Today in Hockey History: Oct. 24

Perhaps the greatest defenseman in NHL history hit a pair of milestones, with two different teams, on this date. Plus, the Nassau Coliseum hosted a handful of memorable moments, and a current general manager built his Hall of Fame credentials during his playing career. So, let’s take a journey back in time and relive all the great moments from Oct. 24.

Orr Makes Even More History

When you had the career Hall of Fame defenseman Bobby Orr had, you could mention him nearly every day in these types of history posts. Oct. 24 was particularly memorable as he had big moments with two different teams.

First, on Oct. 24, 1969, Orr had three assists, including the 100th of his NHL career as the Boston Bruins picked up a 4-2 road victory at the Oakland Golden Seals 4-2.

Exactly seven years later, on Oct. 24, 1976, Orr scored a pair of goals to help the Chicago Blackhawks beat the St. Louis Blues 7-2 at the old Chicago Stadium. Both goals came against his former teammate in Boston, goaltender Eddie Johnston, to give him 900 career points.

Orr became the first defenseman to score 900 points in the NHL, hitting this milestone in 638 games. Since then, 11 more defensemen have scored at least 900 points, two of which will appear later in the column. This was one of the final big moments of Orr’s legendary career as he only played in 19 more games before knee injuries finally forced him to retire in 1978.

Roy Resets the Bar

On Oct. 24, 2002, Patrick Roy helped lead the Colorado Avalanche to a 3-2 road win at the Phoenix Coyotes. The victory came in his 972nd career game, passing the legendary Terry Sawchuk for the most games played by a goaltender in NHL history.

Joe Sakic Patrick Roy Colorado Avalanche
Joe Sakic and Roy won two Stanley Cups together in Colorado. (Photo by Steve Babineau/NHLI via Getty Images)

Roy retired in 2003 with 1,029 games played. He held onto his record until Martin Brodeur of the New Jersey Devils passed him up in 2009. He currently sits third on the all-time games played list for goaltenders, with Roberto Luongo in second.

Nassau Coliseum Memories

Shortly after the New York Islanders joined the NHL, they hosted the Montreal Canadiens on Oct. 24, 1972, at the Nassau Coliseum. The Canadiens won the first-ever meeting between these two franchises, 4-3. Jacques Lemaire scored three goals and assisted on the fourth Montreal goal to post the first hat trick in the building’s history. This was one of 60 losses for the Islanders during their inaugural season.

On Oct. 24, 1981, the Islanders beat the Washington Capitals, 6-4, on home ice. Mike Bossy had a goal and two assists to lead the offensive attack. He became the first member of the Islanders ever to score 250 goals. He accomplished this feat in 315 games, which made him the fastest player to ever do so at the time.

Related – 5 Most Electrifying Islanders in Franchise History

Exactly seven years later, on Oct. 24, 1988, Bossy officially announced his retirement. He missed the entire 1987-88 season due to a back injury and was unable to make a comeback. He retired with 573 goals and 1,126 points in just 752 games, leaving many to wonder how far up the all-time scoring list he could have climbed if it wasn’t for the bad back.

Finally, on Oct. 24, 1992, Benoit Hogue scored his first career NHL hat trick to lead the Islanders to a 4-2 win over the Hartford Whalers. Hogue was originally acquired in the trade that sent Pat LaFontaine to the Buffalo Sabres. He scored 105 goals and 229 points in his 258 games with the Islanders over four seasons.

Francis’ Big Date

Long before Ron Francis became the first general manager of the Seattle Kraken, he scored 1,798 points during his 23-season Hall of Fame playing career. He reached two personal milestones on this date.

On Oct. 24, 1987, Francis picked up an assist, in the Hartford Whalers’ 5-3 win over the Blackhawks, for the 500th point of his career. He scored 382 goals and 1,175 points in his two stints with the Whalers and Carolina Hurricanes.

Ron Francis Hartford Whalers
Francis had a ton of success in Hartford. (Photo by Steve Babineau/NHLI via Getty Images)

In 1991, Francis was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins. It was with the Penguins, on Oct. 24, 1992, where he picked up two assists to record his 900th career NHL point in a 4-3 win at the Devils.

Odds & Ends

On Oct. 24, 1968, 44-year-old defenseman Doug Harvey assisted on two goals in 28 seconds during the third period to lead the St. Louis Blues to a 2-1 win against the Bruins.

The Minnesota North Stars, on Oct. 24, 1971, picked up a big 6-3 road win at the Los Angeles Kings. Forward Murray Oliver played a part in all the scoring with a goal and five assists. One of those assists came on Bob Nevin’s goal, which was the 500th point of the veteran’s NHL career.

Gilbert Perreault scored a goal, on Oct. 24, 1986, in the Sabres’ 5-4 loss to the visiting Whalers. The goal was the 508th of his career, moving him ahead of Canadiens’ legend Jean Beliveau for 11th place on the league’s all-time scoring list.

Gilbert Perreault
Perreault was the greatest Sabre of them all. (Photo by Denis Brodeur/NHLI via Getty Images)

One year later, on Oct. 24, 1987, Phil Housley scored a goal to become the Sabres’ all-time leading scorer among defensemen with 352 points. However, it wasn’t enough as Buffalo lost to Pittsburgh, 5-3, thanks to Mario Lemieux scoring three goals in the third period for the ninth hat trick of his career.

Brian Propp scored the 400th goal of his career, on Oct. 24, 1991, in a 5-2 loss to his former team, the Philadelphia Flyers. He was the 35th player in league history to score 400 goals. Propp scored the first 369 goals of his career in his 11 seasons with the Flyers.

On that same night, Paul Coffey scored his 310th career goal to tie Islanders’ Hall of Famer Denis Potvin as the highest goal-scoring defenseman in NHL history. The milestone goal came in a 4-2 Penguins’ loss to the Devils.

The Bruins retired Terry O’Reilly‘s No. 24 in a pre-game ceremony, on Oct. 24, 2002, before their first home game of the 2002-02 season. O’Reilly spent his entire 14-season career in Boston, scoring 202 goals and 606 points in 891 games. Once the game began, the Bruins tied 2-2 with the visiting Ottawa Senators.

On Oct. 24, 2003, the Detroit Red Wings set a franchise record with their 15th consecutive home victory, in a 4-0 win over the Dallas Stars. Goaltender Dominik Hasek recorded his 62nd career shutout and first since returning from a one-year retirement.

Goaltender Carey Price came up huge with 49 saves on Oct. 24, 2015, as the Canadiens beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-3 at the Bell Centre. The win gave the Habs a perfect 9-0-0 record to start the season, with all the wins coming in regulation. This broke the record for the most consecutive regulation wins to begin a season, initially set by the 1975-76 Sabres. However, the Canadiens missed the playoffs that season, despite the incredible start.

On this date in 2021, Red Wings rookie phenom Lucas Raymond scored his first NHL hat trick and became the second teenager to do so in franchise history joining general manager Steve Yzerman who did it twice in his rookie season. Raymond also became the third teenager to record a four-point game, joining the aforementioned Yzerman and legend Gordie Howe.

On Oct. 24, 2023, Doug Armstrong appeared in his 1,000th game as general manager for the Blues and became the 25th person to reach the milestone with one franchise.

Oct. 24, 2023, marked the first “Frozen Frenzy” event that saw all 32 teams in action.

Happy Birthday to You

A total of 16 current and former NHL players were born on Oct. 24. The most recognizable names include longtime defenseman Harold Snepsts (70), former blueliner Joe Micheletti (70), Jim Peplinski (65), Jamal Mayers (50), Jonas Gustavsson (40), Kyle Rau (32), and Tony DeAngelo (29).

*Originally constructed by Greg Boysen


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