The Welland Tribune

Islanders scoring ace Bossy a four-time Stanley Cup winner

- STEPHEN WHYNO

Mike Bossy, one of hockey’s most prolific goal-scorers and a star for the New York Islanders during their 1980s dynasty, has died after a battle with lung cancer. He was 65.

The Islanders and TVA Sports, the French-language network in Canada where he worked as a hockey analyst, confirmed Bossy died Thursday night. A team spokespers­on said Bossy was in his native Montreal.

Bossy had revealed his diagnosis in October in a letter to TVA Sports.

“It is with a lot of sadness that I need to step away from your screens, for a necessary pause,” Bossy wrote in French. “I intend to fight with all the determinat­ion and fire you’ve seen me show on the ice.”

It’s the third loss from that Islanders era this year after fellow Hockey Hall of Famer Clark Gilles died in January and Jean Potvin died in March.

“The New York Islanders organiWayn­e zation mourns the loss of Mike Bossy, an icon not only on Long Island but the entire hockey world,” Islanders president and general manager Lou Lamoriello said. ”His drive to be the best every time he stepped on the ice was second to none. Along with his teammates, he helped win four straight Stanley Cup championsh­ips, shaping the history of this franchise forever.”

Bossy helped the Islanders win the Stanley Cup from 1980 to ’83, winning the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP in 1982. He scored the Cup-winning goal in 1982 and ’83.

Bossy was a first-round pick in 1977 and played his entire 10-year NHL career with New York. He won the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year, received the Lady Byng Trophy for gentlemanl­y conduct three times and led the league in goals twice.

Bossy scored 50 or more goals in each of his first nine seasons — the league’s longest streak. He and Gretzky are the only players in hockey history with nine 50goal seasons.

Bossy is one of only five players to score 50 goals in 50 games. He remains the all-time leader in goals per game in the regular season at 0.762, and only two players have recorded more hat tricks than Bossy’s 39.

He ranks third in points per game and seventh on the all-time scoring list. Those are all in the regular season, when Bossy put up some of the best numbers in the history of the game. In the playoffs, Bossy was even more clutch. He is the only player with four game-winners in the same playoff series and scored three playoff overtime goals.

Led by Bossy, Gillies, Bryan Trottier and defenceman Denis Potvin, the Islanders succeeded Scotty Bowman’s 1970s Montreal Canadiens as the NHL’s next dynasty before Gretzky’s Edmonton Oilers took over the sport.

Bossy was an eight-time all-star and finished with 573 goals and 553 assists for 1,126 points in 752 regular-season games. He was the fastest player to reach the 100-goal mark and currently ranks 22nd on the career goals list. In the playoffs, Bossy had 160 points in 129 games.

“Though containing him was the obsession of opposing coaches and checking him the focus of opposing players, Bossy’s brilliance was unstoppabl­e and his production relentless throughout his entire career,” NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said in a statement.

“Our deepest condolence­s go out to his wife, Lucie, their daughters, Josiane and Tanya, his former Islanders teammates and his countless fans on Long Island, the New York metropolit­an area and throughout the hockey world. He thrilled fans like few others.”

Back and knee injuries ultimately ended his career in 1987. He was limited to 38 goals in 63 games and unable to return for an 11th season.

Bossy was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1991 and in 2017 was named one of the NHL’s 100 greatest players.

“I once asked Mike Bossy why he scored so many goals. Answer: ‘I rarely missed the net.’ A true natural,” Hayley Wickenheis­er, a fourtime Olympic gold medallist for Canada, said via Twitter on Friday.

 ?? ?? Mike Bossy
Mike Bossy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada