Mike Bossy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Position Forward
Height
Weight
ft 0 in (1.83 m)
185 lb (84 kg)
Pro Clubs New York Islanders
Nationality Flag of Canada Canada
Born January 22, 1957,
Montreal, Quebec
NHL Draft Round 1, 15th Overall, 1977
New York Islanders
Pro Career 19771987
Hall of Fame 1991

Michael Dean "Mike" Bossy (born in Montreal, Quebec, on January 22, 1957), is a former Canadian ice hockey player who played for the New York Islanders during their four-year reign as Stanley Cup champions in the early 1980s. Known for his powerful shot, he was among the league's goal scoring leaders and considered one of the greatest bona-fide snipers of the game. His career was cut short by injuries.

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He started his junior career with Quebec Major Junior Hockey League at the age of 14. Despite scoring 309 goals in four seasons, Bossy was considered a timid player by NHL scouts. In the 1977 NHL Amateur Draft, he was passed over by twelve teams, with the New York Rangers and Toronto Maple Leafs ignoring him twice. However, the New York Islanders made him their first choice, 15th overall.

General manager Bill Torrey was torn at first between taking Bossy and another forward. Bossy was known as a scorer who couldn't check, while the other forward could check but wasn't very good offensively. Coach Al Arbour persuaded Torrey to pick Bossy, figuring it was easier to teach a scorer how to check. Bossy was placed on a line with Bryan Trottier and Clark Gillies.

Bossy boldly predicted that he would score 50 goals in his rookie season. He made good on his promise, scoring a then-record 53 goals as a rookie in the 1977-78 season, won the Calder Trophy for rookie of the year, and was named a Second Team All-Star.

In 1980-81, he scored 50 goals in the first 50 games of the season, the first to do so since the great Maurice Richard thirty-six years earlier. Richard was on hand to congratulate Bossy for achieving that milestone.

Bossy was known for being able to score goals in remarkable fashion, the most incredible, perhaps, in the 1982 Stanley Cup finals against the Vancouver Canucks when, up-ended by a check from Tiger Williams and flying several feet in the air, parallel to the ice, Bossy nonetheless managed to hook the puck with his stick and score. Bossy was also noted for his clean play, never resorting to fighting (and being one of the first players to speak out against violence on the ice), and winning the Lady Byng Trophy for gentlemanly play three times: 1983, 1984, and 1986. Notable about Bossy's game was his strong defensive play which enabled him to be on regular penalty-killing duty; this distinguished him from Gretzky and Mario Lemieux.

Bossy has harbored some animosity towards Gretzky and the Oilers, stating that the Islanders got little recognition for their dynasty (1980-1983) compared to the Montreal Canadiens (1976-1979) or Edmonton Oilers (1984-1990). The dominant scoring star of the late 1970s was Guy Lafleur but his skills waned in the 1980s. In 1982, Bossy set a scoring record for right-wingers with 147 points while also winning the Stanley Cup and the Conn Smythe Trophy. However, far more attention was given to Gretzky who not only won the Hart Trophy and Art Ross Trophy, but also shattered scoring records with an unheard of 212 points and 92 goals. Although the Islanders swept the Oilers in the 1983 final to win a fourth consecutive championship, Gretzky and his Oilers still received the most attention. During Gretzky's interview with the New York Post in 1993, he praised Bossy as the best right-winger ever to play, saying that their scoring totals would have been even higher if the two had played together. Bossy's response in the Post was not complimentary, as he pointed out that their playing styles were different, and also said that Trottier was the best. Gretzky afterwards could not be reached for comment.

The Islanders made a fifth consecutive Stanley Cup final in 1984 but they were outmatched by the Oilers who defeated them 4 games to 1. Bossy, who had scored 8 goals after the first three rounds of the playoffs (and 17 goals in the past three consecutive post-seasons), was silenced completely in the finals series. Afterwards, the Islanders would slowly decline, while injuries would take their toll on Bossy's back. He was limited him to 63 games in the 1986-87 season but he still managed 38 goals.

He retired in 1987 at the age of 30 and worked as a television broadcaster for the Quebec Nordiques until 1990 and was a member of the CKOI's morning show Yé trop de bonne heure's crew in the mid-1990s.

In 2005, Bossy made a cameo appearance on the fourth sequel to the French Canadian classic movie Les Boys, playing himself.

On October 13th, 2006, the Islanders held a news conference to announce that Bossy had rejoined the organization, working with the front office in sponsor and fan development. [1]

Bossy and Wayne Gretzky are the only players to have scored 50 or more goals for nine seasons. Bossy also had nine consecutive 50 goal seasons, a feat unmatched even today. Additionally, both are the only players ever to have scored 60 or more goals in as many as five seasons. Unlike Gretzky, however, who played 20 seasons, Bossy was healthy enough only for 10, of which only the first nine were full.

As he never played long enough for his skills to diminish, his scoring averages remain quite high. Bossy averaged .762 goals per game in the regular season, more than any other player in NHL history, and .659 in the playoffs, second only to Mario Lemieux at .710. Lemieux is second to Bossy in the regular season, at .754 (although if Lemieux had not made his comeback after his inital retirement, his career goals-per-game would have been much higher at .823). Other goal leaders averages, for comparison: Pavel Bure scored .623 in the regular season and .547 in the playoffs; Wayne Gretzky, .601 and .587; Brett Hull, .584 and .510; Phil Esposito, .559 and .469; Maurice Richard, .556 and .617; Bobby Hull, .547 and .521; Marcel Dionne, .542 and .429; Guy Lafleur, .497 and .453; Mike Gartner, .494 and .352. Many thus regard Bossy along with Lemieux (as well as Bobby Hull and Richard) as the best pure goal scorers ever to play the game. (It should be noted, however, that if Gretzky had retired after his first 10 years in the league, his numbers on a per game basis would have eclipsed all other players. Most of Gretzky's major records were all achieved before 1990, including his record as the only player ever to exceed 200 points in a single season, which he had done more than once).

In 1977-78, his rookie season, he scored 53 goals which established a rookie record. This was broken in 1992-93 by Teemu Selänne's 76 goals.

In 1980-81, he scored 50 goals in the first 50 games of the season. He also recorded nine hat tricks that season, establishing an NHL-record (later broken by Gretzky in 1981-1982 with 10. Gretzky tied his own record with 10 hat tricks again in 1983-1984).

In 1982, Bossy set scoring records for right-wingers with 83 assists and 147 points in 80 games. These would stand until the 1995-96 season when Jaromir Jagr broke both records with 87 assists and 149 points, in what was an 82-game schedule.

Bossy earned the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP in 1982, and scored 17 goals in three straight playoffs -- 1981, 1982, and 1983 -- the only player ever to do so. In reaching the Stanley Cup Finals five times, between 1980 and 1984, Bossy scored 69 goals. By contrast, in Gretzky's five Stanley Cup Finals playoffs during his peak years with the Edmonton Oilers, he scored 59 goals.

Bossy earned 5 First Team All-Star selections, one of only four right wings ever to do so, again a notable achievement considering that the other three had much longer careers (Gordie Howe - 26 years; Maurice Richard - 18 years; Guy Lafleur - 17 years).

He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1991. His #22 jersey was retired by the Islanders on March 3, 1992. In 1998, he was ranked number 20 on The Hockey News' list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players, despite having an injury-shortened career.

    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1972-73 Laval National QMJHL 4 1 2 3 0 -- -- -- -- --
1973-74 Laval National QMJHL 68 70 48 118 45 11 6 16 22 2
1974-75 Laval National QMJHL 67 84 65 149 42 16 18 20 38 2
1975-76 Laval National QMJHL 64 79 57 136 25 -- -- -- -- --
1976-77 Laval National QMJHL 61 75 51 126 12 7 5 5 10 12
1977-78 New York Islanders NHL 73 53 38 91 6 7 2 2 4 2
1978-79 New York Islanders NHL 80 69 57 126 25 10 6 2 8 2
1979-80 New York Islanders NHL 75 51 41 92 12 16 10 13 23 8
1980-81 New York Islanders NHL 79 68 51 119 32 18 17 18 35 4
1981-82 New York Islanders NHL 80 64 83 147 22 19 17 10 27 0
1982-83 New York Islanders NHL 79 60 58 118 20 19 17 9 26 10
1983-84 New York Islanders NHL 67 51 67 118 8 21 8 10 18 4
1984-85 New York Islanders NHL 76 58 59 117 38 10 5 6 11 4
1985-86 New York Islanders NHL 80 61 62 123 14 3 1 2 3 4
1986-87 New York Islanders NHL 63 38 37 75 33 6 2 3 5 2
NHL Totals 752 573 553 1126 210 129 85 75 160 38

Preceded by
Willi Plett
Winner of the Calder Trophy
1978
Succeeded by
Bobby Smith
Preceded by
Guy Lafleur
NHL Goal Leader
1979
Succeeded by
Danny Gare, Charlie Simmer, Blaine Stoughton
Preceded by
Danny Gare, Charlie Simmer, Blaine Stoughton
NHL Goal Leader
1981
Succeeded by
Wayne Gretzky
Preceded by
Butch Goring
Winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy
1982
Succeeded by
Billy Smith
Preceded by
Rick Middleton
Winner of the Lady Byng Trophy
1983, 1984
Succeeded by
Jari Kurri
Preceded by
Jari Kurri
Winner of the Lady Byng Trophy
1986
Succeeded by
Joe Mullen
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