原标题:#NHLStats Pack: 2023 Hockey Hall of Fame Inductees
冰球名人堂将在名人堂周末迎来他们几位新成员。这个活动将在11月10日-12日举行,11月13日,周一官方将在多伦多举行正式的推介仪式。今年的荣誉成员名单包括Tom Barrasso,Henrik Lundqvist,Caroline Ouellette,Pierre Turgeon和Mike Vernon,以上为球员身份入选;还有Ken Hitchcock和Pierre Lacroix将以球队建设者身份入选。
所有统计截止到周二结束(11月9日)的比赛。
1962年以来首次3名门将同时入选
超过60年的时间,再一次同一届名人堂有3名门将入选,他们是Tom Barrasso,Henrik Lundqvist和Mike Vernon。上一次出现这种情况是1962年,当时入选的是Riley Hern,John “Bouse” Hutton和Harry “Rat” Westwick。需要注意的是,Westwick是作为门将和球探入选,而Oliver Seibert则是门将和普通球员身份入选。这是首次3名在联盟完全作为门将身份的球员同一年入选名人堂。
- 加上这3位,名人堂门将数量变为44位;
- 他们一共获得过4次斯坦利杯总冠军:Vernon在红翼(1997年)和火焰(1989年),Barrasso在企鹅(1991年和1992年),同时有2次Vezina奖(1983-84赛季的Barrasso和2011-12赛季的Lundqvist)和2次William M. Jennings奖(1984-85赛季的Barrasso,1995-96赛季的Vernon);
- 2023届是历史上第2次有2位Vezina奖得主入围(也是首次该奖项采用新的评定标准下的获得者)。在1980年,Gump Worsley和Harry Lumley也是Vezina奖获得者,当时该奖获得者是常规赛失球最少的球队的门将(这是现在William M. Jennings奖的评奖标准);
- Lundqvist(第6;459场),Vernon(第16;385场)和Barrasso(并列第20,;369场)均排在联盟历史门将胜场数排行榜前25,他们一共取得1213场常规赛胜利。Vernon(第8;77场),Barrasso(并列第15;61场)和Lundqvist(并列第15;61场)也在季后赛胜场数上排名靠前。
荣誉:2023年名人堂新成员
斯坦利杯总冠军,奥运金牌,联盟各奖项,队史或联盟历史各项纪录的保持者或前排成员,2023年名人堂新成员的周围充满了这些荣誉。
- Tom Barrasso在1983年选秀中在第5顺位被军刀选中,然后从高中直接进入联盟。他在19岁新秀赛季就赢得了1983-84赛季的Vezina奖,成为该奖项最年轻的获得者(也是唯一20岁以下的获奖者)。他还获得了当赛季的Calder奖,也是联盟历史上第2位新秀赛季包揽这2个奖项的门将,另外一位是1938-39赛季的美国门将Frank Brimsek(棕熊);
- Barrasso是名人堂9位同时获得Calder和Vezina奖的门将之一(他是第7位做到这一点的门将),也是4位在同一个队获得这两个奖项的门将之一。另外8位是
- Overall, Barrasso will enter the Hall as one of nine goaltenders to win both the Calder and Vezina at any point in his career (he was the seventh to do so) and one of four to claim both in the same campaign (at any point of his career).** The others to win both awards to date: **Brimsek, Terry Sawchuk, Gump Worsley, Glenn Hall, Tony Esposito, Ken Dryden, Ed Belfour and Martin Brodeur. Brimsek (1938-39), Esposito (1969-70), Barrasso (1983-84) and Belfour (1990-91) are the only netminders to capture both awards in the same campaign at any point in their career.
Barrasso led the League with five shutouts during his second season and won the first William M. Jennings Trophy in Sabres franchise history, claiming the award in tandem with Bob Sauve. The 1984-85 campaign also saw Barrasso represent the Wales Conference at the NHL All-Star Game, his lone appearance at the event.
Barrasso was traded to Pittsburgh by Buffalo on Nov. 12, 1988, and went on to backstop the Penguins to their first two Stanley Cup championships in franchise history (1991 & 1992). He became the second U.S.-born goaltender in NHL history with multiple Cups, following Brimsek (1939 & 1941, both w/ BOS).
Barrasso appeared in 896 games (777 regular-season, 119 playoffs) across 19 seasons and three decades with the Sabres, Penguins, Senators, Hurricanes, Maple Leafs and Blues. He is regarded as one of the greatest puck-moving goaltenders in League history and remains the all-time NHL leader for regular-season assists and points among netminders (0-48—48).
A total of 204 players – including 21 goaltenders – were picked in the 2000 NHL Draft before Henrik Lundqvist heard his name called by the Rangers in Round 7. Lundqvist (205th overall) will be the latest-drafted goaltender in NHL history to make the Hall of Fame and the second netminder to enter the Hall after being selected in the seventh round or later (following Dominik Hasek, who was selected in the 10th round, 199th overall, by Chicago in 1983 and was inducted in 2014). Overall, Lundqvist will be the third player (of any position) to be selected 200th or later in the NHL Draft and make the Hall of Fame, following forwards Sergei Makarov (231st overall by CGY in 1983; inducted in 2016) and Igor Larionov (214th overall by VAN in 1985; inducted in 2008).
Lundqvist manned New York’s crease for each of his 15 NHL seasons and set franchise records for games played by a goaltender (887), wins (459) and shutouts (64) while also establishing Rangers records for career playoff games played by a goaltender (130), wins (61) and shutouts (10). “King Henrik” hails from Are, Sweden, and owns the most games played and wins in NHL history among goaltenders born outside North America. He will become the first Swedish-born goaltender ever inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.
In 2005-06, Lundqvist became the first rookie since Jim Carey (1994-95 w/ WSH) to be voted a finalist for the Vezina Trophy. Overall, Lundqvist was a Vezina finalist five times (2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08, 2011-12 & 2012-13) – the highest count in franchise history – and in 2011-12 became the second Rangers goaltender to win the award under its current criteria (since 1981-82; also John Vanbiesbrouck in 1985-86). Also in 2011-12, Lundqvist finished third in voting for the Hart Memorial Trophy as he became the first Rangers goaltender in the NHL’s expansion era (since 1967-68) to be finalist for the regular-season MVP award.
Lundqvist boasts an international resume that includes gold and silver medals at the 2006 and 2014 Winter Olympics, respectively. He also helped Sweden capture gold at the 2017 World Championship, as well as silver during the 2003 and 2004 editions of the tournament.
Lundqvist, whose five appearances in the NHL All-Star Game (2009, 2011, 2012, 2018 & 2019) trail only Ed Giacomin (6x) for the most ever by a Rangers goaltender, became the 11th player in franchise history to have his number retired (Jan. 28, 2022). Lundqvist (No. 30), Giacomin (No. 1) and Mike Richter (No. 35) are the only goaltenders whose number has been retired by the 97-year-old Rangers.
Caroline Ouellette went a perfect four-for-four at the Winter Olympics, winning a gold medal with Canada in 2002, 2006, 2010 and 2014. Ouellette captained Canada during her final appearance at the Games in 2014. She also won six World Championship gold medals over three decades (1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2007, & 2012), with 13 years separating her first and last tournament titles.
Ouellette won more Canadian Women’s Hockey League championships than any other player, winning four Clarkson Cup titles with her hometown team in Montreal (2008-09, 2010-11, 2011-12 & 2016-17) – skating for the club in a rink bearing her name (in 2010, the Centre Étienne-Desmarteau named one of its rinks after Ouellette). Before her CWHL career, Ouellette was part of the first season in National Women's Hockey League history (1998-99) and helped the Montreal Axion win a NWHL title in 2005-06 – when she provided the primary assist on the championship-clinching goal by teammate Lisa-Marie Breton in the Axion’s 1-0 win against the Brampton Thunder during the finale.
Ouellette was named MVP in each of her first two seasons in the CWHL, claiming the honor in 2008-09 and 2010-11 – also securing the Angela James Bowl in the latter campaign by topping the league with 22-46—68 (29 GP). One year after leading the league in scoring, Ouellette was named MVP of the 2011-12 Clarkson Cup after pacing all players in postseason goals (5) and points (8) en route to her third CWHL title.
Ouellette is tied or the outright leader in career regular-season goals (t-1st with Jayna Hefford; 131), assists (1st; 183) and points (1st; 314) in CWHL history, playing in nine of the league’s 13 seasons. Ouellette would rank sixth in CWHL history even without ever scoring a goal. She owns the CWHL single-season assists record (46 in 2010-11) and is one of three 30-goal scorers in CWHL history (30 in 2011-12), along with Hefford (44 in 2008-09) and Meghan Agosta (41 in 2011-12). She also is the all-time CWHL leader in playoff assists (20) and points (32) and ranks second in postseason goals (12) behind Hilary Knight (14). Combining regular-season and playoff totals, no player had more goals, assists or points in the CWHL than Ouellette (143-203—346 in 202 GP).
Ouellette played three seasons with the University of Minnesota-Duluth, winning an NCAA title in her first season (2002-03) and captaining the Bulldogs in 2003-04 and 2004-05. She was named Most Outstanding Player at the 2002-03 Frozen Four after the host Bulldogs earned a championship-clinching, double-overtime win against the Harvard University Crimson, whose roster featured Ouellette’s future wife, Julie Chu.
Pierre Turgeon was tabbed by the Sabres with the No. 1 pick in the 1987 NHL Draft and concluded his 19-season career with 515 goals, 812 assists and 1,327 points in 1,294 games. The only No. 1 picks with as many goals than Turgeon are Alex Ovechkin (824), Mario Lemieux (690), Mats Sundin (564), Mike Modano (561), Guy Lafleur (560), Sidney Crosby (557), Steven Stamkos (520) and Dale Hawerchuk (518).
Turgeon is one of three players in NHL history with at least 300 regular season points for three different clubs. Turgeon hit that milestone with the Blues (134-221—355 in 327 GP), Islanders (147-193—340 in 255 GP) and Sabres (122-201—323 in 322 GP) and finds himself on that list alongside Joe Mullen (CGY, STL & PIT) and Mark Recchi (PHI, PIT & MTL).
Turgeon also is one of 10 players in League history to score 100 or more regular season goals with three franchises. The others are Mullen, Recchi, Jason Arnott, Dino Ciccarelli, Marian Hossa, Alex Kovalev, Pierre Larouche, Frank Mahovlich and Steve Thomas (all w/ 3).
Turgeon tallied at least one 30-goal season with four different franchises, three times with both the Sabres and Islanders, twice with the Blues and once with the Canadiens. He is one of eight players in League history to achieve that feat, alongside Mike Gartner (5), Ciccarelli (4), Geoff Courtnall (4), Hossa (4), Alexander Mogilny (4), Brendan Shanahan (4) and Pat Verbeek (4).
Turgeon was laureled with the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy in 1992-93 after setting single-season career highs for goals (58), assists (74) and points (132) with just 26 penalty minutes for the Islanders. Turgeon followed Mike Bossy (3x) as the second player in franchise history to win the Lady Byng. He also was a finalist for the award in 1993-94 when he finished third in voting behind winner Wayne Gretzky and runner-up Adam Oates.
Mike Vernon backstopped the Flames to the first Stanley Cup win in franchise history in 1989 and later helped the Red Wings end a 42-year championship wait by hoisting the Cup with them in 1997. Vernon became the fourth goaltender in League history to go at least eight years from one Stanley Cup-clinching win to his next, following Terry Sawchuk (12 years from 1955 to 1967) and Alec Connell (8 years from 1927 to 1935). Only one other netminder has achieved the feat since: Chris Osgood (10 years from 1998 to 2008), his teammate for three seasons with Detroit (including in 1997).
Vernon captured the Conn Smythe Trophy in 1997 and at the time was the ninth different goaltender to win the award (click here for more on his performance during the 1997 Stanley Cup Playoffs). He occupies eighth place on the League’s all-time playoff wins list with 77, trailing only Patrick Roy (151), Martin Brodeur (113), Grant Fuhr (92),** Marc-Andre Fleury** (92), **Billy Smith **(88), Ed Belfour (88) and **Ken Dryden **(80).
Vernon was chosen by Calgary with the No. 56 pick in the 1981 NHL Draft and was the first goaltender drafted by the Flames after they relocated from Atlanta. He ranks second on the franchise’s all-time lists for games played (527) and wins (262), trailing only Miikka Kiprusoff in both categories.
Vernon won the William M. Jennings Trophy alongside Osgood in 1995-96 as they became the first Red Wings netminders to claim the award (introduced in 1981-82). Detroit yielded a League-low 181 goals against en route to setting a then-NHL record with 62 wins.
Vernon recorded 39 regular season assists in the NHL, and with 0-39—39 ranks fifth all-time in points among goaltenders behind fellow Class of 2023 inductee Tom Barrasso (0-48—48) as well as Brodeur (2-45—47), Fuhr (0-47—47) and Roy (0-45—45).
Ken Hitchcock was an NHL head coach in 22 seasons with the Stars, Flyers, Blue Jackets, Blues and Oilers (click here for a breakdown of his career). He occupies fourth place on the League’s all-time wins list with 849, trailing only Scotty Bowman (1,244), Joel Quenneville (969) and Barry Trotz (914).
Hitchcock has an all-time regular-season record of 849-534-215 in 1,598 games, equating to a winning percentage of .531 which ranks fifth in League history among those with at least 1,000 games coached, behind Bowman (.581), Bruce Boudreau (.568), Quenneville (.548) and Mike Babcock (.538).
Hitchcock won a Stanley Cup with the 1999 Stars, the first championship in franchise history, and guided Dallas to at least the Conference Finals in three straight years from 1997-98 to 1999-00 (including a second trip the Final in 2000). Dallas won the Presidents’ Trophy in 1997-98 and 1998-99 under Hitchcock. In 2011-12, he claimed the Jack Adams Award with St. Louis – his fourth and final year as a finalist following three straight years among the top three vote-getters with Dallas (2nd in 1996-97, 3rd in 1997-98 and 1998-99).
Hitchcock piloted his teams to eight division titles during his NHL head coaching career – five with the Stars (all consecutive, from 1996-97 to 2000-01), two with the Blues (2011-12 & 2014-15) and one with the Flyers (2003-04). The only head coaches in League history with as many division titles are Bowman (16) and Boudreau (8). Of note, there were no divisions from 1917-18 to 1925-26 and 1938-39 to 1966-67. Hitchcock is one of four head coaches in League history guide his club to at least five consecutive division titles, alongside Glen Sather (6), Bowman (6) and Alain Vigneault (5).
Hitchcock had 50-win seasons with the Blues in 2013-14 (52) and 2014-15 (51) as well as with the Stars in 1998-99 (51). He is one of 16 head coaches in NHL history with at least three 50-win seasons and one of 10 from that group to hit the mark with multiple franchises.
Pierre Lacroix was named general manager of the Quebec Nordiques ahead of the 1994-95 campaign, one year before the franchise relocated to Colorado and became the Avalanche. Prior to joining the Nordiques, he had a lengthy and successful career as a player agent where his clients included NHL legend Mike Bossy, future Avalanche goaltender Patrick Roy and fellow Class of 2023 inductee Pierre Turgeon.
Lacroix’s 19-season tenure with the Avalanche/Nordiques franchise, where he held general manager, president and senior advisor titles, included two Stanley Cup championships (1996 & 2001), two Presidents’ Trophy wins (1996-97 & 2000-01) and an NHL-record nine straight division titles from 1994-95 to 2002-03. The Cup win by the 1996 Avalanche during their first season in Colorado was the first major pro sports championship for the city of Denver.
The Nordiques and Avalanche compiled a 473-259-136 regular-season record with Lacroix as GM from 1994-95 through 2005-06, equating to a .623 point-percentage that stands as the second-highest rate among GMs with at least 800 games served (behind 1978 Hall of Fame inductee Sam Pollock: .685 P% in 1,068 games). Lacroix’s club had the most playoff wins of any team during his tenure as GM (93 from 1994-95 through 2005-06).
The success of the Avalanche under the tutelage of Lacroix led to significant growth in youth and adult hockey participation in the Denver area, quadrupling its numbers since the franchise’s arrival. The charitable efforts of Lacroix and the Avalanche led to the creation of the Colorado Avalanche Charity Fund (CACF), which delegated more than $11 million to charities in the state from 1995 to 2006 and earned national recognition for its contributions to the Denver area.
Lacroix is remembered for pulling off some of the most-memorable trades and signings in NHL history, which included acquiring high-impact players like Claude Lemieux and Sandis Ozolinsh as well as current Hall of Famers in Roy, Dave Andreychuk, Rob Blake, Ray Bourque, Jari Kurri, Paul Kariya and Teemu Selanne. He also had his son, Eric Lacroix, as part of the Avalanche for parts of three seasons from 1996-97 to 1998-99.