MacLeish was an outstanding player, one of my absolute favourites to watch, but he doesn’t quite have a Hall of Fame career, though his outstanding point production in the playoffs makes for a legitimate discussion. Does Bill Barber? Borderline, but his longtime association with Clarke definitely helps him, just as Steve Shutt’s association with Lafleur does no harm.
Anyway, a few thoughts on Rick MacLeish. I’m going at this in a roundabout way, so be patient here.
How many of you remember when Pete Mahovlich centred Lafleur and Shutt? Killer trio, right?
But do you remember the Habs’ second line centre during those years? It was Hall of Famer Jacques Lemaire. Was Lemaire a first-line centre talent? After the Habs re-deployed (and later just traded) Pete Mahovlich, Lemaire stepped into the top role. Had he not been given that opportunity, which he seized, he’d likely be remembered as a great #2 centre on a great dynasty team. Not at the Henri Richard 2C level (who is?), but still pretty damn sweet. Sweet enough to get him into the Hall of Fame? I say probably not. He needed those big years centring the first line to seal the deal. Take those away and he’s got Ralph Backstrom-like numbers. Hall of Very Good.
MacLeish played behind Bobby Clarke, not Pete Mahovlich. Clarke was extremely durable and rarely missed more than a few games in a season. Unlike Pete Mahovlich, who saw his game demonstrably fall off, Clarke maintained 1C level play throughout the decade when he and MacLeish were teammates. This kept MacLeish, who I always believed was a legitimate 1C talent, playing most of his career between Ross Lonsberry and Gary Dornhoefer, two solid but unspectacular linemates.
The Lemaire-MacLeish comparison has a few other noteworthy features.
Both were excellent skaters, both had absolutely wicked wrist shots, both could move to the wing if need be, both were high level special teams guys. Lemaire is known for his 200 foot game and defensive conscience, but I would ask folks to watch some of the footage from the ‘75 finals, when Shero put MacLeish head-to-head against Perreault. There were very few NHL centres with the wheels and anticipation acumen to take on that task for an entire series. Not only did MacLeish totally shut down Perreault, but he cleanly out pointed him and ended up leading the playoffs in points for the second consecutive year. While Lemaire was a relentless, high-motor/ waterbug type, MacLeish was a significantly smoother skater who was an exceptional read-and-react type. Both got the job done.
In sum, Rick MacLeish was a joy to watch and a superb player. But he played behind one of the best and most durable centres in the game, and thus didn’t ever get the chance to be the number one pivot. That’s not his fault — nobody in the league at that time could have knocked Clarke out of the role. But it means he doesn’t quite have Hall of Fame credentials.