China Daily

Andreychuk ecstatic the Hall finally called

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TORONTO — Dave Andreychuk sensed his numbers would be good enough to get him into the Hockey Hall of Fame. He just had to stay patient. Andreychuk retired in 2006 after a 23-year NHL career, and his 640 goals rank him 14th on the all-time list.

Of the 17 retired players to hit the 600-goal mark, he was the only one not in the Hall other than Teemu Selanne, who was also inducted on Monday night.

“I think 600 goals on the resume, it’s got to happen eventually,” Andreychuk said. “To be honest when I look at the time it took to get in, it just makes it sweeter. I think the numbers speak for themselves. You just hope your time will come.”

Andreychuk and Selanne joined the Hall with former NHL greats Mark Recchi and Paul Kariya and Canadian women’s star Danielle Goyette.

Longtime Canadian university coach Clare Drake and Boston Bruins owner Jeremy Jacobs entered in the builder category.

The 54-year-old Andreychuk — who was drafted in 1982 by Buffalo and made stops in Toronto, New Jersey, Boston, Colorado and Tampa Bay — was driving on a Florida freeway to pick up his wife from the airport when he got the call.

“My heart started to race right away. Before I answered the phone, I immediatel­y pulled off the road. After I hung up, I called my parents,” said Andreychuk.

“My mother did most the talking, saying ‘It was about time,’ but my father was crying at the same time.”

The long wait never rattled the man described by his peers as a natural leader. Andreychuk went 22 seasons before lifting the Stanley Cup in 2004 with Tampa Bay.

“Getting into the Hall of Fame is like winning the Stanley Cup,” he said. “You’ve been dreaming about it all your life but you don’t know how you’re going to react until it happens.”

Andreychuk is still the NHL’s all-time leader for powerplay goals with 274. Most came from in front of the net, with his 6-foot-4, 220-pound frame paying the price. He earned his paycheck by being a goalie’s nightmare.

“It started in junior, when I was 16, 17 years old,” he said. “You realize that’s where my bread and butter was going to be. Not a lot of pretty goals, to be honest. Not sure if there’s a highlight-reel goal.”

Andreychuk played 1,639 games in the NHL and had 19 seasons with at least 20 goals, with a career-high 54 with Toronto in 1992-93.

Former Maple Leafs teammate Doug Gilmour once said part of Andreychuk’s secret to success was his ability to create a better scoring opportunit­y by intentiona­lly firing a shot off a goalie’s pad and then collecting his own rebound.

“Absolutely, it’s very true,” Andreychuk said. “Players I played with knew what was happening. I did it on purpose.”

Andreychuk spent the first 11 seasons of his career in Buffalo and it disappoint­ed him that the Sabres’ quality teams in the late 1980s couldn’t deliver in the playoffs.

A trade to Toronto in 1993 placed him on a line with another Hall of Famer in Gilmour, which turned into back-to-back 50-goal seasons with the team he cheered for growing up in nearby Hamilton, Ontario.

“Like a lot of Canadian kids, it was my dream to put on the Leafs. Hard to believe a 30-year-old guy could walk into a dressing room and still shake,” Andreychuk said.

Retiring without a Stanley Cup looked possible for Andreychuk after 19 seasons. But in 2001, at 37, he signed with Tampa Bay and it all came together.

He would spend four years with the Lightning, the final three as captain, and won his only Cup.

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT / GETTY IMAGES / AFP ?? Dave Andreychuk dons his Hockey Hall of Fame jacket ahead of Sunday’s NHL Legends Classic game at Air Canada Centre in Toronto.
BRUCE BENNETT / GETTY IMAGES / AFP Dave Andreychuk dons his Hockey Hall of Fame jacket ahead of Sunday’s NHL Legends Classic game at Air Canada Centre in Toronto.

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