In the first installment of my Past and Present National Hockey League player comparisons, I'll take a look at two forwards with non-traditional hockey numbers, who took the league by storm in their respective eras.
Only seven players have reached the 100 point benchmark in their rookie season, only five players have represented the Canadian National Junior team at the age of 16, only two players have been among the Time Magazine’s Top 100 Most Influential People, and only two players have been deemed the saviors of the National Hockey League in their respective eras. If you haven’t figured it out already, I speak of the “Great One,” number 99, Wayne Gretzky, and the “Next One,” number 87, Sidney Crosby.
Wayne Gretzky, the native of Brantford Ontario, is widely considered to be the greatest National Hockey League player of all time. He set 40 regular-season records, 15 playoff records, 6 All-Star records, won four Stanley Cups with the Edmonton Oilers, and won 9 MVP awards and 10 scoring titles. While Sidney Crosby, who hails from Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia, doesn’t have a trophy case just as illustrious as Wayne’s just yet, he is in the process of writing a script that will in all likelihood land him a comfortable spot next to the “Great One” in the Hockey Hall of Fame. In almost every opposing city that Crosby visits, half the fans in the building come to watch the home team while the other half usually come to catch a glimpse of Crosby in person. No player has ever had such an everlasting positive effect on the game since Gretzky, and Crosby is barely out of his teenager years!
Continue reading "Past and Present Players: Sidney Crosby and Wayne Gretzky"