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Today in Hockey History: March 25

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Today’s date in National Hockey League history has been all about things happening for the first time, both in the regular season and Stanley Cup Playoffs. The greatest player of them all had one of the biggest firsts in league history. Let’s take our daily trip back in time to relive all the top moments from March 25.

Gretzky Does the Unthinkable

On March 25, 1982, Wayne Gretzky accomplished something many thought could never be done; score 200 points in a season. He entered the game against the Calgary Flames with 199 points. Early in the first period, he assisted on Pat Hughes’ goal to become the first player ever to hit the 200-point plateau.

Related: One for the Ages: Wayne Gretzky’s 1995-96 NHL Season

Gretzky was far from done that evening as he picked up another assist later in the first period. He set another NHL record in the second period by scoring two shorthanded goals just 27 seconds apart.

The Great One finished the season with 212 points. He scored 196 points the following season before having three straight seasons with over 200 points. He scored 205 in 1983-84, 208 in 1984-85 and a record 215 in 1985-86. He remains the only player to score 200 points in a single season. Mario Lemieux was the closest ever to hit that mark when he scored 199 points during the 1988-89 season.

Stanley Cup Playoff Firsts

Bernie Morris scored six times on March 25, 1917, to lead the Seattle Metropolitans to a 9-1 win over the Montreal Canadiens. The Metropolitans, members of the old Pacific Coach Hockey Association, became the first team based in the United States to win the Stanley Cup.

On March 25, 1924, the Montreal Canadiens defeated the Calgary Tigers 3-0 to win the Stanley Cup. Legendary goaltender Georges Vezina picked up the shutout as the Canadiens won their first Stanley Cup since the formation of the NHL in 1917.

Nick Metz made Stanley Cup Playoff history on March 25, 1941. He picked up three assists during the second period of the Toronto Maple Leafs 7-2 victory over the Boston Bruins in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Semifinals. He became the first player to have three assists in a postseason game. Metz also scored a goal for good measure.

Two years later, Harvey “Busher” Jackson scored the first shorthanded overtime goal in Stanley Cup playoff history. The historic goal game 3:20 into overtime and gave the Bruins a 3-2 win in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Semifinals over the Canadiens.

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On March 25, 1954, Dickie Moore had a huge night for the Canadiens in their 8-1 win over the Bruins. Moore scored two goals and picked up four assists to become the first player to have six points in a Stanley Cup Playoff game. That record stood for 29 years until Gretzky scored four goals and seven points against the Flames in 1983. Lemieux and Patrik Sundstrom share the record for the most points in a playoff game with eight.

Regular-Season Firsts

On March 25, 1951, Alex Delvecchio played in his first NHL game as the Detroit Red Wings beat the Canadiens 5-0. He became one of the greatest players in franchise history by scoring 456 goals and 1,281 points in 1,550 games. He was part of three Stanley Cup-winning teams and won the Lady Bing Trophy three times. With the win that night, the Red Wings became the first team to reach 100 points in a season. Much later in his career, on this date in 1972, Delvecchio became the third player in NHL history to reach 1,200 points with a goal and an assist for the Red Wings in a 5-3 loss at the St. Louis Blues.

Alex Delvecchio
Delvecchio was one of the greatest Red Wings of all time. (THW Archives)

The Canadiens’ 8-4 win over the Chicago Blackhawks on March 25, 1980, saw a pair of NHL firsts. Steve Schutt became the first player to score a goal against 20 teams in one season with his first-period tally. Also, Pierre Laroche scored a pair of goals to hit 50 on the season and become the first player in league history to score 50 goals for two different teams. He scored 53 goals for the Pittsburgh Penguins during the 1975-76 season.

On March 25, 1995, Scotty Bowman became the first coach in NHL history to win 900 regular-season games when he led the Red Wings over the Vancouver Canucks. He finished his legendary career with 1,244 wins, which is still the all-time record. Joel Quenneville is the only other coach to win 900 games as he is second all-time with 945 wins and counting.

Blackhawks’ rookie goaltender Kevin Lankinen made history on this date in 2021 when he recorded a 41-save shutout to become the first rookie in franchise history to blank an opponent with 40 or more saves. He did so against the Panthers in what ended up being a 3-0 victory.

A Big Date for the Hulls

Bobby Hull has a statue sitting outside the United Center in Chicago. You don’t get immortalized in bronze unless you accomplished some incredible things during your playing career. On March 25, 1962, Hull became the third player in NHL history to score 50 goals in a season with a goal against the New York Rangers. He joined Maurice Richard and Bernie Geoffrion as the only players to have 50-goal seasons.

Hull had a legendary career with the Blackhawks. (THW Archives)

Hull made more history a decade later with a goal in the old Boston Garden. He tied the game with just 2:26 remained to join Gordie Howe as the only two players to score 600 goals. Since then, 18 more players have joined the 600-goal club.

On March 25, 1994, Bobby’s son, Brett Hull, became a 50-goal scorer for the fifth consecutive season when he scored three times for the Blues in a 5-3 win against the visiting Dallas Stars. He completed the 21st hat trick of his career just 23 seconds after scoring goal No. 50 on the season.

Odds & Ends

Barry Pederson became the fifth rookie in NHL history to score 40 goals on March 25, 1982, as the Boston Bruins won 5-1 over the visiting Buffalo Sabres. This was their seventh straight over the Sabres at Boston Garden.

Luc Robitaille had a goal and an assist on March 25, 1987, to lead the Los Angeles Kings to a 6-1 win at the Red Wings. This gave him 77 points, breaking the franchise’s single-season rookie record for scoring set by Larry Murphy during the 1980-81 season.

A year later, Mario Lemieux scored two goals and added three assists in the Pittsburgh Penguins’ 5-2 win over the Canadiens. This gave him 155 points, moving him past Phil Esposito for the highest single-season total by any player in NHL history, except Gretzky.

Pavel Bure scored twice on March 25, 2000, as the Florida Panthers beat the Canadiens 4-2. This gave him and his brother Valeri, who was with the Calgary Flames, 89 combined goals, breaking the single-season record for siblings set by Bobby and Dennis Hull. The Bure brothers finished the season with 93 total goals, 58 for Pavel, with Valeri scoring 35. In that same game, Viktor Kozlov set a team record for most assists in a season, with his 50th.

Staying in Florida, on March 25, 2004, Roberto Luongo made 42 saves for the Panthers in a 3-2 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes to give him an NHL-record 2,219 for the season. He broke the record of 2,214 saves set by Felix Potvin of the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1996-97.

Brad Marchand tied the NHL single-season record for overtime goals on March 25, 2018, when he scored 28 seconds into OT to give the Bruins a 2-1 victory at the Minnesota Wild. This was his fifth overtime goal of the season, putting him in a four-way with Steven Stamkos of the Tampa Bay Lightning (2011-12), Jonathan Toews of the Blackhawks (2015-16) and Alex Galchenyuk of the Canadiens (2016-17).

John Tavares scored four goals for the Maple Leafs on March 25, 2019, in a 7-5 home win over the Panthers. The first four-goal goal of his NHL career gave 45 goals for the season, breaking Eddie Olczyk’s record of 42, set in 1987-88, for the most goals by any player in his first season with Toronto.

Mika Zibanejad became the third NHL player to score six points against the same team in one season when he scored a natural hat trick and added three assists in the Rangers’ 8-3 win over the Flyers on March 25, 2021. He joined Doug Bentley of the Blackhawks (vs. Rangers, 1942-43) and Joe Malone of the Quebec Athletic Club (vs. Toronto St. Patricks, 1919-20) in the feat. He also was the third player all-time with two natural hat tricks against the same opponent in one season joining Thomas Vanek of the Sabres (vs. Lightning, 2007-08) and Peter Bondra of the Capitals (vs. Islanders, 1995-96).

On that same night, Sidney Crosby became the eighth-fastest to reach 1,300 NHL points, doing so in 1,017 games. He accomplished the milestone by recording three assists in the Penguins’ 4-0 blanking of the Sabres.

To finish off a busy day in 2021, Avalanche bench boss Jared Bednar posted his 166th victory as he passed Marc Crawford for third place in wins in Avalanche/Quebec Nordiques history. It came in a game where his team fired five goals past Marc-Andre Fleury to dispatch the Vegas Golden Knights 5-1.

On March 25, 2022, Cale Makar set a franchise record for goals by a defenseman in a single season with his 23rd and 24th goals as he passed Sandis Ozolinsh.

On March 25, 2023, the Seattle Kraken hit 88 points after getting only 60 in their inaugural season. It marked the largest increase in NHL history between a team’s first and second seasons.

Also on that night, Patrick Kane notched his 1,233rd point to pass Phil Housley for second by a United States-born player in NHL history. Mike Modano still holds the record with 1,374.

Happy Birthday to You

There are 26 players who played in at least one NHL game born on this date. The most notable of the group are Pat Hughes (69), Ken Wregget (60), Andrei Nikolishin (51), Lance Bouma (34), Brendan Gaunce (30), J.C. Beaudin (27) and the late Bill Barilko and Jean Potvin.

*Originally constructed by Greg Boysen


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