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* The last active person that played during the ] and ]. * The last active person that played during the ] and ].
* In ], he was ranked number 3 on '']''' list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players, the highest-ranking right wing on the list. * In ], he was ranked number 3 on '']''' list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players, the highest-ranking right wing on the list.
* His number '''9''' is retired by both the ] and the ]. * His number '''9''' was retired by both the Detroit Red Wings and the Hartford Whalers (Which became the Carolina Hurricanes).


==Records== ==Records==

Revision as of 19:59, 17 October 2006

Ice hockey player
Gordie Howe
Hockey Hall of Fame, 1972
Born March 31, 1928
Floral, SK, CA
Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 205 lb (93 kg; 14 st 9 lb)
Position Right Wing
Played for Detroit Red Wings
Houston Aeros
Hartford Whalers
Playing career 1946–1971
1973 – 1980

Gordon "Gordie" Howe, OC (Born March 31, 1928 in Floral, Saskatchewan, Canada) was a Canadian Hockey player in the National Hockey League who played for the Detroit Red Wings and Hartford Whalers. He is often referred to as Mr. Hockey and is generally regarded as one of the greatest players of all time.

Playing Career

Howe made his NHL debut in 1946 at the age of 18 playing right wing for the Detroit Red Wings. He quickly established himself as a great goal scorer and a gifted playmaker. Using his great physical strength, he was able to dominate the opposition in a career that spanned five decades. In a feat unsurpassed by any athlete, in any sport, Gordie Howe finished in the top five in scoring for twenty straight seasons. It was said that a Gordie Howe hat trick was a goal, an assist, and a fight.

Howe led Detroit to four Stanley Cups and to first place in regular season play for seven consecutive years (1948-9 to 1955-6), a feat never equalled in NHL History. During this time Howe and his linemates, Sid Abel and Ted Lindsay were known collectively as "The Production Line", both for their scoring and as an allusion to Detroit auto factories. The Red Wings were consistently contenders throughout the 1950s and early 1960s but began to slump in the late 60s.

File:HartHowe.jpg
Howe holds the Hart and Art Ross Trophies.

After twenty-five years, a chronic wrist problem forced him to retire, and he took a job in the Red Wings front office. However, a year later he was offered a contract to play with the Houston Aeros of the newly formed World Hockey Association, who had also signed his sons Mark and Marty to contracts. Dissatisfied with not having any meaningful influence in the Red Wings' office, he underwent an operation to improve his wrist and make a return to hockey possible, and he led his new team to consecutive championships. In 1974, at the age of 46, Howe was selected as the WHA's most valuable player.

When the WHA folded in 1979 the Hartford Whalers joined the NHL and the 51-year-old Howe signed on for one final season playing in all 80 games of the schedule. He helped the Whalers make the playoffs with fifteen goals and was selected to the mid-season all-star game. Another milestone in a remarkable career was reached in 1997 when Howe played professional hockey in a sixth decade. He was signed to a one-game contract by the Detroit Vipers of the IHL and, almost 70 years old, made a return to the ice for one shift.

His most productive seasons came during an era when scoring was difficult and checking was tight, yet Howe ranks third in NHL history with 1,850 total points, including 801 goals and 1,049 assists. Careerwise, when his goals and assists from both the NHL and the WHA regular seasons are combined, he ranks first in goals with 975. Howe would also become good friends with Wayne Gretzky, who had idolized Howe as a young player, and who would later break many of Howe's scoring records and milestones.

At the time of his retirement Mr. Hockey's professional totals, including playoffs, for the NHL and WHA combined, were first. He finished with 2421 games played, 1,071 goals, 1,518 assists, and 2,589 points. Wayne Gretzky has since passed him in goals (1,072), assists (2,297), and points (3,369), but not games played (1,788). It is unlikely that anyone will surpass Howe's total professional games played. Mark Messier retired only 11 NHL games behind Howe at 1,756 (and counting minor league action and playoffs, 2,048 total professional games), but this is over five seasons away from 2,478 total professional games (including minor league action).

Howe has been married to Colleen Joffa since April 15, 1953; two of their sons, Marty and Mark, were his teammates on the Houston Aeros and the Hartford Whalers. Colleen is the founder of the Detroit Junior Red Wings, the first Ontario Hockey League team in the U.S.

Awards & Achievements

Records

  • Most NHL regular season games played: 1,767
  • Most NHL & WHA regular season games played: 2,186
  • Most NHL & WHA regular season and playoff games played: 2,421
  • Most NHL seasons played: 26
  • Most NHL & WHA seasons played: 32
  • Most NHL regular season goals by a right winger: 801
  • Most NHL regular season assists by a right winger: 1,049
  • Most NHL regular season points by a right winger: 1,850

Career statistics

    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1945-46 Omaha Knights USHL 51 22 26 48 53 6 2 1 3 15
1946-47 Detroit Red Wings NHL 58 7 15 22 52 5 0 0 0 18
1947-48 Detroit Red Wings NHL 60 16 28 44 63 10 1 1 2 11
1948-49 Detroit Red Wings NHL 40 12 25 37 57 11 8 3 11 19
1949-50 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 35 33 68 69 1 0 0 0 7
1950-51 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 43 43 86 74 6 4 3 7 4
1951-52 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 47 39 86 78 8 2 5 7 2
1952-53 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 49 46 95 57 6 2 5 7 2
1953-54 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 33 48 81 109 12 4 5 9 31
1954-55 Detroit Red Wings NHL 64 29 33 62 68 11 9 11 20 24
1955-56 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 38 41 79 100 10 3 9 12 8
1956-57 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 44 45 89 72 5 2 5 7 6
1957-58 Detroit Red Wings NHL 64 33 44 77 40 4 1 1 2 0
1958-59 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 32 46 78 57 -- -- -- -- --
1959-60 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 28 45 73 46 6 1 5 6 4
1960-61 Detroit Red Wings NHL 64 23 49 72 30 11 4 11 15 10
1961-62 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 33 44 77 54 -- -- -- -- --
1962-63 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 38 48 86 100 11 7 9 16 22
1963-64 Detroit Red Wings NHL 69 26 47 73 70 14 9 10 19 16
1964-65 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 29 47 76 104 7 4 2 6 20
1965-66 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 29 46 75 83 12 4 6 10 12
1966-67 Detroit Red Wings NHL 69 25 40 65 53 -- -- -- -- --
1967-68 Detroit Red Wings NHL 74 39 43 82 53 -- -- -- -- --
1968-69 Detroit Red Wings NHL 76 44 59 103 58 -- -- -- -- --
1969-70 Detroit Red Wings NHL 76 31 40 71 58 4 2 0 2 2
1970-71 Detroit Red Wings NHL 63 23 29 52 38 -- -- -- -- --
1973-74 Houston Aeros WHA 70 31 69 100 46 13 3 14 17 34
1974-75 Houston Aeros WHA 75 34 65 99 84 13 8 12 20 20
1975-76 Houston Aeros WHA 78 32 70 102 76 17 4 8 12 31
1976-77 Houston Aeros WHA 62 24 44 68 57 11 5 3 8 11
1977-78 New England Whalers WHA 76 34 62 96 85 14 5 5 10 15
1978-79 New England Whalers WHA 58 19 24 43 51 10 3 1 4 4
1979-80 Hartford Whalers NHL 80 15 26 41 42 3 1 1 2 2
1997-98 Detroit Vipers IHL 1 0 0 0 0 -- -- -- -- --
NHL Totals 1767 801 1049 1850 1685 157 68 92 160 220
WHA Totals 419 174 334 508 399 78 28 43 71 115

International Play

Trivia

  • Bart Simpson used a picture of Howe as part of a practical joke he pulls on Mrs. Krabappel in The Simpsons episode "Bart the Lover". At the end of the episode, Howe's career statistics are displayed on the screen.
  • At the height of Howe's career, a ballad was penned by a songwriter named Bob Davies called, "Gordie Howe is the Greatest of Them All" For lyrics, see and scroll in http://www.root-1.co.il/sadduceeprintoutslyrics12.htm
  • Howe is a member of 11 different Halls of Fame.
  • His name and nickname, "Mr. Hockey", as well as his wife's nickname as "Mrs. Hockey", are registered trademarks.
  • His tough physical play also earned him the nickname "Mr. Elbows".
  • His Detroit Red Wings jersey is worn by the character Cameron Frye in Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
  • Michael Vartan gives a speech about Gordie Howe in the movie Never Been Kissed
  • The only person in hockey history to compete in 5 different decades at the professional level (e.g. NHL and WHA; 1940s-1980s)
  • There is a Statue of Gordie Howe in downtown Saskatoon, SK on the corner of 20th Street and 1st Ave. He is depicted wearing a Detroit Red Wings Sweater
  • Gordie Howe has never actually recorded a "Gordie Howe hat trick", even though the hat-trick, which requires a player to score a goal, an assist, and win a fight in one game, is named after him.
  • Colleen & Gordie Howe have a Middle School named after them, located in Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada (Colleen & Gordie Howe Middle School)
  • Wore jersey number 9, which was retired by Detroit, Hartford, and the Houston Aeros

See also

External links

Preceded byRed Kelly Detroit Red Wings Captains
1958-62
Succeeded byAlex Delvecchio
Preceded byJacques Plante Winner of the Hart Trophy
1963
Succeeded byJean Beliveau
Preceded byAndy Bathgate Winner of the Hart Trophy
1960
Succeeded byBernie Geoffrion
Preceded byJean Beliveau Winner of the Hart Trophy
1957, 1958
Succeeded byAndy Bathgate
Preceded byMilt Schmidt Winner of the Hart Trophy
1952, 1953
Succeeded byAl Rollins
Preceded byBobby Hull Winner of the Art Ross Trophy
1963
Succeeded byStan Mikita
Preceded byJean Beliveau Winner of the Art Ross Trophy
1957
Succeeded byDickie Moore
Preceded byTed Lindsay Winner of the Art Ross Trophy
1951, 1952, 1953, 1954
Succeeded byBernie Geoffrion
Preceded byBobby Hull NHL Goal Leader
1963
Succeeded byBobby Hull
Preceded byJean Beliveau NHL Goal Leader
1957
Succeeded byDickie Moore
Preceded byMaurice Richard NHL Goal Leader
1951, 1952, 1953
Succeeded byMaurice Richard
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