The Welland Tribune

Brodeur leads inductees into Hockey Hall of Fame

- ABBEY MASTRACCO

He revolution­ized the goaltender position and won more games than any other goalie in

National Hockey League history.

For those reasons and many others, former Devils goaltendin­g great Martin Brodeur is being inducted into the 2018 Hockey Hall of Fame class, as announced by the 18-member selection committee Tuesday.

Brodeur headlines a class of six that includes Martin St. Louis, Jayna Hefford and Alexander Yakushev, as well as Willie O’Ree, who broke the NHL’s colour barrier, and commission­er Gary Bettman, who will be inducted into the builder category. The 2018 induction ceremony will be take place Nov. 12 at the Hall of Fame in Toronto and the Devils will play the Maple Leafs in the Hall of Fame Game on Nov. 9, at the Air Canada Centre.

“As a player, you get to meet Hall of Fame members, and now to have my name in the same sentence makes me speechless,” Brodeur said in a statement. “I was fortunate to play on great teams that allowed me to play with my own personalit­y, which is so important to a goaltender.”

Brodeur was considered a lock for this round of Hall of Fame inductions. The list of accolades is about a mile long. The 46-yearold Montreal native backstoppe­d the Devils to three Stanley Cups, won four Vezina Trophies, five Jennings Trophies (fewest goals allowed in the regular season), and his 691 career wins and

125 shutouts both top the NHL’s all-time charts. Plus, he earned a pair of Olympic gold medals with Team Canada.

His 2.242 career goals against average mark stands as ninth all-time and he’s the only NHL goalie to have scored three goals. The No. 30 already hangs in the rafters of Prudential Center, and his statue is a can’t-miss for fans before and after games.

Perhaps what he’s most remembered for is the trapezoid behind the goal, otherwise known as the “Brodeur Rule.”

Essentiall­y, Brodeur was such a good puckhandle­r that he was playing it up the ice like a defenceman. After the 2004-05 lockout season, new goalie rules were instituted, one of which was the trapezoid which limited the area a goalie could play the puck.

Brodeur was not happy with the rule but it’s no doubt part of his legacy. When his number was retired in 2016, the Devils put that number inside the trapezoid that was created for him in a nod to that legacy.

The Devils drafted Brodeur in 1990 at No. 20 overall. He was back-and-forth between the NHL, the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League and the American Hockey League until the 1993-94 season when he won the Calder Trophy as the league’s best rookie. At the peak of his illustriou­s career, he was one of the most dominant goalies hockey had ever seen and one of the best, if not the best, goalie in the world.

His career didn’t quite end after the 2012 Stanley Cup final but the veteran was forced to split time with current Devils netminder Cory Schneider. After his two-year contract expired in 2014 he signed with the St. Louis Blues to replace the injured Brian Elliott. But just a few months later he retired and took a frontoffic­e position with the Blues. He’s now an assistant general manager in St. Louis.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? New Jersey goalie Martin Brodeur hoists the Stanley Cup after the Devils defeated the Anaheim Mighty Ducks in East Rutherford, N.J., in 2003. Brodeur was selected to the Hockey Hall of Fame on Tuesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO New Jersey goalie Martin Brodeur hoists the Stanley Cup after the Devils defeated the Anaheim Mighty Ducks in East Rutherford, N.J., in 2003. Brodeur was selected to the Hockey Hall of Fame on Tuesday.

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