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Scott Stevens

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For other uses, see Scott Stevens (disambiguation).
Stevens played for Canada in the 1998 Winter Olympics.
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Stevens played for Canada in the 1998 Winter Olympics.

Ronald Scott Stevens (born 1 April 1964, in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada) is a former professional ice hockey defenseman in the National Hockey League. He was the captain of the New Jersey Devils and is among the NHL's all-time leaders in games played (both in the regular season and in the Stanley Cup playoffs). He is generally regarded as one of the best stay-at-home defencemen to ever play in the NHL.

Playing Career

The 6 ft 2 in, 215 lb. Stevens was drafted by the Washington Capitals in the First Round of the 1982 NHL Entry Draft as the fifth overall pick, selected for his offensive abilities and his physical presence on the ice. In his final year of junior hockey in Kitchener, Stevens was voted by the league's coaches as best bodychecker, a harbinger of things to come. He played for nine seasons in D.C. and enjoyed both individual and team success. The Capitals housed one of the strongest defensive corps of the 1980s, and so Stevens was immersed in the defense-first ideology early on in his career.

On 16 July 1990, Scott Stevens was signed as a restricted free-agent by the St. Louis Blues. However, his tenure there would be short. On 25 July 1991, former New Jersey Devil forward Brendan Shanahan was signed as a restricted free-agent by the Blues. Consequently, the Blues owed the Devils compensation for signing Shanahan. Ordinarily this compensation would come in the form of draft picks, however the Blues already owed the Washington Capitals four first-round draft picks for having signed Stevens the previous year. The Blues made an offer of compensation [to the Devils] consisting of goaltender Curtis Joseph, forward Rod Brind'Amour and two future draft picks, but the Devils wanted Stevens. In a decision that would eventually be a catalyst for the first work stoppage involving NHL players by the owners in the 1994-1995 season, an arbitrator ruled in favor of the Devils, thereby sending Shanahan to the Blues in exchange for Stevens.

Scott Stevens became a New Jersey Devil on 3 September 1991. As captain and spiritual leader of the Devils, he won 3 Stanley Cup championships (in 1995, 2000, and 2003). It was also in New Jersey that Stevens gained notoriety for his clean but punishing open-ice hits, some of which have rendered opponents unconscious. Notable victims of Scott Stevens hits over the years include Slava Kozlov (1995 Stanley Cup Finals), Tomas Kaberle, Kevyn Adams (2000 playoffs), Daymond Langkow (2000 Eastern Conference Finals), Eric Lindros (2000 Eastern Conference Finals), Ron Francis (2001 playoffs), Shane Willis (2001 playoffs), Sami Kapanen (2001 playoffs), Joe Thornton (2003 playoffs), and Paul Kariya (2003 Stanley Cup Finals). The hit on Lindros, who had just intercepted a Scott Niedermayer pass and had his head down, in Game 7 of the 2000 Eastern Conference Finals in Philadelphia on 26 May 2000 almost ended his career.

Winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy as the Most Valuable Player in the 2000 playoffs, Stevens is widely considered to be a shoo-in in the Hockey Hall of Fame after the mandatory three year waiting period. He announced his retirement on 6 September 2005.

The Devils retired his uniform number (#4) on 3 February 2006.[link] He was the first player to have his number retired by the Devils organization.

Achievements

NHL Career Stats

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts +/- PIM GP G A Pts +/- PIM
1982-1983 Washington Capitals NHL 77 9 16 25 +14 195 4 1 0 1 0 26
1983-1984 Washington Capitals NHL 78 13 32 45 +26 201 8 1 8 9 0 21
1984-1985 Washington Capitals NHL 80 21 44 65 +19 221 5 0 1 1 -4 11
1985-1986 Washington Capitals NHL 73 15 38 53 0 165 9 3 8 11 0 12
1986-1987 Washington Capitals NHL 77 10 51 61 +13 283 7 0 5 5 0 19
1987-1988 Washington Capitals NHL 80 12 60 72 +14 184 13 1 11 12 0 46
1988-1989 Washington Capitals NHL 80 7 61 68 +1 225 6 1 4 5 -2 11
1989-1990 Washington Capitals NHL 56 11 29 40 +1 154 15 2 7 9 -1 25
1990-1991 St. Louis Blues NHL 78 5 44 49 +23 150 13 0 0 3 +8 36
1991-1992 New Jersey Devils NHL 68 17 42 59 +24 124 7 2 1 3 -5 29
1992-1993 New Jersey Devils NHL 81 12 45 57 +14 120 5 2 2 4 -2 10
1993-1994 New Jersey Devils NHL 83 18 60 78 +53 112 20 2 9 11 -1 42
1994-1995 New Jersey Devils NHL 48 2 20 22 +4 56 20 1 7 8 +10 24
1995-1996 New Jersey Devils NHL 82 5 23 28 +7 100 - - - - - -
1996-1997 New Jersey Devils NHL 79 5 19 24 +26 70 10 0 4 4 -2 2
1997-1998 New Jersey Devils NHL 80 4 22 26 +19 80 6 1 0 1 +4 8
1998-1999 New Jersey Devils NHL 75 5 22 27 +29 64 7 2 1 3 -2 10
1999-2000 New Jersey Devils NHL 78 8 21 29 +30 103 23 3 8 11 +9 6
2000-2001 New Jersey Devils NHL 81 9 22 31 +40 71 25 1 7 8 +3 37
2001-2002 New Jersey Devils NHL 82 1 16 17 +15 44 6 0 0 0 +5 4
2002-2003 New Jersey Devils NHL 81 4 16 20 +18 41 24 3 6 9 +14 14
2003-2004 New Jersey Devils NHL 38 3 9 12 +3 22 - - - - - -
2004-2005 Did not Play 1 NHL - - - - - - - - - - - -
NHL Totals 1635 196 712 908 +393 2785 233 26 92 118 +34 378

1 Season was cancelled due to the 2004-05 NHL lockout.

See also

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Note: Scott Niedermayer served as Devils captain, (later half of the 2003-04 season), while Stevens was injured & out of the line-up.

References

 


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