former st louis blues players

Note: Stats are updated through to the end of the 2017-2018 season, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_St._Louis_Blues_players&oldid=970732299, Short description is different from Wikidata, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, This page was last edited on 2 August 2020, at 01:47. Therefore the teams went to arbitration to settle the compensation. His 17 assists rank first in Blues history for goalies, while he sits 2nd in games played, wins and minutes played. Without Hull, St. Louis may not be a hockey city on the NHL’s radar. He is second in games played with 779 and his 1786 penalty minutes are the most in Blues history, ahead of pugilists Kelly Chase and Tony Twist. On November 8th, 2005 Turgeon became the 34th player to reach 500 career goals. Mullen would finish his career with 502 goals and 561 assists and was elected into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2000. In his first full season with the Blues, Brind’Amour recorded 27 points in his first 24 games and would finish the year third on the Blues in goals scored with 26. Berenson would return to the Blues in 1974 and continue to play with the Note until retiring after the 1977-78 season. Coming in at #25: The Young Trio (TJ Oshie, David Perron and Patrik Berglund). While his number will never be retired as one of the all time great Blues players, Demitra was a steady constant in the line up from the late 90′s through the early 2000′s. The Blues offered to send Curtis Joseph, Rod Brind’Amour and two draft picks New Jersey’s way but the Devils wanted Stevens and only Stevens. Former Michigan Tech hockey player Mitch Reinke signed a one-year, two-way contract with the St. Louis Blues the team announced on Sunday (Oct. 18). Ramage credits Plager for his transformation into an elite defensemen. Cujo’s efforts that year led to him finishing 3rd in the voting for the Vezina Trophy. Fuhr returned the next season and over the next three years became one of the Blues winning-est goalies in team history. Plante was traded to Toronto the following season and continued playing in the NHL until 1973. Louis Blues”) joined the NHL during the 1967–68 season as one of the six teams added to the league when it expanded from the so-called “Original Six” franchises. This allowed him to sit 5th in points with 493, 5th in assists with 289 and 6th in goals with 204 in Blues team history. Chase started the program in 1990 to help those with developmental disabilities participate in hockey activities. Fuhr ended up playing 79 games in goal, 76 straight, and leading the Blues to the playoffs. The Blues were able to win the series against Toronto but were defeated by the Red Wings in the next round. Glenn Hall, Don Caley, Jacques Plante, Gary Edwards, Ted Ouimet, Robbie Irons, Ernie Wakely, Jim McLeod, Wayne Stephenson, Eddie Johnston, Phil Myre, Mike Liut, Darrell May, Pat Jablonski, Brent Johnson, Roman Turek, Curtis Sanford, Brian Elliott, Fred Hucul, Doug Harvey, Ray Fortin, Bob Wall, Carl Brewer, Steve Durbano, Bryan Watson, Ted Harris, Larry Sacharuk, Rick Smith, Joe Zanussi, Len Frig, Bob Stewart, Terry Harper, Gerry Hart, Andre Dore, Dave Pichette, Craig Levie, Shawn Evans, Brian Benning, Scott Stevens, Rick Zombo, Curt Giles, Al MacInnis, RETIRED 4/9/06, Al Arbour, Fran Huck, Andre Dupont, Brent Hughes, Glenn Patrick, Bob Stumpf, Bob Gassoff, RETIRED 10/1/77, Noel Picard, Paul Curtis, Bob Gassoff, Gordon Buynak, Bruce Affleck, Dick Lamby, Bryan Maxwell, Scott Campbell, Kari Eloranta, Guy Lapointe, Rik Wilson, Charlie Bourgeois, Gordie Roberts, Rob Robinson, Rick Zombo, Dallas Eakins, Marc Bergevin, Eric Brewer, Kris Russell, Carl Gunnarsson, Bob Plager, Larry Giroux, Len Frig, Craig Norwich, Alain Vigneault, Guy Lapointe, Rob Ramage, Dave Richter, Harold Snepsts, Garth Butcher, Jeff Batters, Jeff Norton, Igor Kravchuk, Todd Gill, Alexei Gusasov, Barret Jackman, RETIRED 2/2/17, Jim Roberts, Chris Evans, Dave Gardner, Rick Bourbonnais, Larry Patey, Dave Barr, Tim Bothwell, Tony Twist, Garth Butcher, Murray Baron, Doug Crossman, Phil Housley, Doug Lidster, Jamie Rivers, Dave Ellett, Sean Hill, Ted Donato, Tom Koivisto, Eric Weinrich, Erik Johnson, Kent Huskins, Wade Redden, Zbynek Michalek, Joel Edmundson, Marco Scandella, Red Berenson, Garry Unger, Red Laurence, Joe Mullen, Cliff Ronning, Dan Quinn, Nelson Emerson, Alexei Kasatonov, Greg Gilbert, Ricard Persson, Mike Van Ryn, Keith Tkachuk, Pat Maroon, Ron Attwell, Barclay Plager, Darryl Edestrand, Ron Schock, Steve Durbano, Rick Bowness, RETIRED 3/24/81, Roger Picard, Frank St. Marseille, Ab Demarco, Greg Polis, Murray Kuntz, Red Berenson, Mike Walton, Neil Labatte, Perry Turnbull, Doug Gilmour, Mike Bullard, Peter Zezel, Geoff Courtnall, Jason Ruff, Denny Felsner, Glenn Anderson, Shayne Corson, Darren Turcotte, Tyson Nash, Jeff Heerema, Jame Pollock, Jay McClement, Paul Kariya, Jaden Schwartz, Steve Ott, Scottie Upshall, Sammy Blais, Ron Schock, Phil Goyette, George Morrison, Wayne Merrick, Mike Lampman, John Wright, Brian Ogilvie, Bruce Cowick, Rick Bourbonnais, Rod Seiling, Jack Brownschidle, Wayne Babych, Mark Johnson, Bruce Bell, Tony McKegney,Dave Lowry, Jim Montgomery, Esa Tikkanen, Dale Hawerchuk, Jim Campbell, Dallas Drake, Andy McDonald, Brenden Morrow, Joakim Lindstrom, Scottie Upshall, Brayden Schenn, Wayne Rivers, Gary Sabourin, Bert Wilson, Brian Sutter, RETIRED 12/30/88, Ron Stewart, Dickie Moore, Gary Veneruzzo, Terry Crisp, Noel Picard, Wayne Maki, Jaroslav Jirik, Fran Huck, Bob Collyard, Gordon Brooks, Jack Borotsik, Claude Larose, Rick Bowness, Joe Micheletti, Richie Hansen, Perry Anderson, Ron Flockhart,Dave Lowry, Adam Oates, Dave Roberts, Vitali Karamnov, Dale Hawerchuk, Kevin Sawyer, Rob Pearson, Chris Kenady, Derek King, Ladislav Nagy, Mike Keane, Cory Stillman, Steve Martins, Lee Stempniak, Kevin Shattenkirk, Scott Nichol, Derek Roy, Jori Lehtera, Zach Sanford, Yuri Khmylev, Ray Ferraro, Valeri Bure, Bill Guerin, Dan Hinote, Carlo Colaiacovo, Olli Jokinen, Tim Ecclestone, Norm Dennis, Wayne Connelly, Mike Murphy, Lou Angotti, Doug Palazzari, Bill Fairbairn, Rick Shinske, Blair Chapman, Doug Wickenheiser, Bill Root, Paul Cavallini, Kevin Miller, Todd Elik, Geoff Courtnall, Eric Boguniecki, Bill McCreary, Gene Carr, Jack Egers, Glen Sather, Ken Richardson, Mitch Babin, Gilles Marotte, Tony Currie, Floyd Thomson, Mark Reeds, Ron Handy, Shane MacEachern, Jocelyn Lemieux, Craig Coxe, Paul MacLean, Craig Janney, Dave Roberts, Mike Hudson, Alexander Vasilevski, Marty Reasoner, Daniel Corso, Peter Sejna, Mike Glumac, Brad Winchester, Jamie Langenbrunner, Keith Aucoin, Robby Fabbri, Gerry Melnyk, Craig Cameron, Ron Anderson, Gary Veneruzzo, Brian Lavender, Jim Shires, Roger Lafreniere, Pierre Plante, Rod Seiling, Jack Brownschidle, Kevin LaVallee, Jocelyn Lemieux, Brett Hull, RETIRED 12/5/06, Don McKenney, Jean-Guy Talbot, John Arbour, Gordon Kannegiesser, Larry Hornung, Phil Roberto, Bernie Lukowich, Jerry Butler, Inge Hammarstrom, Ed Kea, Guy Chouinard, Denis Cyr, Gino Cavallini, Denny Felsner, Basil McRae, Joe Murphy, Jochen Hecht, Sergei Varlamov, Ryan Johnson, Derek Armstrong, Vladimir Sobotka, Jaden Schwartz, Larry Keenan, Brit Selby, Floyd Thomson, Harvey Bennett, Rick LaPointe, Pat Hickey, Bobby Crawford, Doug Gilmour, Brian Benning, Doug Evans, Pat Hughes, Tony Hrkac, Ron Wilson, Tony Twist, Daniel Corso, Steve Dubinsky, Scott Pellerin, Mike Sillinger, Radek Dvorak, Jay McClement, Ty Rattie, Robert Thomas, Terry Crisp, Craig Cameron, Ray Fortin, Andre Boudrias, Jim Lorentz, Curt Bennett, Mike Lampman, Wayne Merrick,Connie Forey, Gordon Brooks, Frank Spring, Butch Williams, Stan Gilbertson, Denis Dupere, Derek Sanderson, Curt Bennett, Doug Palazzari, Blake Dunlop, John Markell, Perry Ganchar, Doug Evans, Eddy Beers, Perry Turnbull, Rod Brind'Amour, Brendan Shanahan, Chris McAlpine, Stephane Richer, Scott Mellanby, D.J. Chase retired from hockey in 2000 and is currently working with Chris Kerber on KMOX as the color commentator for Blues hockey. In 1980–81 the Blues, behind the play of left wing Brian Sutter and centre Bernie Federko, won 45 games—posting the best record in team history up to that point—and captured a division title, but their playoff struggles continued as they were eliminated in their second postseason series. In the Blues era of 1990 to the present Pronger is the second best defensemen to grace the blue line behind Hall of Famer Al MacInnis. While crashing the net, Kypreos ran into Fuhr, knocking him backwards and tearing several ligaments in Fuhr’s knee. Expectations were high for the Blues in the 1996 playoffs and Fuhr was one of the main reasons why. Record: 28-39-11 (67 points), Finished 3rd in NHL West Division  (Schedule and Results), Coach: Sid Abel (3-6-1), Bill McCreary (6-14-4), Al Arbour (19-19-6), Captain: ts ironic the Chris Pronger finds himself at number 13 on this list, his career in St. Louis always seemed like it was cursed. Plante also invented the first goalie mask while playing for Montreal and that invention would prove vital throughout his career. Led by first-time head coach Scotty Bowman and featuring hard-nosed defenseman Barclay Plager, the Blues advanced to the Stanley Cup finals in their first season but were defeated by the Montreal Canadiens in four contests that were each decided by just one goal. When it came down to it, influence over the city won out and that's why Bernie is #2. Stevens went on to win 3 Stanley Cups with the Devils and had a Hall of Fame career. All-time Points Leader: Bernie Federko, 1073. This led to a falling out with the coach and in the 1970-71 season Unger was traded to the St. Louis Blues for another superstar in Red Berenson. Pronger sits 4th in Blues history with 931 penalty minutes, 7th with 272 assists, and 9th with 598 games played and 356 points. The newly formed St. Louis Blues acquired Red Berenson, along with Barclay Plager, seven weeks into the 1967-68 season and both provided immediate dividends. The fiberglass mask shattered and knocked Plante out cold. Plante joined the Blues and shared net minding duties with another famous goalie in Glenn Hall. Federko was a Blues draft pick in the 1976 Amateur Draft and would start his career in Kansas City. Pavol is currently playing in the KHL but has not ruled out a return to the NHL. Berenson led the Blues to the Stanley Cup Finals in three straight seasons and was voted by his peers as the top player in the Western Division all three of those seasons. He would play in Winnipeg/Phoenix for the next ten years and would wind up second in team history in goals and first in penalty minutes.

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