Introduction
Wayne Douglas
Gretzky was
born on January 26, 1961. He was born and raised in
Brantford,
Ontario, and honed his skills at a backyard rink and regularly
played minor
hockey at
a level far above his peers. Despite his unimpressive stature,
strength and speed, Gretzky's intelligence and reading of the game
were unrivaled. He was adept at dodging checks from opposing players,
and he could consistently anticipate where the puck was going to be
and execute the right move at the right time. Gretzky also became
known for setting up behind his opponent's net, an area that was
nicknamed "Gretzky's office" because of his adept skills in
that area.
In
1978, he signed with the Indianapolis
Racers of
the World Hockey Association (WHA), where he briefly played before
being traded to the Edmonton
Oilers. When the WHA folded, the Oilers joined the NHL, where he
established many scoring records and led his team to four
Stanley
Cup championships.
His trade to the Los
Angeles Kings on
August 9, 1988, had an immediate impact on the team's performance,
eventually leading them to the 1993
Stanley Cup Finals, and he is credited with popularizing hockey
in California. Gretzky played briefly for the
St.
Louis Blues before
finishing his career with the New
York Rangers. Gretzky captured nine Hart
Trophies as
the most valuable player, ten Art
Ross Trophies for
most points
in a season, five
Lady Byng Trophies, five Lester
B. Pearson Awards, and two Conn
Smythe Trophies as
playoff MVP.
After
his retirement in 1999,
he was immediately inducted into the Hockey
Hall of Fame, making him the most recent player to have the
waiting period waived. The NHL retired
his
jersey
number 99
league-wide, making him the only player to receive this honour. He
was one of six players voted to the
International
Ice Hockey Federation's (IIHF) Centennial
All-Star Team. Gretzky became executive director for the
Canadian
national men's hockey team during
the 2002
Winter Olympics, in which the team won a gold medal. In
2000,
he became part owner of the Phoenix
Coyotes, and following the 2004–05
NHL lockout he
became the team's head coach. In September 2009, following the
franchise's
bankruptcy, Gretzky resigned as coach and relinquished his
ownership share.
He
played 20 seasons in the NHL
for four teams from 1979 to 1999. Nicknamed "The Great One",
he has been called "the greatest hockey player ever" by
many sportswriters, players, and the NHL itself. He is the leading
point-scorer in NHL history, with more assists than any other player
has points, and is the only NHL player to total over 200 points
in one season – a feat he accomplished four times. In addition, he
tallied over 100 points in 16 professional seasons, 14 of them
consecutive. At the time of his retirement in 1999, he held 40
regular-season records, 15 playoff records, and six
All-Star
records. He won the
Lady
Byng Trophy for
sportsmanship and performance five times, and he often spoke out
against fighting
in hockey.
Gretzky's
size, strength, and basic athletic abilities were not considered
impressive. As an 18-year-old NHL rookie in 1979, he was
conspicuously underweight at just 160 pounds (73 kg). Many
critics opined at that time that Gretzky was "too small, too
wiry, and too slow to be a force in the NHL".Although he managed
to increase his weight to 185 pounds (84 kg) by the end of his
career in 1999, that was still much less than the NHL average. During
his years with the Oilers, the team conducted individual strength and
stamina tests twice per year. According to Gretzky himself, he always
finished dead last in peripheral vision, flexibility and strength,
and could only bench press 140 pounds (64 kg). On the other
hand, his intelligence and reading of the game was unrivaled, and he
could consistently anticipate where the puck was going to be and
execute the right move at the right time. Hall of Fame defenceman
Bobby Orr said of Gretzky, "He
passes better than anybody I've ever seen. And he thinks so far
ahead." He
was considered one of the most creative players in hockey. "You
never knew what he was going to do,"
said hockey Hall of
Famer Igor Larionov. "He
was improvising all the time. Every time he took the ice, there was
some spontaneous decision he would make. That’s what made him such
a phenomenal player." Gretzky’s
ability to improvise came into the spotlight at the 1998 Olympics in
Japan. Then an older player in the sunset of his career, he had been
passed over for the captaincy of the team. But as the series
continued, his unique skills made him a team
leader.
"The
Canadians had trouble with the big ice. They had trouble with the
European patterns and the lateral play and the endless, inventive
cycling. . . . . Slowly, as game after game went by and the concern
continued to rise, Wayne Gretzky began climbing through the lineup.
He, almost alone among the Canadians, seemed to take to the larger
ice surface as if it offered more opportunity instead of obligation .
. . . His playing time soared, as he was being sent on not just for
power plays but double shifts and even penalty kills. By the final
round . . . it was Wayne Gretzky who assumed the leadership both on
and off the ice. Gretzky had such an uncanny ability to judge the
position of the other players on the ice that many suspected he
enjoyed some kind of extrasensory perception. Sports commentators
said that he played like he had "eyes in the back of his head."
Gretzky said he sensed other players more than he actually saw them.
"I get a feeling about where a teammate is going to be," he
said. "A lot of times, I can turn and pass without even
looking." One
author said, "He
could envision the whole rink in his mind and how players were moving
within it." Because
of this "vision," Gretzky was sometimes called the
"Einstein of Hockey."
Veteran
Canadian journalist Peter Gzowski says that Gretzky also seemed to be
able to, in effect, slow down time. Gzowski explains that the most
elite athletes have "more
room in the flow of time" than
ordinary athletes. Of Gretzky he said, "There
is an unhurried grace to everything Gretzky does on the ice. Winding
up for the slapshot, he will stop for an almost imperceptible moment
at the top of his arc, like a golfer with a rhythmic swing. Gretzky
uses this room to insert an extra beat into his actions. In front of
the net, eyeball to eyeball with the goaltender . . . he will . . .
hold the puck one . . . extra instant, upsetting the anticipated
rhythm of the game, extending the moment. . . He distorts time, and
not only by slowing it down. Sometimes he will release the puck
before he appears to be ready, threading the pass through a maze of
players precisely to the blade of a teammate’s stick, or finding a
chink in a goaltender’s armour and slipping the puck into it . . .
before the goaltender is ready to react."
However,
Gretzky denied that he had any exotic innate abilities. He said that
many of his advantages were a result of his father's brilliant
coaching. Some
say I have a 'sixth sense' . . . Baloney. I've just learned to guess
what's going to happen next. its anticipation. It's not God-given,
its Wally-given. He used to stand on the blue line and say to me,
'Watch, this is how everybody else does it.' Then he'd shoot a puck
along the boards and into the corner and then go chasing after it.
Then he'd come back and say, 'Now, this is how the smart player does
it.' He'd shoot it into the corner again, only this time he cut
across to the other side and picked it up over there. Who says
anticipation can't be taught?
Gretzky
learned his skills from his father on a backyard rink at his home.
Walter Gretzky had played Junior B hockey, but was slowed by
chicken
pox and
failed in a tryout for the Junior A Toronto Marlboros, ending his
playing career. Walter cultivated a love of hockey in his sons and
provided them with a backyard rink and drills to enhance their
skills. On the backyard rink, nicknamed the "Wally Coliseum",
winter was total hockey immersion with Walter as mentor-teacher as
well as teammate. According to Brent Gretzky, "It
was definitely pressed on us, but we loved the game. Without the
direction of the father, I don't know where I'd be."
The rink itself was built so that Walter could keep an eye on his
boys from the warmth of his kitchen, instead of watching them
outdoors on a neighbourhood rink, as Wayne put in long hours on
skates. Walter's drills were his own invention, but were ahead
of their time in Canada. Gretzky would later remark that the Soviet
National Team's practice drills, which impressed Canada in 1972, had
nothing to offer him: "I'd
been doing these drills since I was three. My Dad was very smart."
In his
autobiography, Gretzky describes how at practices, his Dad would
drill him on the fundamentals of smart hockey:
Him:
‘Where's the last place a guy looks before he passes it?’
Me:
‘The guy he's passing to.’
Him:
‘Which means...’
Me:
‘Get over there and intercept it.’
Him:
‘Where do you skate?’
Me:
‘To where the puck is going, not where it's been.’
Him:
‘If you get cut off, what are you gonna do?’
Me:
‘Peel.’
Him:
‘Which way?’
Me:
‘Away from the guy, not towards him.’
Much
has been written about Gretzky’s highly developed hockey instincts,
but he once explained that what appeared to be instinct was, in large
part, the effect of his relentless study of the game. As a result, he
developed a deep understanding of its shifting patterns and dynamics.
Peter Gzowski says that elite athletes in all sports understand the
game so well, and in such detail, that they can instantly recognize
and capitalize upon emerging patterns of play. Analyzing Gretzky’s
hockey skills, he says, "What
we take to be creative genius is in fact a reaction to a situation
that he has stored in his brain as deeply and firmly as his own phone
number." Gzowski
presented this theory to Gretzky, and he fully agreed.
"Absolutely,"
Gretzky said.
"That’s a
hundred percent right. It’s all practice. I got it from my Dad.
Nine out of ten people think it’s instinct, and it isn’t. Nobody
would ever say a doctor had learned his profession by instinct; yet
in my own way I’ve put in almost as much time studying hockey as a
medical student puts in studying medicine."
But Gretzky’s
skill as an athlete was not all mental. Like Gordie Howe, he
possessed "an exceptional capacity to renew his energy resources
quickly." In 1980, an exercise physiologist tested all of the
Edmonton Oilers, and when he saw the results of Gretzky’s test of
recuperative abilities, he said "he thought the machine had
broken." He was, in fact, an exceptional all-around athlete.
Growing up, he was a competitive runner and also
batted
.492 for the Junior
Intercounty Baseball League's Brantford CKCP Braves in the summer of
1980. As a result, he was offered a contract by the
Toronto
Blue Jays. History repeated itself in June 2011, when Gretzky’s
17-year-old son, Trevor, was drafted by the
Chicago
Cubs. Trevor signed with the Cubs the next month. Where Gretzky
differed from others in his development was in the extraordinary
commitment of time on the ice. In his autobiography, he wrote:
All I wanted to
do in the winters was be on the ice. I'd get up in the morning, skate
from 7:00 to 8:30, go to school, come home at 3:30, stay on the ice
until my mom insisted I come in for dinner, eat in my skates, then go
back out until 9:00. On Saturdays and Sundays we'd have huge games,
but nighttime became my time. It was a sort of unwritten rule around
the neighbourhood that I was to be out there myself or with my dad.
Gretzky
would prod next-door neighbour Brian Rizzetto to play in goal after
sundown in order to practice his backhand. He not only
enthusiastically practised long hours every day, but he also started
working on his skills at an extraordinarily young age. When asked how
he managed, at age ten, to score 378 goals in a single season,
Gretzky explained, See,
kids usually don’t start playing hockey until they’re six or
seven. Ice isn’t grass. It’s a whole new surface and everybody
starts from ground zero. . . . By the time I was ten, I had eight
years on skates instead of four, and a few seasons’ worth of ice
time against ten-year-olds. So I had a long head start on everyone
else. Gretzky
also excelled at baseball and box
lacrosse, which he played during the summer. At age ten, after
scoring 196 goals in his hockey league, he scored 158 goals in
lacrosse. According to him, lacrosse was where he learned to protect
himself from hard checks:
"In those
days you could be hit from behind in lacrosse, as well as
cross-checked, so you had to learn how to roll body checks for
self-protection." Gretzky,
who weighed far less than the NHL average, adroitly applied this
technique as a professional player, avoiding checks with such skill
that a rumour circulated that there was an unwritten rule not to hit
him. But Gretzky himself dispelled the rumor at the end of one
grueling season with the Edmonton Oilers, in which he had suffered a
mild concussion as a result of what writer Michael Benson called a
"cheap shot" from Winnipeg
Jets star
centre
Dale
Hawerchuk. "People
say there is an unwritten rule that you can’t hit Gretzky,"
he said,
"but that
is not true." Still,
Gretzky was a most elusive target. Fellow Hockey Hall of Famer
Denis
Potvin compared
attempting to hit Gretzky to "wrapping
your arms around fog. You saw him but when you reached out to grab
him your hands felt nothing, maybe just a chill."
The 205-pound
(93 kg) Potvin, a three-time winner of the
Norris
Trophy for
best defenceman, added that part of the problem in hitting Gretzky
hard was that he was "a
tough guy to dislike... what was there to hate about Gretzky? It was
like running Gandhi
into a corner."
Gretzky became
known for setting up with the puck behind the net, an area that was
nicknamed "Gretzky's Office" because of his great prowess
there. He could pass to an open teammate, jump out for his own shot
on a wraparound, or even try to shoot the puck over the goal to
bounce it off the goaltender's back and into the net. Gretzky became
accustomed to the position after watching and studying
Bobby
Clarke play
in that zone. In honour of his abilities, a large "99" was
painted on the ice behind the goal at each end of the rink for his
final game.
Gretzky
has made several TV appearances, including a
Dance
Fever celebrity
judge, and an 'unforgettable appearance', acting in a dramatic role
alongside Victor Newman in The
Young and The Restless in
1981. In 1984, he travelled to the Soviet
Union to
film a television program on Russian goaltender
Vladislav
Tretiak. Gretzky hosted the Saturday
Night Live comedy
program in 1989. A fictional crime-fighting version of him served as
one of the main characters in the cartoon
ProStars
in 1991. Gretzky
has made over 60 movies, network television and video appearances as
himself, according to IMDB,
as of February 2012. While serving as a celebrity judge on
Dance Fever,
Gretzky met his future wife, American actress
Janet
Jones. According to Wayne, Janet does not recall him being on the
show. They met regularly after that, but did not become a couple
until 1987 when they ran into each other at a
Los
Angeles Lakers game
that Wayne and Alan
Thicke were
attending. Wayne proposed in January 1988, and they were
married on July 17, 1988 in a lavish ceremony the Canadian press
dubbed "The Royal Wedding". Broadcast
live throughout Canada from Edmonton's
St. Joseph's Basilica, members of the Fire Department acted as
guards at the church steps. The event reportedly cost Gretzky over
US$1 million. The couple have five children:
Paulina,
Ty, Trevor, Tristan, and Emma. Ty played hockey at
Shattuck-Saint
Mary's, but quit, and returned home. He now attends
Arizona
State University. Trevor graduated from Oaks
Christian High School, where he played baseball and varsity
football, in 2011. His teammates on the football team included wide
receiver Trey
Smith, son of Will
Smith, and quarterback Nick Montana, son of former NFL
quarterback Joe
Montana. Trevor signed a letter
of intent to
play baseball at San
Diego State University, currently coached by
Hall
of Famer Tony
Gwynn, and was drafted by the Chicago
Cubs in
the 2011
MLB draft. Gwynn told the Toronto
Sun that
Trevor had signed with the Cubs, a signing that was not immediately
announced by the team, and thus would not play for him at San Diego
State. Trevor spent 2012 with the Arizona
League Cubs.
Gretzky
has owned or partnered in the ownership of two sports teams before
becoming a partner in the Phoenix Coyotes. In 1985, Gretzky bought
the Hull
Olympiques of
the Quebec
Major Junior Hockey League for
$175,000 CA. During his ownership, the team's colours were
changed to silver and black, presaging the change in team jersey
colours when he played for the Los Angeles Kings. For the first
season that Gretzky played in Los Angeles, the Kings had their
training camp at the Olympiques' arena. Gretzky eventually sold the
team in 1992 for $550,000 CA. In 1991, Gretzky purchased the
Toronto
Argonauts of
the Canadian
Football League with
Bruce
McNall and
John
Candy. The club won the Grey
Cup championship
in the first year of the partnership but struggled in the two
following seasons, and the partnership sold the team before the 1994
season. Only McNall's name was engraved on the Grey Cup as team
owner, but in November 2007, the CFL
corrected the
oversight, adding Gretzky's and Candy's names. In 1992, Gretzky and
McNall partnered in an investment to buy a rare
Honus
Wagner T206
cigarette
card for
$451,000 US, later selling the card. It most recently sold for
$2.8 million US. As of May 2008, Gretzky's current business
ventures include the "Wayne Gretzky's" restaurant in
Toronto near the Rogers
Centre in
downtown Toronto, opened in partnership with John Bitove in 1993.
Gretzky is also a partner in First Team Sports, a maker of sports
equipment and Worldwide Roller Hockey, Inc., an operator of roller
hockey rinks. He has endorsed and launched a wide variety of
products, from pillow cases to insurance. Forbes
estimates that
Gretzky earned US$93.8 million from 1990–98.
Transactions
·
June 12, 1978 –
Signed as a free agent with the Indianapolis
Racers
·
November 2, 1978 –
Traded by the Indianapolis Racers, along with
Eddie
Mio and
Peter
Driscoll, to the Edmonton
Oilers in
exchange for $700,000 and future considerations.
·
August 9, 1988 –
Traded by the Edmonton Oilers, along with Mike
Krushelnyski and
Marty
McSorley, to the Los
Angeles Kings in
exchange for Jimmy
Carson, Martin
Gelinas, Los Angeles's 1989, 1991 and 1993 first round draft
choices, and $15,000,000.
·
February 27, 1996 –
Traded by the Los Angeles Kings to the St.
Louis Blues in
exchange for Roman
Vopat, Craig
Johnson, Patrice
Tardif, St. Louis's 1996 fifth round draft choice, and 1997 first
round draft choice.
·
July 21, 1996 –
Signed as a free agent with the New
York Rangers.
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