Luc Robitaille

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Luc Robitaille playing for the Los Angeles Kings on December 21, 2005
Luc Robitaille playing for the Los Angeles Kings on December 21, 2005

"Lucky" Luc Robitaille (born February 17, 1966 in Montréal, Québec, Canada) is a retired professional ice hockey player. In a 20-year NHL career from 1986 to 2006, he played for the Los Angeles Kings (three different times), New York Rangers, Detroit Red Wings and Pittsburgh Penguins. Robitaille retired as the all-time highest-scoring left winger in National Hockey League history and the holder of the Kings franchise record for goals.

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Robitaille starred in junior hockey for the Hull Olympiques of the QMJHL, scoring an amazing 191 points in 1985-86, and being named the CHL Player of the Year that season. However, due to perceived skating deficiencies, Luc was not drafted until the 9th round (171st overall) by the Los Angeles Kings in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft - five rounds later than Tom Glavine, whom the Kings also drafted, and who would become a star Major League Baseball pitcher instead. Only Robitaille's former teammate Dave Taylor has ever had as many as one thousand career points after being drafted so low.

Despite such an inauspicious start, Robitaille burst onto the NHL scene in 1986, garnering the Calder Memorial Trophy for rookie of the year honors after scoring 45 goals and 39 assists in his first year. He would never look back, scoring more than forty goals in each of his first eight seasons for Los Angeles (a string broken only by the shortened strike year of 1994-95), registering three seasons exceeding fifty goals in that time. In the 1992-93 season, holding the team's captaincy in place of injured captain Wayne Gretzky, he broke Steve Shutt's record for goals by a left winger with a team leading 63 and Kevin Stevens' mark for points by a left winger with a team leading 125, marks which both still stand, making him the only person to ever dethrone Wayne Gretzky as his team's leading scorer during a season. He followed that up with being the third leading scorer (behind Gretzky and Tomas Sandstrom) for the Kings in their run to the Stanley Cup finals that season.

Somewhat astonishingly, Robitaille was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins after the 1993-94 NHL season for Rick Tocchet and a draft choice. After a single season in Pittsburgh, he was traded to the New York Rangers, where he spent two seasons before being traded back to Los Angeles for Kevin Stevens.

His return to Los Angeles was not immediately triumphant. In an injury plagued 1997-98 season he had the lowest point total of his career to that time, but the next three years proved to be a renaissance in his career, as Robitaille returned to form as one of the great left wingers of hockey. However, wishing for a shot at the Stanley Cup, which playing for Los Angeles was unlikely to grant, he signed as a free agent in 2001 with the star-studded, veteran Detroit Red Wings. Robitaille scored thirty goals that year and was a key component to the Red Wings Cup win.

After a mediocre following season, the worst of his career, Robitaille, hoping to finish his career back in Los Angeles, signed as a free agent in the fall of 2003 with the Kings. He led the team in scoring the next season at the age of 38.

On the night of Thursday, January 19, 2006 during a game against the Atlanta Thrashers, Robitaille broke the Kings' all time franchise scoring record with his second goal of the night, his five-hundred and fifty-first (551st) goal in total. He went on to score a hat-trick third goal on an empty net in the final seconds of the 3rd period, embossing the new record, at least temporarily, at five-hundred and fifty two (552) goals. His record breaking goal was met with several minutes of a stadium-wide standing ovation and a video-congratulation reel was run on the in-house monitors for fans to watch.

On Monday, April 10, 2006, the Kings announced Robitaille's intention to retire at the conclusion of the 2005-06 NHL season. Robitaille officially confirmed this the next day, Tuesday, April 11, 2006 in a press conference held at the Toyota Sports Center in El Segundo, California.

Luc Robitaille played his final NHL home game as a Los Angeles King against the Calgary Flames on Saturday, April 15, 2006. He also wore the Captain's 'C' that normally belongs to Mattias Norstrom. Although he was held without a point in the game, he logged 18:37 of ice time, and had 4 shots on goal. He was also the second shooter in the shootout, but his shot towards the upper-right corner of the net was stopped by the glove of Flames goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff, who was giving Robitaille the five hole for him to score[1] . The Kings went on to steal this game 2-1 off of a shootout goal by Pavol Demitra, and three shootout saves by the Kings' Jason LaBarbera. The Kings held a curtain call for Robitaille after the game, where he was given a standing ovation by the sell-out crowd of 18,118 fans in attendance. After chants of his name died down, he gave a short speech and did one final lap of the rink at Staples Center.

Luc Robitaille finished his playing career on Monday, April 17, 2006 at the HP Pavilion in a game against the playoff-bound San Jose Sharks. The Kings won this game 4-0, with Jason LaBarbera earning the shutout. He received applause and chants of his name throughout the night by the 17,496 fans in attendance, as well as good wishes from many of the opposing players of the Sharks. After the game ended, the Kings players came out and gathered around him first, rather than the traditional congratulation of the goaltender. The players of the Sharks team then came onto the ice to shake hands with Robitaille before they headed off into their locker room.

Robitaille finished his legendary career with 668 goals, and 726 assists for a total of 1,394 points in 1,431 games played over the course of 19 NHL seasons (1986-87 to 2005-06). His final NHL goal and point was scored in typical Luc Robitaille fashion, one-timing a pass from Jeremy Roenick while at the center of the right wing faceoff circle past the Phoenix Coyotes' Curtis Joseph during a power play on the March 14, 2006 6-2 loss to the Coyotes.

On July 6, 2006 Robitaille was named president of the Omaha Lancers hockey team of the United States Hockey League (USHL). [1]

The Kings officially retired Robitaille's number 20 sweater on January 20, 2007. Robitaille became the fifth player to have his number retired by the Kings, after Rogie Vachon, Marcel Dionne, Dave Taylor and Wayne Gretzky.

  • August 28, 1997- Traded by the New York Rangers to the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for Kevin Stevens.
  • July 24, 2003- Signed as a free agent with the Los Angeles Kings.

  • Calder Memorial Trophy - 1987
  • Named to the NHL All-Rookie Team - 1987
  • Played in 8 NHL All-Star Games - 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 2001
  • Lifetime Achievement Award from the Aquatic Foundation of Metropolitan Los Angeles 6/8/06

Rankings are correct as of 18 April 2006

  • Ranks 10th in all-time NHL goals and first amongst left wingers (653)
  • Ranks 40th in all-time NHL assists and second to John Bucyk amongst left wingers (717)
  • Ranks 19th in all-time NHL points and first amongst left wingers (1370)
  • Ranks 28th in all-time NHL games (1366)
  • Los Angeles Kings franchise record for career goals (552)

    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1983-84 Hull Olympiques QMJHL 70 32 53 85 48 -- -- -- -- --
1984-85 Hull Olympiques QMJHL 64 55 94 149 115 5 4 2 6 27
1985-86 Hull Olympiques QMJHL 63 68 123 191 91 15 17 27 44 28
1986-87 Los Angeles Kings NHL 79 45 39 84 28 5 1 4 5 2
1987-88 Los Angeles Kings NHL 80 53 58 111 82 5 2 5 7 18
1988-89 Los Angeles Kings NHL 78 46 52 98 65 11 2 6 8 10
1989-90 Los Angeles Kings NHL 80 52 49 101 38 10 5 5 10 12
1990-91 Los Angeles Kings NHL 76 45 46 91 68 12 12 4 16 22
1991-92 Los Angeles Kings NHL 80 44 63 107 95 6 3 4 7 12
1992-93 Los Angeles Kings NHL 84 63 62 125 100 24 9 13 22 28
1993-94 Los Angeles Kings NHL 83 44 42 86 86 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 46 23 19 22 37 12 7 4 11 26
1995-96 New York Rangers NHL 77 23 46 69 80 11 1 5 6 8
1996-97 New York Rangers NHL 69 24 24 48 48 15 4 7 11 4
1997-98 Los Angeles Kings NHL 57 16 24 40 66 4 1 2 3 6
1998-99 Los Angeles Kings NHL 82 39 35 74 54 -- -- -- -- --
1999-00 Los Angeles Kings NHL 71 36 38 74 68 4 2 2 4 6
2000-01 Los Angeles Kings NHL 82 37 51 88 66 13 4 3 7 10
2001-02 Detroit Red Wings NHL 81 30 20 50 38 23 4 5 9 10
2002-03 Detroit Red Wings NHL 81 11 20 31 50 4 1 0 1 0
2003-04 Los Angeles Kings NHL 80 22 29 51 56 -- -- -- -- --
2005-06 Los Angeles Kings NHL 65 15 9 24 52 -- -- -- -- --
QMJHL Totals 197 155 270 424 256 5 4 2 6 27
NHL Totals 1431 668 726 1394 1177 159 58 69 127 174

Played for Canada in:

  • Luc Robitaille is named in a song of Swedish rock band Mando Diao Welcome home, Luc Robitaille on their album Ode to Ochrasy.

  1. ^ Amber, David. Facing Off: Q&A with Luc Robitaille.


Preceded by
Dan Hodgson
CHL Player of the Year
1986
Succeeded by
Rob Brown
Preceded by
Gary Suter
Winner of the Calder Trophy
1987
Succeeded by
Joe Nieuwendyk
Preceded by
Wayne Gretzky
Los Angeles Kings captains
1992-93
Succeeded by
Wayne Gretzky

Note: Robitaille served as captain in 1992-93 season, while Gretzky was injured & out of line-up.

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