I had big hopes of getting Beliveau when this all started. That didn't happen. I will, however, pick another well respected by his peers player.
He was a most effective, prolific scorer, but also played the game with class and sportsmanship.
I choose
Jean Ratelle, C
A product of the
New York Rangers organization, a term utilized in the days prior to the NHL's Entry Draft, Ratelle's hockey career almost ended when he suffered a serious back injury at age 23 and had to undergo major
spinal cord surgery. He recovered to become a regular with the Rangers from 1963 until 1975 -- his greatest success coming with his linemates
Vic Hadfield and
Rod Gilbert in the so-called
"GAG line" (which stood for
Goal
A Game) -- and was the perennial scoring leader for the Rangers between 1968 and 1973 when the team was a powerhouse annually among the league's best.
Ratelle was poised to beat out
Boston Bruins' legend
Phil Esposito for the scoring title in 1972 before he lost fifteen games due to an injury, but came back for the Stanley Cup finals against Boston to lead his team. Only Esposito,
Bobby Orr and
John Bucyk had before then had scored as many points in league history as Ratelle had managed in his shortened season. His 109 points that season remained a Rangers' scoring record until
2006, when
Jaromir Jagr broke the mark.
In November 1975, Ratelle was traded with teammates
Brad Park and
Joe Zanussi in a blockbuster deal to the
Boston Bruins (ironically, for Esposito, and for
Carol Vadnais). Ratelle finished strongly that year for his second 100-point campaign. On March 21, 1976, he played his 1,000th game against the
Montreal Canadiens. He starred for several more seasons for Boston, gaining admiration for his slick passing, skill at faceoffs and all-around excellent play, retiring a Bruin after the 1981 season. He served for several years thereafter as an assistant coach for the Bruins.
Remembered as a gentlemanly player (perennially in the running for the Lady Byng sportsmanship award), Ratelle played centre ice in the NHL for twenty-one seasons, accumulating 1267 points on 491 goals and 776 assists. At the time of his retirement, he was the league's sixth all-time leading scorer. While he never played on a team that won the
Stanley Cup, Ratelle was a member of the 1972 Team Canada squad that defeated the
Soviet Union in the first-ever
Summit Series.
In 1985, Jean Ratelle was elected to the
Hockey Hall of Fame, along with
Bernie Parent and
Bert Olmstead.