This Day In Hockey History-June 21, 2003-Penguins trade for top pick, select Marc Andre Fleury

NASHVILLE, Tenn. | The Pittsburgh Penguins can only hope they have half the success with their latest No. 1 pick as they did with their last. The Penguins so wanted goalie Marc-Andre Fleury to rebuild their franchise around that they traded up two spots Saturday in the NHL Draft to make sure that they got …

This Day In Hockey History-June 21, 2003- Bruins Draft Patrice Bergeron, Mark Stuart

NASHVILLE – When Mark Stuart’s name was called as the Bruins’ pick at No. 21 of the first round of yesterday’s National Hockey League draft, his grandfather Jerry leaned over to him and whispered, “Ray Bourque.” The 19-year-old Colorado College defenseman just laughed. If Stuart has a hero in the NHL, it’s New Jersey defenseman …

This Day In Hockey History-June 16, 1990-Dale Hawerchuck traded for Phil Housely

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Dale Hawerchuk and Joe Mullen, two of the National Hockey League’s top scorers in the 1980s, found new homes Saturday in a pair of draft-day trades. Hawerchuk, Winnipeg’s all-time leading scorer, was traded to the Buffalo Sabres in a four-player deal in which the Jets got Phil Housley. The trade …

This Day In Hockey History-June 13, 1987-Pierre Turgeon is No. 1 in NHL draft, Shanahan 2nd, Then Defensemen Dominate

DETROIT (AP) — As expected, high-scoring centers Pierre Turgeon and Brendan Shanahan were the top two picks in Saturday’s NHL draft. The selection of Turgeon, by the Buffalo Sabres, and Shanahan, who went to the New Jersey Devils, came as no surprise. They had been rated the top two players available in the draft by …

This Day In Hockey History-June 3, 1970-Oakland Seals Steal the Spotlight

Those Oakland Seals, the unloved waifs of the National Hockey League, have suddenly been thrust into the forefront of the league’s annual meetings June 8-11. Highlight of the meetings will be the expansion draft to stock Vancouver Canucks and Buffalo Sabres. Both clubs enter the NHL next season for a $6 million entry fee each. …

This Day In Hockey History -February 11- Vancouver snubbed coldly, brutally, as St Louis awarded expansion franchise before the Canucks.

11 Feb 1966, Fri North Bay Nugget (North Bay, Ontario, Canada) The garbage from the National Hockey League’s expansion meeting can be boiled down to one sorry fact: Vancouver, the only Canadian city which applied for a new franchise, > was snubbed, coldly and IbrutaRy. Eric Kierans, Quebec’s Minister of Revenue, is correct: The United …