Wayne Gretzky

Wayne Gretzky

Wayne Gretzky

Wayne Gretzky (born 1961), known by hockey fans simply as "The Great One," showed great talent even in the junior leagues in Canada. He went on to become the first player to win the Hart Trophy for eight consecutive years and beat hockey legend Gordie Howe's all-time point record of 1,850.

Wayne Gretzky was born on January 26, 1961, in Brantford, Ontario, Canada, of Russian and Polish descent. His father, Walter, had hoped himself to become a hockey player but was discouraged because of his size. Wayne displayed an early interest in skating and received his first pair of skates when he was three years old. He learned to skate on the Ninth River near his grandfather's farm in Canning, Ontario, and at public rinks on weekends. But it was the rink built for him by his father behind the little house on Varadi Avenue in Brantford that received the acclaim of being the birthplace of his skating skills.

Showed Early Talent

He was only six years old when he saw his first year in organized hockey, scoring one goal, the lowest yearly total of his career. As a nine-year-old in 1970-1971 he scored 196 goals in 76 games, with 120 assists. The next year he scored 378 goals in 82 games. In 1972-1973 he scored 105 goals in the major pee wee league, and in 1974-1975 he scored 90 goals in the major bantam league. As a 16-year-old in the Junior "A" league he continued his high scoring and packed the arenas with fans eager to witness his skills. He wore number 99, because number 9 was still being worn by his idol, Gordie Howe. In 1975 he moved to Toronto to play for the Young Nats, where he won the league's rookie of the year award. Two years later he was drafted by the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds, where he again won rookie of the year honors.

In 1978 he turned pro with the Indianapolis Racers of the World Hockey Association (WHA). Less than two months later Peter Pockington, owner of the Edmonton Oilers of the same league, purchased his contract from the financially troubled Racers and signed Gretzky to a 21-year contract. In 1979-1980, the Edmonton Oilers, along with the New England (Hartford) Whalers, the Quebec Nordiques, and the Winnipeg Jets, were admitted to the National Hockey League (NHL). In his first year in the NHL Gretzky scored 51 goals, 8 more than he had scored in the WHA, and he made the second All-Star team. He won his first Hart Trophy, for being the most valuable player in the league, and the Lady Byng Trophy for his sportsmanship, gentlemanly conduct, and skating ability. He went on to become the first player to win the Hart Trophy for eight consecutive years, from the 1979-1980 season through the 1986-1987 season.

Turnaround for the Oilers

Despite Gretzky's talents, the struggling Oilers remained at the bottom of the league. In his second year he led the league in assists and points, made the first All-Star team, and won his second most valuable player trophy award, but the Oilers lost in the quarter-finals to the New York Islanders. During the 1981-1982 season he continued to break records, including some of his own. He scored 50 goals in 38 games, breaking Maurice Richard's record. And on February 24, 1982, he broke Phil Esposito's single season scoring record with a goal against the Buffalo Sabres. But the Oilers had not yet made it past the first round of the playoffs. Although Gretzky had won the most valuable player award for each year that he had been in the NHL, fans began to wonder who really was the best player. While Gretzky had all the records, Brian Trottier of the New York Islanders owned four Stanley Cup rings. In 1983-1984, however, the Oilers won their first Stanley Cup. They won their second in 1984-1985, and repeated in 1986-1987.

In the summer of 1988 what was to have been a 21-year contract with the Oilers came to an end when Gretzky was traded to the Los Angeles Kings. He quickly turned that team from a weak one into one of the best. A knee injury kept him out of several games, and his consecutive league's most valuable trophy string came to an end. However, he did win the Conn Smyth trophy for being the most valuable player in the playoffs. He also won the Hart trophy again.

Broke Howe's Record

During his career Gretzky, a left-handed shooting center, developed a style that was as distinctive as it was exciting to watch. Listed in the program as 6 feet and 170 pounds, he always stayed away from fights, preferring to drift and glide around the ice. He combined mental and physical skills to transform himself into a scoring machine. Some fans believed that he viewed the rink as a chess board and that he had the ability to sense where the puck was going to end up and skated to that position. Others believed that his greatest asset was his ability to move laterally across the ice at full speed. But it was his assists that made him especially valuable to his team. In becoming the leading scorer in NHL history he set a new record for assists (more than 1,300) in just 12 seasons. In 1989, he passed his idol Gordie Howe's all-time point record of 1,850. Howe supported Gretzky, according to Maclean's and called Gretzky "a great kid," and "great for hockey."

Such accolades brought Gretzky numerous commercial endorsements for companies as diverse as General Mills and Nike. Consumers found his personality appealing, and he only endorsed products he used. Advertising Age Magazine called him "an ideal athlete to endorse products."

Traded To the Blues

Gretzky continued breaking records and winning awards in the 1990s and in the late 1993-1994 season broke another Howe record of 801 career goals, accomplishing this in 650 fewer games than Howe played. Then Gretzky began to get frustrated with the unsuccessful attempts of the Kings. Although in 1995 he said his "life is in L.A." and he intended to "end my career as an L.A. King," he now wanted to be traded. Richard Hoffer of Sports Illustrated said Gretzky demanded that the Kings "either acquire top-notch talent to make a run at the cup immediately or trade him."

Gretzky was traded to the St. Louis Blues in the 1995-1996 season. He received some criticism for what seemed to be his selfishness and lack of loyalty to the Kings, because of his desire for another Stanley Cup. Gretzky defended his actions. He told Sports Illustrated, "I want to win … for people to accept losing in life, that's not right."

Gretzky's career with the Blues was brief. He had not yet officially signed with the team when they lost the first two games in the play-off series with the Detroit Red Wings. Mike Keenan, the coach and general manager of the Blues, blamed Gretzky for the losses. Keenan later apologized and the Blues won the next three out of four games with Detroit, but Gretzky had already decided not to sign with St. Louis. Instead, he signed with the New York Rangers for the 1996-1997 season. Gretzky fully intended to sign with St. Louis, but, as he told Sports Illustrated, "you want to play for people who believe in you."

Further Reading

Gretzky (1984) by Walter Gretzky, Wayne's father, and Jim Taylor, is an affectionate look at the entire Gretzky family, written before the trade to Los Angeles.

Hockey: Twenty Years (1987), an official publication of the National Hockey League, covers the years 1967 to 1987. A heavily illustrated volume, it traces Gretzky's career and his effect on the success of the Edmonton Oilers.

Younger readers will enjoy: Wayne Gretzky: The Great Gretzky (1982) by Bert Rosenthal; Sports Star: Wayne Gretzky (1982) by S. H. Burchard. A good pictorial history of Gretzky's life is Jim Taylor's Wayne Gretzky (Opus Productions, 1994).

Articles about Gretzky's trade to the Blues: Michael Farber, "Less Than Great," Sports Illustrated, (March 6, 1995); Richard Hoffman, "King No More," Sports Illustrated, (March 11, 1996).

A look at Gordy Howe when Gretzky neared his record: Joe Chidley, "Still Mr. Hockey," Maclean's (March 21, 1994).

Gretzky's trade to the New York Rangers: E.M. Swift, "The Good Old Days," Sports Illustrated (October 7, 1996). □

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Gretzky, Wayne 1961-

GRETZKY, WAYNE 1961-

Hockey superstar

The Great One

No individual dominated his or her sport in the 1980s the way Wayne Gretzky dominated professional hockey. Regardless of how greatness is measured, whether in terms of individual accomplishments such as statistics and awards, team championships, or peer respect, Gretzky distanced himself from virtually everyone over the course of the decade. According to Gretzky, "the best players in hockey are the ones who make their teammates look good, the ones who make their teams win." By that standard, too, Gretzky was in extraordinarily select company, including such players as Phil Esposito, Bobby Hull, Bobby Orr, and Gordie Howe. Even such players as these are unstinting in their praise of the "Great One." "No one I have ever seen has been able to think like Wayne Gretzky can on ice. You can hone that talent by studying the game, but believe me, it comes from God," testified Esposito. "No one can do the things he does out there—the back passes, toying with people with the puck right in front of them, and they can't get it from him. It's miraculous," marveled Hull. "There are great players, but no one can ever compare" to Gretzky, asserted serted Orr. "If you want to tell me he's the greatest player of all time, I have no argument at all," conceded Howe.

Accomplishments

Of course, numbers also tell a good deal of the Gretzky story. "I have to admit," said Gretzky, "my childhood was a little different from most. I could skate at two. I was nationally known at six. I was signing autographs at ten. I had a magazine article written about me at eleven and a thirty-minute national television show done on me at fifteen." He turned professional at seventeen. In his nine seasons with the Edmonton Oilers, from 1980 to 1988, Gretzky scored 583 goals and handed out 1,086 assists. For six of those years he averaged 73 goals and 130 assists a season, a remarkable achievement considering that no one else in the history of the NHL had managed to score 200 points in a season. He won eight MVP awards and led the Oilers to four Stanley Cup championships. Traded to the Los Angeles Kings before the 1988-1989 season, Gretzky continued his excellence. In his first year with the Kings he scored 54 goals, passed for 114 assists, and won the league's MVP award. The next season, on 15 October 1989, he broke Howe's all-time scoring record of 1,850 points. All this before the age of thirty. Perhaps just as important, wrote E. M. Swift, "Gretzky's style of play was changing hockey's image as a goon sport as night after night he put on a show of offensive creativity worthy of the highlight tapes."

Legend

A man of seemingly ordinary physical gifts, of average size and never the fastest or strongest player on his NHL teams, Gretzky was a hockey legend nonetheless. Noted for his modesty and teamwork, his consistency and endurance, his leadership and sportsmanship, Gretzky has been called by many the greatest athlete of the twentieth century. Such a claim is far from hyperbolic. One national newspaper poll rated him the fourth greatest athlete of this century, behind only Muhammad Ali, Babe Ruth, and Jim Thorpe. In 1985, years after his greatness had bloomed but years before it would begin to fade, Tom Callahan wrote that as "long as men beat sticks against the ice, not to mention each other, Gretzky will be remembered." He will be remembered for his statistical achievements and the way his name reappears time and time again in the hockey record book and on NHL trophies; for his ability to make clever passes and shots appear commonplace by their sheer frequency; for his ability to dominate the flow and pace of a game without monopolizing the puck; his grace, quiet determination, and competitive drive. But to truly understand why he was the best hockey player ever it has been suggested that one will have had to see him play.

Sources:

Tom Callahan, "Masters of Their Own Game," Time, 125 (18 March 1985): 52-60;

Wayne Gretzky, Gretzky: An Autobiography (New York: Harper Collins, 1990);

Allan Safarik & Dolores Reimer, Quotations On The Great One: The Little Book of Wayne Gretzky (Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press, 1992);

E. M. Swift, "Wayne Gretzky," Sports Illustrated, 81 (19 September 1994): 76-77.

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Gretzky, Wayne

Gretzky, Wayne (1961– ) (‘the Great One’) Canadian ice hockey player. He led the Edmonton Oilers to four consecutive Stanley Cups before being traded to the Los Angeles Kings in 1988. In 1981–82, Gretzky scored the most goals (92) in a single season. He heads the NHL all-time scoring record with 2857 career points (894 goals and 1963 assists).

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"Gretzky, Wayne." World Encyclopedia. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

What's in a name? For the Wolves' Brent Gretzky - Wayne Gretzky's brother -...
Newspaper article from: Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL); 2/16/1999
Great influence; Wayne Gretzky, Canada's most revered player, will be honored...
Newspaper article from: Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN); 12/3/1999
GRETZKY SHOWS WHY WAYNE'S WORLD IS A GREAT ONE.(SPORTS)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA); 11/26/1999
Gretzky, Wayne images
Wayne Gretzky. (Image by Aude, CC)