Honour
Roll Honouring our past. Investing in our future. Honouring the hockey exploits of those who put Thunder Bay and Northwestern Ontario on the map Proudly presented by: Hilary Kaszor Investors Group Financial Services Inc. M.B.A, C.F.P., Senior Financial Consultant Contact: (807) 345-6363 E-mail Web site |
Alex
Delvecchio
Born: 12/04/1931, Fort William, Ontario
Inducted as Honoured Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame (1977)
Inducted Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame (1982)
24 NHL seasons with the Detroit Red Wings as player with four more
as coach
3-time winner of Stanley Cup (1952, 1954, 1955)
3-time recipient of Lady Byng trophy (1959, 1966, 1969)
Lester Patrick trophy recipient (1974)
13-time NHL all-star
His Red Wings jersey #10 is retired
and hangs from the rafters at Joe Louis Arena
Career
stats courtesy of Hockey Database
Bio: (Courtesy of Detroit Red Wings Alumni)
Born
December 4,1931 in Fort William, Ont., Alex Delvecchio played his junior
hockey with the Fort William Rangers & Oshawa Generals. Alex was
only the second player in NHL history to play more than 20 seasons for one
team, 12 of which he served as the team captain. He played over 22 full seasons
and parts of two others with the Detroit Red Wings before his retirement
on November 9, 1973. In 13 of those seasons, he scored 20 or more goals. He
netted a career total of 456 goals and 825 assists, plus 35 goals and 69 assists
during the playoffs. Alex had his best season in 1968-69 when he scored 25
goals and assisted on 58, for a total of 83 points.
Alex was named to two positions on all-star teams, center in 1952-53 and left wing in 1958-59. Sidelined by an ankle injury for 22 games during the 1956-57 season, he missed only 21 other games during his career. Alex played in 1,549 regular season and 121 playoff games.
Alex accumulated only 383 penalty minutes (never more than 37 in a season) and only 29 more in playoff competition. That accomplishment, among others was a testament to his reputation as an exceptionally clean player and one of the things that earned him three Lady Byng Trophies.
Alex played on many outstanding Detroit teams, including the Stanley Cup winners in 1952,1954 and 1955. His teams also won the Prince of Wales Trophy six times, when the trophy went to the team that finished first in regular season play. When he retired, Alex ranked second only to Gordie Howe in NHL records for games played, seasons played, total points and assists. He entered the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1977.
His round, pleasant face and warm smile earned him the nickname "Fats" early in his career. Delvecchio was the consummate team player on a team full of superstars. Often overshadowed by his famous teammates Ted Lindsay, Gordie Howe, and Sid Abel, Alex was the games embodiment of class and sportsmanship. In 1991 the Red Wings honored his accomplishments by declaring November 10th Alex Delvecchio day and retiring his jersey to the rafters.