would make it easier to follow along if we ALL adopted the convention of listing lines from left-to-right, the way we read... LW- C- RW]- that trio made such an impact in my subconscious (and, apparently, others too), that they deserve their own treatment.

That 1995-96 season mentioned earlier- that was the one year where Lemieux scored more Power Play goals than even-strength goals. I have specific memory of Lemieux being the recipient of continuous restraining fouls. Jágr was victimized in this manner, as well. Every now-and-then (but less than it should have been) some of the fouls were actually whistled as penalties. {Keep in mind, this was Dead-Puck-Era Hockey. Most of the time, Skitching was functionally legal.}

Pittsburgh (to my surprise) was not particularly advantaged by Power Play opportunities for. They were only seven Opportunities For higher than league-average. 10 teams had a higher figure. In another strange twist, they were "on-the-podium" for Power Play opportunities against- only two teams had a higher number in that column.

But when they got on that Power Play, though...

Lemieux is in that category of player that brings so much lethality to a Power Play that it more than makes up for some even-strength lapses. In this era, McDavid, too, deserves consideration in this manner.

When, in a season, the Team Superstar scores more Power Play goals than even-strength goals, when the team breaks the counter for Power Play percentage (8+% over league-average, and an absurd 4.6% higher than second place!), I guess that's part of why many of us remember Lemieux- Francis- Jágr as a line, even though (for the purposes of this discussion) they're not, really...
 
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Nerowoy nora tolad

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May 9, 2018
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It’s not earlier, but the Cook-Boucher-Cook line was an early line built along similar principles. Slick playmaking center, elite goal scoring sniper, glue guy with enough skill to clean up chances. Marinate for a generation till they mind-meld.
There was an amazing quote I once read in a book that I wish I could find where Foster Hewitt was asked about the Soviets after the Summit Series, and he immediately likened their style to that of the Bread Line.

He also then went on to claim that that style of puck possesion, constant movement, playing keepaway traces its lineage to great Native Lacrosse teams of the past.

Which I think is the coolest thing Ive ever read, with how it links so many eras of sport together with one common thread
 
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