9 résultats pour "gretzky"
-
Wayne Gretzky
I
INTRODUCTION
Wayne Gretzky, born in 1961, Canadian professional ice hockey player, nicknamed The Great One, who is the National Hockey League (NHL) career leader in goals,
assists, and points (goals and assists combined).
and 1991. He was captain of the national team for the 1996 World Cup and made his first Olympic Games appearance as a member of Canada’s ice hockey team duringthe 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan. In 1999, just a few months after his retirement from the NHL, Gretzky was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. The board of directors of the Hall of Fame waived thenormal three-year waiting period as a way of honoring Gretzky for all his contributions to the sport of hockey. Gretzky remained active...
-
Wayne Gretzky.
and 1991. He was captain of the national team for the 1996 World Cup and made his first Olympic Games appearance as a member of Canada’s ice hockey team duringthe 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan. In 1999, just a few months after his retirement from the NHL, Gretzky was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. The board of directors of the Hall of Fame waived thenormal three-year waiting period as a way of honoring Gretzky for all his contributions to the sport of hockey. Gretzky remained active...
- Wayne Gretzky - Sport.
- Gretzky, Wayne - sport.
-
Debating Sports Records
Mark Purdy, sports columnist for the San Jose Mercury News in California, compiles a list of sports records that he believes will never be broken and a separate list of
records that he thinks are soon to be eclipsed.
UCLA’s dominance of NCAA men’s college basketball in the late 1960s and early 1970s will never be matched. With John Wooden as coach, the Bruins went from1967 to 1973 without losing a tournament game. Wooden built a dynasty around a system that stressed team play and solid defense, anchored by standout centersLew Alcindor (who later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and Bill Walton. The Bruins’ ten straight appearances in the Final Four (1967-1976) will alsobe tough to top, given that tod...
-
Debating Sports Records
Mark Purdy, sports columnist for the San Jose Mercury News in California, compiles a list of sports records that he believes will never be broken and a separate list of
records that he thinks are soon to be eclipsed.
UCLA’s dominance of NCAA men’s college basketball in the late 1960s and early 1970s will never be matched. With John Wooden as coach, the Bruins went from1967 to 1973 without losing a tournament game. Wooden built a dynasty around a system that stressed team play and solid defense, anchored by standout centersLew Alcindor (who later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and Bill Walton. The Bruins’ ten straight appearances in the Final Four (1967-1976) will alsobe tough to top, given that tod...
-
NHL Hart Memorial Trophy: Most Valuable Player.
1993 Mario Lemieux Pittsburgh 1994 Sergei Fedorov Detroit 1995 Eric Lindros Philadelphia 1996 Mario Lemieux Pittsburgh 1997 Dominik Hasek Buffalo 1998 Dominik Hasek Buffalo 1999 Jaromir Jagr Pittsburgh 2000 Chris Pronger St. Louis 2001 Joe Sakic Colorado 2002 Jose Theodore Montréal 2003 Peter Forsberg Colorado 2004 Martin St. Louis Tampa Bay 2005 No Winner* 2006 Joe Thornton San Jose 2007 Sidney Crosby Pittsburgh * Season canceled due to labor dispute. Source: National Hockey League.
-
NHL Hart Memorial Trophy: Most Valuable Player
This trophy was first presented in 1924.
1993 Mario Lemieux Pittsburgh 1994 Sergei Fedorov Detroit 1995 Eric Lindros Philadelphia 1996 Mario Lemieux Pittsburgh 1997 Dominik Hasek Buffalo 1998 Dominik Hasek Buffalo 1999 Jaromir Jagr Pittsburgh 2000 Chris Pronger St. Louis 2001 Joe Sakic Colorado 2002 Jose Theodore Montréal 2003 Peter Forsberg Colorado 2004 Martin St. Louis Tampa Bay 2005 No Winner* 2006 Joe Thornton San Jose 2007 Sidney Crosby Pittsburgh * Season canceled due to labor dispute. Source: National Hockey League.Microsoft...
-
Messier Lifts the Curse.
Swept up in the hype, the Rangers came out for game five at the Garden in a virtual sleepwalk. By the start of the third period they were down 3-0. New Yorkscratched back to level the score as Messier culminated the three-goal spurt with a wrist shot midway through the period. Vancouver then stunned the Rangers—andthe sellout crowd—by netting three quick goals to put the game far out of reach. Game six in Vancouver proved even more of a challenge for the Rangers. The team showed little will...