Showing posts with label scoring record. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scoring record. Show all posts

Friday, May 23, 2014

Evolution Of The NHL Scoring Record


wayne gretzky 1985-86 o-pee-chee hockey card edmonton oilers
Wayne Gretzky’s record for most points in a single National Hockey League season has stood for nearly three decades. Some say it’s unbreakable, but as with any record in professional sports, it will seem unbreakable until the day it’s broken.  Through time, the record stood at an ‘unbreakable’ level 16 times since the creation of the NHL in 1917-18.

Joe Malone of the Montreal Canadiens held the mark first for most points in a single National Hockey League campaign. All he had to do to accomplish this was lead the league in scoring in its inaugural season. Assists were not recorded in that first year but Malone’s total of 44 goals in 20 games was in itself a pretty amazing feat and set the standard. To put that amount into perspective, applying that goal scoring pace over the present day 82 game schedule would produce 180 goals.

Malone broke his own record two years later while playing for the Quebec Bulldogs. Playing four more games than in 1917-18, Joe added four more points for 48 in 1919-20. This record would stand until the 1927-28 season when Howie Morenz of the Montreal Canadiens would total 51 points. However, Morenz’s total was accomplished over a much longer 43 game games.


Outside of Boston Bruins fans, the name Cooney Weiland is not overly well known. However, Weiland, while playing for the Boston Bruins during the 1929-30 season, shattered Morenz’s record with 73 points in 44 games. That season, six players would better the 51 point plateau. As for Weiland, he would go on to a respectable eleven season NHL career but would never get higher than the 38 point mark again in his career.

Over a decade would pass before Weiland’s mark would be surpassed. With the aid of an expanded 50 game schedule, Doug Bentley tied the record with 73 points in 1942-43. The following season, Herb Cain of the Boston Bruins would increase the record by nine points to 82 in 48 games. Just three short years later, Cain would be sent down to the Hershey Bears of the American Hockey League where he would finish out his professional hockey career.

The legendary Gordie Howe would be next to set the mark. It would take Mr. Hockey 22 more games than Cain to add four points to the record. In 1950-51, Howe had an even 43 goals and 43 assists for 86 points. The following season, Howe would equal the mark and the season after that, 1952-53, Howe would increase the record by nine points to 95.

The record jumped just a single point in 1958-59 as Dickie Moore of the Montreal Canadiens would total 96 points in the same 70 games as Howe. The record would increase by the same increment in the mid 1960’s as teammates Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita of the Chicago Blackhawks would each get 97 points in 1965-66 and 1966-67 respectively.

The late 1960’s brought expansion to the NHL and doubling the size of the league overnight, increasing the length of the schedule and watering down the talent was catalyst to a new level of offense. Phil Esposito came into his own during the 1968-69 season and provided the Boston Bruins with 126 points. Two seasons later, Esposito would increase the record to 152 points, a number that most thought could never be broken.

Along came a kid from Brantford, Ontario, Canada and the league’s record books were never the same. Wayne Gretzky, in just his second season in the NHL, provided the Edmonton Oilers with 164 points. The following season, the impossible was accomplished with The Great One’s 92 goals, 120 assists and 212 points. The 212 points would be eclipsed by none other than Wayne Gretzky himself during the 1985-86 season when he had 215 in 80 games, but the 92 goals stands as an NHL record today.

Is the record breakable? Of course it is. The game has changed and the offensive numbers have dropped since the mid 1990’s but things can change on a dime. A simply amazing player could emerge. Rule changes could provide a more offensive game. Retraction or expansion could significantly affect the level of talent. Just as Joe Malone’s record was thought unbreakable ninety years ago, Gretzky’s might falsely be thought of as unbreakable today.

Friday, September 13, 2013

Single Season Scoring Records of the Chicago Blackhawks


bobby hull chicago black hawks topps hockey card
It’s been around two and a half decades since the Chicago Blackhawks single season record for goals, assists or points has been re-written. The Blackhawks may not be the Edmonton Oilers or Pittsburgh Penguins when it comes to these individual records, by the numbers are quite respectable.

Most Goals – Bobby Hull


You have to go back to the year they put a man on the moon for the record for most goals in a single season by a Chicago Blackhawks player. Bobby Hull set the then National Hockey League record with 58 goals during the 1968-69 season. He broke his own record of 54 goals set three years earlier and his 58 would stand as the best ever for only two years. Phil Esposito of the Boston Bruins shattered the mark with 76 goals during the 1970-71 season.

That year, 1968-69, Hull’s performance was the only highlight of Chicago’s season. The team finished last in the six team Eastern Division and out of the post season. Bobby finished second in the race for the Art Ross Trophy, 19 points behind Esposito. Hull was selected the Left Winger on the First All-Star Team.

Most Assists – Denis Savard


Denis Savard owns the record for the most assists by a Blackhawk in a single season with 87 in 1981-82. He matched the total in 1987-88. Despite the fact that 87 assists is a Chicago record, the total was good enough for just third place in 1981-82, behind Wayne Gretzky of the Edmonton Oilers and Peter Stastny of the Quebec Nordiques. Chicago, despite finishing fourth in the Norris Division with a lacklustre record of 30 wins, 38 losses and 12 ties for 72 points, made it through to the Conference finals in the Stanley Cup playoffs before losing to the Vancouver Canucks.

In 1987-88, Savard was once again third in the league in the assists category, this time behind Gretzky and Mario Lemieux of the Pittsburgh Penguins. The team had a mediocre season, finishing third in the Norris with 69 points and making a quick first round exit from the Stanley Cup playoffs at the hands of the St. Louis Blues.

Most Points – Denis Savard


Denis Savard also holds the Chicago record for most points in a single season. In 1987-88, Denis produced 131 points. It was his fifth and final 100+ point season with the Blackhawks. Once more, his thunder was stolen by Lemieux and Gretzky, who finished 1-2 in scoring with 168 and 149 points. The 131 points ties Savard for the 41st highest single season point total in NHL history.

Both of these gentlemen are members of the Hockey Hall of Fame. Hull was inducted in 1983 and Savard entered in 2000. Bobby’s number 9 and Denis’ number 18 are two of only six Chicago Blackhawks retired numbers. In the history of the Blackhawks, they are among a select group with their accomplishments. Just Savard, Hull, Steve Larmer and Jeremy Roenick have produced 100+ point seasons. Al Secord and Jeremy Roenick are the only other two Chicago players to score 50 or more goals in a single season.

 

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Kingston Frontenacs Single Season Scoring Records


kingston frontenacs ohl ontario hockey league
The single season individual records of the Ontario Hockey League’s Kingston Frontenacs for goals, assists and points were all set when the team went by a different name. The last of these records to be set was for assists in 1983-84 when the team was still known as the Canadians. After a brief one year stint as the Raiders in 1988-89, the franchise has been known as the Frontenacs since.
 

Most Goals - Bernie Nicholls


The Kingston Frontenacs record for most goals in a single season was set in 1980-81 by Bernie Nicholls. Bernie scored 63 that season, a far cry from the league leader Ernie Godden. Godden scored 87 goals that season for the Windsor Spitfires, an OHL record to this day. In fact, the team record performance by Nicholls was only good enough for fourth place that year. The Canadians finished third in the Leyden Division (East) and lost in the Robertson Cup semi-finals to the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds.

Bernie Nicholls played two seasons with the Kingston Canadians, 1979-80 and 1980-81. He was taken in the fourth round of the 1980 NHL Entry Draft by the Los Angeles Kings, 73rd overall. He played in the National Hockey League from 1981-82 to 1998-99 with the Kings, New York Rangers, Edmonton Oilers, New Jersey Devils, Chicago Blackhawks and San Jose Sharks. He displayed his scoring touch for one great season with the Kings in 1988-89 when he scored 70 goals and assisted on 80 others for 150 points.
 

Most Assists - Tim Salmon


Tim Salmon recorded 100 assists in 1983-84, a Kingston Frontenacs team record. Salmon led the league in assists that season and is one of 13 players in OHL history to record 100 or more assists in a single season. Added to his 45 goals, Tim’s 145 points also led the league that season and earned him the Eddie Powers Trophy. Despite Tim’s great season, the Canadians finished last in the Leyden and out of the Robertson Cup playoffs.

Salmon played in the OHL from 1982-83 to 1984-85. His first year was with the Guelph Platers (now Owen Sound Attack) and the rest was spent in Kingston. He played just 20 games for the Canadians in his final season. Tim never played in the NHL but became a scoring legend in England.
 

Most Points - Bernie Nicholls


Along with the 63 goals Bernie Nicholls scored in 1980-81, he assisted on 89 others for 152 points. The point total remains a team record. In 1980-81, Bernie finished third in the race for the Eddie Powers Trophy behind John Goodwin of the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds (166) and Ernie Godden (153).