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Hockey
player and NHL Hall of Famer Wayne Gretzky was born in
Brantford, Ontario,
Canada, in 1961. He started skating at age 2 and by the age of
6 was regularly
playing with older boys. He played his first full NHL season
in 1979-80 for the
Edmonton Oilers. Over the next two decades, he dominated the
sport, setting a
host of league records. He retired in 1999 and was inducted
into the Hall of
Fame that same year.
Widely
considered
hockey's greatest player, Wayne Douglas Gretzky was born on
January
26, 1961, in Brantford, Ontario, Canada. A precise and
hard-working player,
Gretzky was just 2 years old when he first started skating.
The
young
Gretzky spent countless hours on the ice, honing his talents
as a skater,
shooter and passer. As a result, Gretzky often played in
leagues that catered
to older boys. The age and size differences between Gretzky
and his competition
mattered little. In his final year of peewee hockey he scored
an improbable 378
goals.
By
the
time he was a teenager, Gretzky was making waves across Canada
with his
play. He was selected third in the 1977 Ontario Major
Junior Hockey League
Midget draft, and displayed his impressive skills that season
for
the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds. His future status as an
NHL star was furthered
at the 1978 World Junior Championships in Quebec City, where
Gretzky played for
his home country and led the entire tournament in scoring.
Eager
to
turn professional but barred from leaping to the NHL because
of the league's
age restrictions, Gretzky signed with the Indianapolis Racers
of the fledgling
World Hockey Association in the fall of 1978. But not long
after Gretzky
arrived, the franchise closed its doors and sold its young
asset to the NHL's
Edmonton Oilers.
In
the
fall of 1979, Gretzky embarked on his first full NHL season.
As he had at
every other level, he quickly started to dominate the
competition, racking up
an astonishing 51 goals and 86 assists, on his way to winning
the league's Hart
Memorial Trophy, an award recognizing its most valuable
player. It was the
first time a first-year player had ever been honored with the
award.
Soon
enough,
Edmonton came to be a championship juggernaut. With Gretzky
leading the
way, the Oilers finished as Stanley Cup champions in 1984,
1985, 1987 and 1988.
As his team won, Gretzky blazed through the record books by
posting
unfathomable numbers. In 1982, he cracked the 200-point
barrier for the first
time, setting a single-season record with 92 goals, while also
collecting 120
assists. His finest year may have been 1986, a season in which
he totaled 52
goals and an NHL single-season record, 163 assists.
With
the
big numbers came plenty of adoration from Canadian hockey
fans. Nicknamed
The Great One, Gretzky captivated Canadian sports fans as few
sports stars ever
had. On toy store shelves, the Wayne Gretzky doll was a part
of the inventory,
and in 1983 the government of Canada even issued an official
Wayne Gretzky
dollar coin. Helping the player's celebrity status was his
quiet, humble attitude,
which helped ensure he wouldn't do anything off the ice to
tarnish his image.
In
late
summer of 1988, however, the unthinkable happened when the
Oilers traded
Gretzky to Los Angeles for a slew of players, draft picks and
cash. Speculation
has swirled around the exact reason for the trade. Popular
opinion has long
suggested that Gretzky, who'd recently married the actress
Janet Jones, had
pushed for the trade in order to further his wife's career.
But
another
theory banks on the idea that the NHL, fearing that its
greatest asset
was being wasted in Edmonton, forced the move. If Gretzky was
in Los Angeles,
the reasoning went, hockey's best player could greatly help
the league become
relevant in southern California.
Regardless
of
why the trade happened, in the fall of 1988, Gretzky donned a
Kings jersey
for the first time. Over the next eight seasons he led the
franchise, not quite
dominating the league as he once had, but still making his
case as the NHL's
best player. In 1993, he even steered the franchise to the
Stanley Cup finals,
where the club lost to the Montreal Canadiens in five games.
In
1996
Gretzky left L.A. to play for the St. Louis Blues. After just
one season
with the franchise, he was on the move again, this time to the
New York
Rangers, where he played three more years and finished out his
career in 1999.
By
almost
every measure, Gretzky is hockey's most dominant scorer and
quite
possibly its greatest player. In all, he holds or shares 61
NHL records,
including most career goals (894), most career assists (1,963)
and most career
points (2,857).
"Not
only
am I mentally ready to retire, I'm physically ready to
retire," he
said after his last game. "It's hard. This is a great game,
but it's a
hard game. I'm ready."
Not
long
after hanging up his skates, Gretzky was inducted into the
Hockey Hall of
Fame. In addition, he continued to stay in close contact with
the game and the
league.
With
Gretzky
at the helm as the program's executive director, Canada's
men's Olympic
hockey team ended its 50-year drought and took home the gold
medal at the Salt
Lake City Games in 2002.
Shortly
after
assuming his Olympic duties, Gretzky also came aboard as the
managing
partner of the NHL's Phoenix Coyotes in early 2001. Over the
course of several
seasons, Gretzky served in the front office and as the team's
head coach.
Despite
the
excitement surrounding his association with the club, coach
Gretzky was
never able to lead the club to the playoffs, much less fill
the arena with fans.
In September 2009, after four tough seasons, he stepped down
as coach. He
eventually relinquished his ownership of the team.
Gretzky,
who's
become involved in both the restaurant business and the wine
business
over the years, lives with his family in California.