List of NHL statistical leaders
This is a list of National Hockey League (NHL) statistical leaders through the end of the 2009–10 NHL season.
Most of these records are dominated by Canadian players, due to the traditional popularity of ice hockey in Canada. In the past, most NHL players were from Canada, and even today roughly half of all NHL players are born in Canada (52.3% in the 2008–09 season). To distinguish players of different nations, a flag is placed beside players born outside of Canada based on their place of birth; the Canadian flag () will not be shown next to Canadian-born players in order to avoid visual clutter.
Skaters
The statistics listed include the 2009–10 NHL regular season and 2010 playoffs.
All-time leaders (skaters)
Active skaters (during 2010–11 NHL season) are listed in boldface.
Regular season points
Rank | Name | Team(s) | GP | Pts | PPG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Wayne Gretzky | EDM, LAK, STL, NYR | 1487 | 2857 | 1.92 |
2 | Mark Messier | EDM, NYR, VAN, NYR | 1756 | 1887 | 1.07 |
3 | Gordie Howe | DET, HFD | 1767 | 1850 | 1.05 |
4 | Ron Francis | HFD, PIT, CAR, TOR | 1731 | 1798 | 1.04 |
5 | Marcel Dionne | DET, LAK, NYR | 1348 | 1771 | 1.31 |
6 | Steve Yzerman | DET | 1514 | 1755 | 1.16 |
7 | Mario Lemieux | PIT | 915 | 1723 | 1.88 |
8 | Joe Sakic | QUE/COL | 1378 | 1641 | 1.19 |
9 | Jaromir Jagr | PIT, WSH, NYR | 1273 | 1599 | 1.26 |
10 | Phil Esposito | CHI, BOS, NYR | 1282 | 1590 | 1.24 |
11 | Ray Bourque | BOS, COL | 1612 | 1579 | 0.98 |
12 | Paul Coffey | EDM, PIT, LAK, DET, HFD, PHI, CHI, CAR, BOS | 1409 | 1531 | 1.09 |
13 | Mark Recchi | PIT, PHI, MTL, PHI, PIT, CAR, PIT, ATL, TBL, BOS | 1571 | 1485 | 0.95 |
14 | Stan Mikita[1] | CHI | 1394 | 1467 | 1.05 |
15 | Bryan Trottier | NYI, PIT | 1279 | 1425 | 1.11 |
16 | Adam Oates | DET, STL, BOS, WSH, PHI, ANA, EDM | 1337 | 1420 | 1.06 |
17 | Doug Gilmour | STL, CGY, TOR, NJD, CHI, BUF, MTL, TOR | 1474 | 1414 | 0.96 |
18 | Dale Hawerchuk | WPG, BUF, STL, PHI | 1188 | 1409 | 1.19 |
19 | Jari Kurri | EDM, LAK, NYR, ANA, COL | 1251 | 1398 | 1.12 |
20 | Luc Robitaille | LAK, PIT, NYR, DET, LAK | 1431 | 1394 | 0.97 |
21 | Brett Hull[2] | CGY, STL, DAL, DET, PHX | 1269 | 1391 | 1.10 |
22 | Johnny Bucyk | DET, BOS | 1540 | 1369 | 0.89 |
23 | Mike Modano | MNS/DAL DET, | 1459 | 1359 | 0.93 |
24 | Brendan Shanahan | NJD, STL, HFD, DET, NYR, NJD | 1524 | 1354 | 0.89 |
25 | Guy Lafleur | MTL, NYR, QUE | 1127 | 1353 | 1.20 |
26 | Mats Sundin | QUE, TOR, VAN | 1346 | 1349 | 1.00 |
27 | Denis Savard | CHI, MTL, TBL | 1196 | 1338 | 1.12 |
28 | Dave Andreychuk | BUF, TOR, NJD, BOS, COL, TBL | 1639 | 1338 | 0.82 |
29 | Mike Gartner | WSH, MNS, NYR, TOR, PHX | 1432 | 1335 | 0.93 |
30 | Pierre Turgeon | BUF, NYI, MTL, STL, DAL, COL | 1294 | 1327 | 1.03 |
31 | Gilbert Perreault | BUF | 1191 | 1326 | 1.11 |
32 | Alex Delvecchio | DET | 1550 | 1281 | 0.83 |
33 | Al MacInnis | CGY, STL | 1416 | 1274 | 0.90 |
34 | Jean Ratelle | NYR, BOS | 1281 | 1267 | 0.99 |
35 | Teemu Selanne | WIN, ANA, SJS, COL, ANA | 1186 | 1260 | 1.06 |
36 | Peter Stastny[3] | QUE, NJD, STL | 977 | 1239 | 1.27 |
37 | Phil Housley | BUF, WPG, STL, CGY, NJD, WSH, CHI, TOR | 1495 | 1232 | 0.82 |
38 | Norm Ullman | DET, TOR | 1410 | 1229 | 0.87 |
39 | Jean Beliveau | MTL | 1125 | 1219 | 1.08 |
40 | Jeremy Roenick | CHI, PHX, PHI, LAK, PHX, SJS | 1363 | 1216 | 0.89 |
41 | Larry Murphy | LAK, WSH, MNS, PIT, TOR, DET | 1615 | 1216 | 0.75 |
42 | Bobby Clarke | PHI | 1144 | 1210 | 1.06 |
43 | Bernie Nicholls | LAK, NYR, EDM, NJD, CHI, SJS | 1127 | 1209 | 1.07 |
44 | Vincent Damphousse | TOR, EDM, MTL, SJS, COL | 1378 | 1205 | 0.87 |
45 | Dino Ciccarelli | MNS, WSH, DET, TBL, FLA | 1232 | 1200 | 0.97 |
46 | Rod Brind'Amour | STL, PHI, CAR | 1484 | 1184 | 0.80 |
47 | Sergei Fedorov | DET, ANA, CBJ, WSH | 1248 | 1179 | 0.94 |
48 | Bobby Hull | CHI, WPG, HFD | 1063 | 1170 | 1.10 |
49 | Michel Goulet | QUE, CHI | 1089 | 1152 | 1.06 |
50 | Bernie Federko | STL, DET | 1000 | 1130 | 1.13 |
Regular season points per game
- Minimum 500 points
- Wayne Gretzky, 1.921
- Mario Lemieux, 1.883
- Mike Bossy, 1.497
- Bobby Orr, 1.393
- Sidney Crosby, 1.364
- Alexander Ovechkin, 1.336
- Marcel Dionne, 1.314
- Peter Stastny,[3] 1.268
- Jaromir Jagr, 1.256
- Peter Forsberg, 1.254
- Kent Nilsson, 1.240
- Phil Esposito, 1.240
- Guy Lafleur, 1.202
- Joe Sakic, 1.191
- Dale Hawerchuk, 1.186
- Pat LaFontaine, 1.171
- Steve Yzerman, 1.159
- Eric Lindros, 1.138
- Bernie Federko, 1.130
- Denis Savard, 1.119
- Jari Kurri, 1.117
- Bryan Trottier, 1.114
- Gilbert Perreault, 1.113
- Pavel Bure, 1.110
- Bobby Hull, 1.101
Regular season goals
- Wayne Gretzky, 894
- Gordie Howe, 801
- Brett Hull,[2] 741
- Marcel Dionne, 731
- Phil Esposito, 717
- Mike Gartner, 708
- Mark Messier, 694
- Steve Yzerman, 692
- Mario Lemieux, 690
- Luc Robitaille, 668
- Brendan Shanahan, 656
- Jaromir Jagr, 646
- Dave Andreychuk, 640
- Joe Sakic, 625
- Bobby Hull, 610
- Dino Ciccarelli, 608
- Teemu Selanne, 606
- Jari Kurri, 601
- Mike Bossy, 573
- Joe Nieuwendyk, 564
- Mats Sundin, 564
- Mark Recchi, 563
- Guy Lafleur, 560
- Mike Modano, 557
- Johnny Bucyk, 556
- Ron Francis, 549
- Michel Goulet, 548
- Maurice Richard, 544
- Stan Mikita,[1] 541
- Keith Tkachuk, 538
- Frank Mahovlich, 533
- Bryan Trottier, 524
- Pat Verbeek, 522
- Dale Hawerchuk, 518
- Pierre Turgeon, 515
- Jeremy Roenick, 513
- Gilbert Perreault, 512
- Jean Beliveau, 507
- Peter Bondra,[4] 503
- Joe Mullen, 502
- Lanny McDonald, 500
- Glenn Anderson, 498
- Jean Ratelle, 491
- Norm Ullman, 490
- Brian Bellows, 485
- Darryl Sittler, 484
- Sergei Fedorov, 483
- Bernie Nicholls, 475
- Alexander Mogilny, 473
- Denis Savard, 473
Regular season goals per game
- Minimum 200 goals
- Mike Bossy, 0.762
- Cy Denneny, 0.756
- Mario Lemieux, 0.754
- Babe Dye, 0.742
- Alexander Ovechkin, 0.679
- Pavel Bure, 0.623
- Wayne Gretzky, 0.601
- Brett Hull,[2] 0.584
- Bobby Hull, 0.574
- Tim Kerr, 0.565
- Rick Martin, 0.561
- Phil Esposito, 0.559
- Maurice Richard, 0.556
- Ilya Kovalchuk, 0.544
- Cam Neely, 0.544
- Marcel Dionne, 0.542
- Pat LaFontaine, 0.541
- Teemu Selanne, 0.511
- Dany Heatley,[5] 0.508
- Jaromir Jagr, 0.507
- Michel Goulet, 0.503
- Rick Vaive, 0.503
- Nels Stewart, 0.498
- Guy Lafleur, 0.497
- Mike Gartner, 0.494
Regular season powerplay goals
When a team is given a penalty for committing an infraction (such as tripping another player), the offending player must sit in the penalty box, and his team must play with one fewer player on the ice. The penalized team is said to be "short-handed", while the other team has a "powerplay". If a player scores while his team is on the powerplay, this is recorded as a powerplay goal.
- Dave Andreychuk, 274
- Brett Hull,[2] 265
- Phil Esposito, 249
- Luc Robitaille, 247
- Brendan Shanahan, 237
- Mario Lemieux, 236
- Marcel Dionne, 234
- Dino Ciccarelli, 232
- Teemu Selanne, 220
- Mike Gartner, 217
- Joe Nieuwendyk, 215
- Keith Tkachuk, 212
- Joe Sakic, 205
- Wayne Gretzky, 204
- Steve Yzerman, 202
- Brian Bellows, 198
- Mark Recchi, 194
- Pierre Turgeon, 190
- Ron Francis, 188
- Pat Verbeek, 186
- Jeremy Roenick, 184
- Dale Hawerchuk, 182
- Michael Bossy, 181
- Jaromir Jagr, 181
- Mark Messier, 179
Regular season short-handed goals
When a team is given a penalty for committing an infraction (such as tripping another player), the offending player must sit in the penalty box, and his team must play with one fewer player on the ice. The penalized team is said to be "short-handed", while the other team has a "powerplay". If a player scores while his team is short handed, this is recorded as a short-handed goal.
- Wayne Gretzky, 73
- Mark Messier, 63
- Steve Yzerman, 50
- Mario Lemieux, 49
- Butch Goring, 40
- Dave Poulin, 39
- Jari Kurri, 37
- Sergei Fedorov, 36
- Theoren Fleury, 35
- Dirk Graham, 35
- Pavel Bure, 34
- Brian Rolston, 33
- Peter Bondra,[4] 32
- Guy Carbonneau, 32
- Bobby Clarke, 32
- Joe Sakic, 32
- Bill Barber, 31
- Mats Sundin, 31
- Russ Courtnall, 29
- Craig MacTavish, 29
- Mike Modano, 29
- Esa Tikkanen, 29
- Rod Brind'Amour, 28
- Mark Howe,[6] 28
- Todd Marchant, 28
- Bernie Nicholls, 28
- Dave Reid, 28
- Jeremy Roenick, 28
- Doug Smail, 28
- Martin St. Louis, 28
Regular season game-winning goals
- Phil Esposito, 118
- Jaromir Jagr, 112
- Brett Hull,[2] 110
- Brendan Shanahan, 109
- Guy Lafleur, 97
- Teemu Selanne, 97
- Mats Sundin, 96
- Steve Yzerman, 94
- Sergei Fedorov, 93
- Joe Nieuwendyk, 93
- Mark Messier, 92
- Mike Modano, 92
- Jeremy Roenick, 92
- Wayne Gretzky, 91
- Mike Gartner, 90
- Luc Robitaille, 89
- Joe Sakic, 86
- Pierre Turgeon, 86
- Glenn Anderson, 85
- Mark Recchi, 85
- Mike Bossy, 82
- Gilbert Perreault, 81
- Ron Francis, 79
- Peter Bondra,[4] 78
- Vincent Damphousse, 78
- Steve Thomas,[7] 78
Regular season overtime goals
If a game is tied after regulation time (which lasts three 20-minutes periods), there will be a period of "overtime" to decide the winner. The player who scores during this extra time is given the overtime goal. All overtime in the NHL is sudden death—meaning the first team to score is the winner—so the player who scores in overtime also has the game-winning goal.
- Patrik Elias, 15
- Sergei Fedorov, 15
- Jaromir Jagr, 15
- Mats Sundin, 15
- Olli Jokinen, 12
- Scott Niedermayer, 12
- Brendan Shanahan, 12
- Theoren Fleury, 11
- Glen Murray, 11
- Pierre Turgeon, 11
- Brendan Morrison, 10
- Steve Thomas,[7] 10
- Pavol Demitra, 9
- Bill Guerin, 9
- Milan Hejduk, 9
- Mike Modano, 9
- Teemu Selanne, 9
- Rod Brind'Amour, 8
- Valeri Bure, 8
- Ilya Kovalchuk, 8
- Marc Savard, 8
- Joe Thornton, 8
- Keith Tkachuk, 8
Regular season assists
- Wayne Gretzky, 1,963
- Ron Francis, 1,249
- Mark Messier, 1,193
- Ray Bourque, 1,169
- Paul Coffey, 1,135
- Adam Oates, 1,079
- Steve Yzerman, 1,063
- Gordie Howe, 1,049
- Marcel Dionne, 1,040
- Mario Lemieux, 1,033
- Joe Sakic, 1,016
- Doug Gilmour, 964
- Jaromir Jagr, 953
- Al MacInnis, 934
- Larry Murphy, 929
- Stan Mikita,[1] 926
- Mark Recchi, 922
- Bryan Trottier, 901
- Phil Housley, 894
- Dale Hawerchuk, 891
- Phil Esposito, 873
- Denis Savard, 865
- Bobby Clarke, 852
- Alex Delvecchio, 825
- Gilbert Perreault, 814
- Johnny Bucyk, 813
- Pierre Turgeon, 812
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 809
- Mike Modano, 802
- Jari Kurri, 797
- Guy Lafleur, 793
- Peter Stastny,[3] 789
- Mats Sundin, 785
- Brian Leetch, 781
- Jean Ratelle, 776
- Vincent Damphousse, 773
- Chris Chelios, 763
- Bernie Federko, 761
- Larry Robinson, 750
- Doug Weight, 748
- Denis Potvin, 742
- Norm Ullman, 739
- Bernie Nicholls, 734
- Rod Brind'Amour, 732
- Luc Robitaille, 726
- Jean Beliveau, 712
- Scott Stevens, 712
- Jeremy Roenick, 703
- Dave Andreychuk, 698
- Brendan Shanahan, 698
Regular season assists per game
- Minimum 300 assists
- Wayne Gretzky, 1.320
- Mario Lemieux, 1.129
- Bobby Orr, 0.982
- Peter Forsberg, 0.901
- Sidney Crosby, 0.871
- Peter Stastny,[3] 0.808
- Adam Oates, 0.807
- Paul Coffey, 0.805
- Marcel Dionne, 0.771
- Kent Nilsson, 0.763
- Bernie Federko, 0.761
- Dale Hawerchuk, 0.750
- Jaromir Jagr, 0.749
- Bobby Clarke, 0.745
- Craig Janney, 0.741
- Joe Sakic, 0.737
- Mike Bossy, 0.735
- Ray Bourque, 0.725
- Denis Savard, 0.723
- Ron Francis, 0.722
- Joe Thornton, 0.706
- Bryan Trottier, 0.705
- Guy Lafleur, 0.704
- Steve Yzerman, 0.702
- Denis Potvin, 0.700
Regular season games played
- Gordie Howe, 1,767
- Mark Messier, 1,756
- Ron Francis, 1,731
- Chris Chelios, 1,651
- Dave Andreychuk, 1,639
- Scott Stevens, 1,635
- Larry Murphy, 1,615
- Ray Bourque, 1,612
- Mark Recchi, 1,571
- Alex Delvecchio, 1,549
- Johnny Bucyk, 1,540
- Brendan Shanahan, 1,524
- Steve Yzerman, 1,514
- Phil Housley, 1,495
- Wayne Gretzky, 1,487
- Rod Brind'Amour, 1,484
- Doug Gilmour, 1,474
- Mike Modano, 1,459
- Glen Wesley, 1,457
- Tim Horton, 1,446
- Mike Gartner, 1,432
- Scott Mellanby, 1,431
- Luc Robitaille, 1,431
- Pat Verbeek, 1,424
- Luke Richardson, 1,417
Regular season penalty minutes
A penalty is given to a player for committing an infraction during the game. The length of the penalty varies depending on the severity of the offence. The amount of penalty minutes recorded for statistical purposes are:
- minor – 2 minutes
- double minor – 4 minutes
- major – 5 minutes
- misconduct – 10 minutes
- game misconduct – 10 minutes
- Tiger Williams, 3,966
- Dale Hunter, 3,565
- Tie Domi, 3,515
- Marty McSorley, 3,381
- Bob Probert, 3,300
- Rob Ray, 3,207
- Craig Berube, 3,149
- Tim Hunter, 3,146
- Chris Nilan, 3,043
- Rick Tocchet, 2,972
- Pat Verbeek, 2,905
- Chris Chelios, 2,891
- Dave Manson, 2,792
- Scott Stevens, 2,785
- Donald Brashear, 2,634
- Willi Plett,[8] 2,572
- Gino Odjick, 2,567
- Matthew Barnaby, 2,562
- Gary Roberts, 2,560
- Joe Kocur, 2,519
- Ken Daneyko, 2,516
- Brendan Shanahan, 2,489
- Scott Mellanby, 2,479
- Basil McRae, 2,457
- Ulf Samuelsson, 2,453
Regular season plus-minus
Plus-minus is a statistic that indicates the relative goal differential when a player is on the ice. If the player is on the ice when his team scores even-strength or short-handed, he is given +1; if he is on the ice when the opposing team scores even-strength or short-handed, he is given -1.
- Larry Robinson, +730
- Bobby Orr, +597
- Ray Bourque, +528
- Wayne Gretzky, +518
- Bobby Clarke, +506
- Denis Potvin, +460
- Serge Savard, +460
- Guy Lafleur, +453
- Bryan Trottier, +452
- Brad McCrimmon, +444
- Nicklas Lidstrom, +432
- Mark Howe,[6] +400
- Steve Shutt, +393
- Scott Stevens, +393
- Mike Bossy, +381
- Al MacInnis, +373
- Brad Park, +358
- Dallas Smith, +355
- Chris Chelios, +350
- Jacques Lemaire, +349
- Guy Lapointe, +329
- Craig Ramsay, +328
- Bill Hajt, +321
- Bill Barber, +316
- Brian Propp, +310
Regular season shots on goal
- Ray Bourque, 6,206
- Marcel Dionne, 5,366
- Al MacInnis, 5,157
- Mike Gartner, 5,090
- Wayne Gretzky, 5,089
- Brendan Shanahan, 5,086
- Brett Hull,[2] 4,876
- Joe Sakic, 4,621
- Steve Yzerman, 4,602
- Jaromir Jagr, 4,596
- Phil Esposito, 4,595
- Dave Andreychuk, 4,556
- Paul Coffey, 4,385
- Mark Messier, 4,219
- Mike Modano, 4,194
- Mats Sundin, 4,015
- Sergei Fedorov, 3,985
- Luc Robitaille, 3,961
- Teemu Selanne, 3,910
- Rob Blake, 3,896
- Darryl Sittler, 3,812
- Phil Housley, 3,808
- Ron Francis, 3,754
- Dale Hawerchuk, 3,754
- Dino Ciccarelli, 3,706
- Claude Lemieux, 3,650
Regular season shooting percentage
Shooting percentage is the percentage of shots on goal which result in a goal.
- Minimum 800 shots
- Craig Simpson, 23.66 %
- Charlie Simmer, 22.34 %
- Paul MacLean,[9] 21.41 %
- Mike Bossy, 21.18 %
- Yvon Lambert, 19.85 %
- Rick Middleton, 19.69 %
- Blaine Stoughton, 19.52 %
- Darryl Sutter, 19.42 %
- Rob Brown, 19.41 %
- Mike Ridley, 19.30 %
- Steve Vickers, 19.28 %
- Kent Nilsson, 19.21 %
- Tom McCarthy, 19.16 %
- Jari Kurri, 19.13 %
- John Bucyk, 19.09 %
- Mario Lemieux, 18.99 %
- Peter Stastny,[3] 18.96 %
- Ray Ferraro, 18.85 %
- Alex Tanguay, 18.83 %
- Mark Hunter, 18.78 %
Playoff points
- Wayne Gretzky, 382
- Mark Messier, 295
- Jari Kurri, 233
- Glenn Anderson, 214
- Paul Coffey, 196
- Brett Hull,[2] 190
- Doug Gilmour, 188
- Joe Sakic, 188
- Steve Yzerman, 185
- Bryan Trottier, 184
- Jaromir Jagr, 181
- Ray Bourque, 180
- Jean Beliveau, 176
- Sergei Fedorov, 176
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 175
- Denis Savard, 175
- Mario Lemieux, 172
- Peter Forsberg, 171
- Denis Potvin, 164
- Mike Bossy, 160
- Gordie Howe, 160
- Al MacInnis, 160
- Bobby Smith, 160
- Claude Lemieux, 157
- Adam Oates, 156
Playoff points per game
- Minimum 50 points
- Wayne Gretzky, 1.837
- Mario Lemieux, 1.607
- Barry Pederson, 1.529
- Sidney Crosby, 1.323
- Mark Messier, 1.250
- Bobby Orr, 1.243
- Mike Bossy, 1.240
- Evgeni Malkin, 1.177
- Jari Kurri, 1.165
- Gilbert Perreault, 1.144
- Peter Forsberg, 1.133
- Peter Stastny,[3] 1.129
- Bernie Federko, 1.110
- Pavel Bure, 1.094
- Joe Sakic, 1.093
- Jean Beliveau, 1.086
- Bobby Hull, 1.084
- Eric Lindros, 1.075
- Jaromir Jagr, 1.071
- Toe Blake, 1.069
- Ken Linseman, 1.062
- Phil Esposito, 1.054
- Guy Lafleur, 1.047
- Denis Savard, 1.036
- Doug Gilmour, 1.033
Playoff goals
- Wayne Gretzky, 122
- Mark Messier, 109
- Jari Kurri, 106
- Brett Hull,[2] 103
- Glenn Anderson, 93
- Mike Bossy, 85
- Joe Sakic, 84
- Maurice Richard, 82
- Claude Lemieux, 80
- Jean Beliveau, 79
- Jaromir Jagr, 77
- Mario Lemieux, 76
- Dino Ciccarelli, 73
- Esa Tikkanen, 72
- Bryan Trottier, 71
- Steve Yzerman, 70
- Gordie Howe, 68
- Denis Savard, 66
- Joe Nieuwendyk, 66
- Peter Forsberg, 64
- Bobby Smith, 64
- Brian Propp, 64
- Yvan Cournoyer, 64
- Bobby Hull, 62
- Phil Esposito, 61
- Jacques Lemaire, 61
Playoff goals per game
- Alexander Ovechkin, 0.714
- Mario Lemieux, 0.710
- Mike Bossy, 0.659
- Barry Pederson, 0.647
- Maurice Richard, 0.617
- Cam Neely, 0.613
- Wayne Gretzky, 0.587
- Pavel Bure, 0.547
- Craig Simpson, 0.537
- Jari Kurri, 0.530
- Bobby Hull, 0.521
- Gordie Drillon, 0.520
- Dino Ciccarelli, 0.518
- Jarome Iginla, 0.518
- Martin St. Louis, 0.511
- Brett Hull,[2] 0.510
- Steve Shutt, 0.505
- Reggie Leach, 0.500
- Rick Vaive, 0.500
- Tim Kerr, 0.494
- Steve Payne, 0.493
Playoff powerplay goals
When a team is given a penalty for committing an infraction (such as tripping another player), the offending player must sit in the penalty box, and his team must play with one fewer player on the ice. The penalized team is said to be "short-handed", while the other team has a "powerplay". If a player scores while his team is on the powerplay, this is recorded as a powerplay goal.
- Brett Hull,[2] 38
- Mike Bossy, 35
- Dino Ciccarelli, 34
- Wayne Gretzky, 34
- Mario Lemieux, 29
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 28
- Denis Potvin, 28
- Brian Propp, 27
- Joe Sakic, 27
- Steve Yzerman, 27
- Mark Messier, 26
- Jari Kurri, 25
- Cam Neely, 25
- Jaromir Jagr, 24
- Al MacInnis, 24
- Mike Modano, 24
- Denis Savard, 24
- Bobby Smith, 24
- Brian Bellows, 23
- Joe Nieuwendyk, 23
Playoff short-handed goals
When a team is given a penalty for committing an infraction (such as tripping another player), the offending player must sit in the penalty box, and his team must play with one fewer player on the ice. The penalized team is said to be "short-handed", while the other team has a "powerplay". If a player scores while his team is short handed, this is recorded as a short-handed goal.
- Mark Messier, 12
- Wayne Gretzky, 11
- Jari Kurri, 10
- Hakan Loob, 8
- Ed Westfall, 8
- Paul Coffey, 7
- Dave Poulin, 6
- Wayne Presley, 6
- Brian Rolston, 6
- Derek Sanderson, 6
- Bill Barber, 5
- Bob Bourne, 5
- Guy Carbonneau, 5
- Sergei Fedorov, 5
- Lorne Henning, 5
- Anders Kallur, 5
- Kirk Maltby, 5
- Kelly Miller, 5
Playoff game-winning goals
- Brett Hull,[2] 24
- Wayne Gretzky, 24
- Claude Lemieux, 19
- Joe Sakic, 19
- Glenn Anderson, 17
- Mike Bossy, 17
- Chris Drury, 17
- Jaromir Jagr, 15
- Mike Modano, 15
- Peter Forsberg, 14
- Jari Kurri, 14
- Guy Lafleur, 14
- Mark Messier, 14
- Joe Nieuwendyk, 14
- Dino Ciccarelli, 13
- Doug Gilmour, 13
- Stephane Richer, 13
- Bobby Smith, 13
Playoff overtime goals
If a game is tied after regulation time (which lasts three 20-minutes periods), there will be a period of "overtime" to decide the winner. The player who scores during this extra time is given the overtime goal. All overtime in the NHL is sudden death—meaning the first team to score is the winner—so the player who scores in overtime also has the game-winning goal.
- Joe Sakic, 8
- Maurice Richard, 6
- Glenn Anderson, 5
- Chris Drury, 4
- Wayne Gretzky, 4
- Jaromir Jagr, 4
- Jamie Langenbrunner, 4
- Kirk Muller, 4
- Joe Murphy, 4
- Bob Nystrom, 4
- Stephane Richer, 4
- Jeremy Roenick, 4
- Greg Adams, 3
- Peter Forsberg, 3
- Martin Gelinas, 3
- Mel Hill, 3
- Brenden Morrow, 3
- Cory Stillman, 3
- Martin St. Louis, 3
- Petr Sykora, 3
- Niclas Wallin, 3
- Scott Young, 3
Playoff assists
- Wayne Gretzky, 260
- Mark Messier, 186
- Ray Bourque, 139
- Paul Coffey, 137
- Doug Gilmour, 128
- Jari Kurri, 127
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 125
- Sergei Fedorov, 124
- Glenn Anderson, 121
- Al MacInnis, 121
- Larry Robinson, 116
- Larry Murphy, 115
- Steve Yzerman, 115
- Adam Oates, 114
- Chris Chelios, 113
- Bryan Trottier, 113
- Denis Savard, 109
- Denis Potvin, 108
- Peter Forsberg, 107
- Jaromir Jagr, 104
- Joe Sakic, 104
- Jean Beliveau, 97
- Ron Francis, 97
- Mario Lemieux, 96
- Bobby Smith, 96
Playoff games played
- Chris Chelios, 266
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 247
- Mark Messier, 236
- Claude Lemieux, 234
- Scott Stevens, 233
- Guy Carbonneau, 231
- Larry Robinson, 227
- Glenn Anderson, 225
- Bryan Trottier, 221
- Mike Keane, 220
- Larry Murphy, 215
- Ray Bourque, 214
- Kris Draper, 214
- Kevin Lowe, 214
- Wayne Gretzky, 208
- Brett Hull,[2] 202
- Scott Niedermayer, 202
- Jari Kurri, 200
- Steve Yzerman, 196
- Paul Coffey, 194
Playoff penalty minutes
A penalty is given to a player for committing an infraction during the game. The length of the penalty varies depending on the severity of the offence. The amount of penalty minutes recorded for statistical purposes are:
- minor – 2 minutes
- double minor – 4 minutes
- major – 5 minutes
- misconduct – 10 minutes
- game misconduct – 10 minutes
- Dale Hunter, 729
- Chris Nilan, 541
- Claude Lemieux, 529
- Rick Tocchet, 471
- Willi Plett,[8] 466
- Tiger Williams, 455
- Glenn Anderson, 442
- Tim Hunter, 426
- Chris Chelios, 423
- Dave Schultz, 412
- Duane Sutter, 405
- Scott Stevens, 402
- Jim Peplinski, 382
- Al Secord, 382
- Marty McSorley, 374
- Andre Dupont, 352
- Basil McRae, 349
- Dave Manson, 343
- Terry O'Reilly, 335
- Gary Roberts, 332
Playoff plus-minus
Plus-minus is a statistic that indicates the relative goal differential when a player is on the ice. If the player is on the ice when his team scores even-strength or short-handed, he is given +1; if he is on the ice when the opposing team scores even-strength or short-handed, he is given -1.
- Charlie Huddy, +82
- Jari Kurri, +73
- Randy Gregg, +71
- Wayne Gretzky, +67
- Glenn Anderson, +63
- Peter Forsberg, +54
- Nicklas Lidstrom, +53
- Steve Smith,[10] +49
- Chris Chelios, +48
- Scott Stevens, +48
- Chris Pronger, +43
- Brian Rafalski, +43
- Paul Coffey, +42
- Claude Lemieux, +42
- Mark Messier, +42
- Sergei Fedorov, +38
- Jaromir Jagr, +38
- Kevin Lowe, +38
- Johan Franzen, +37
Playoff shots on goal
- Brett Hull,[2] 803
- Claude Lemieux, 730
- Al MacInnis, 664
- Ray Bourque, 648
- Brendan Shanahan, 622
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 616
- Sergei Fedorov, 603
- Chris Chelios, 587
- Steve Yzerman, 585
- Joe Sakic, 582
- Jaromir Jagr, 578
- Mark Messier, 569
- Wayne Gretzky, 549
- Paul Coffey, 536
- Mike Modano, 502
- Scott Stevens, 473
- Jari Kurri, 469
- Larry Murphy, 468
- Glenn Anderson, 451
- Steve Thomas,[7] 444
Playoff shooting percentage
Shooting percentage is the percentage of shots on goal which result in a goal.
- Minimum 80 shots
- Craig Simpson, 33.64 %
- Ken Linseman, 23.21 %
- Tim Kerr, 20.33 %
- Bernie Federko, 20.20 %
- Martin St. Louis, 20.00 %
- Cam Neely, 19.59 %
- Jari Kurri, 19.40 %
- Patrick Kane, 19.39 %
- Ray Ferraro, 19.27 %
- Paul MacLean,[9] 19.10 %
- Mario Lemieux, 18.91 %
- Kevin Dineen, 18.85 %
- Peter Stastny,[3] 18.58 %
- Peter Forsberg, 18.13 %
- Rick Vaive, 17.83 %
Active leaders (skaters)
Regular season points (active)
- Mark Recchi, 1,485
- Mike Modano, 1,359
- Teemu Selanne, 1,260
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 1,046
- Doug Weight, 1,024
- Daniel Alfredsson, 992
- Alexei Kovalev, 990
- Paul Kariya, 989
- Joe Thornton, 931
- Jarome Iginla, 920
- Owen Nolan,[11] 885
- Jason Arnott, 873
- Ray Whitney, 869
- Vyacheslav Kozlov, 853
- Marian Hossa, 770
- Pavol Demitra, 768
- Patrik Elias, 754
- Mathieu Schneider, 743
- Vincent Lecavalier, 739
- Miroslav Satan, 735
- Ryan Smyth, 713
- Robert Lang, 703
- Brian Rolston, 703
Regular season points per game (active)
- Minimum 500 points
- Sidney Crosby, 1.364
- Alexander Ovechkin, 1.336
- Teemu Selanne, 1.062
- Dany Heatley,[5] 1.061
- Ilya Kovalchuk, 1.034
- Joe Thornton, 1.018
- Paul Kariya, 1.000
- Daniel Alfredsson, 0.989
- Pavel Datsyuk, 0.977
- Mark Recchi, 0.945
- Mike Modano, 0.931
- Marian Hossa, 0.925
- Brad Richards, 0.913
- Pavol Demitra, 0.907
- Marian Gaborik, 0.905
- Jarome Iginla, 0.898
- Marc Savard, 0.890
- Martin St. Louis, 0.879
- Patrik Elias, 0.857
- Vincent Lecavalier, 0.850
Regular season goals (active)
- Teemu Selanne, 637
- Mark Recchi, 577
- Mike Modano, 561
- Jarome Iginla, 484
- Alexei Kovalev, 428
- Owen Nolan,[11] 422
- Paul Kariya, 402
- Jason Arnott, 400
- Daniel Alfredsson, 389
- Marian Hossa, 388
- Ilya Kovalchuk, 369
- Miroslav Satan, 363
- Milan Hejduk, 357
- Patrick Marleau, 357
- Vyacheslav Kozlov, 356
- Ryan Smyth, 355
- Vincent Lecavalier, 351
- Ray Whitney, 341
- Brian Rolston, 335
- Patrik Elias, 335
- Dany Heatley, 325
- Joe Thornton, 306
- Pavol Demitra, 304
Regular season goals per game (active)
- Minimum 200 goals
- Alexander Ovechkin, 0.679
- Ilya Kovalchuk, 0.544
- Teemu Selanne, 0.511
- Dany Heatley,[5] 0.508
- Marian Gaborik, 0.452
- Rick Nash, 0.439
- Marian Hossa, 0.436
- Jarome Iginla, 0.431
- Henrik Zetterberg, 0.407
- Paul Kariya, 0.406
- Milan Hejduk, 0.399
- Simon Gagne, 0.390
- Mike Modano, 0.382
- Vincent Lecavalier, 0.375
- Daniel Alfredsson, 0.374
- Pavol Demitra, 0.359
- Mark Recchi, 0.358
- Patrik Elias, 0.357
- Owen Nolan,[11] 0.352
- Jason Arnott, 0.348
Regular season powerplay goals (active)
When a team is given a penalty for committing an infraction (such as tripping another player), the offending player must sit in the penalty box, and his team must play with one fewer player on the ice. The penalized team is said to be "short-handed", while the other team has a "powerplay". If a player scores while his team is on the powerplay, this is recorded as a powerplay goal.
- Teemu Selanne, 220
- Mark Recchi, 194
- Mike Modano, 156
- Owen Nolan,[11] 155
- Ryan Smyth, 141
- Paul Kariya, 139
- Jarome Iginla, 137
- Jason Arnott, 135
- Alexei Kovalev, 126
- Milan Hejduk, 122
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 121
- Miroslav Satan, 120
- Dany Heatley,[5] 117
- Ilya Kovalchuk, 117
- Daniel Alfredsson, 114
- Petr Sykora, 107
- Marian Hossa, 105
- Todd Bertuzzi, 102
- Tomas Holmstrom, 102
Regular season short-handed goals (active)
When a team is given a penalty for committing an infraction (such as tripping another player), the offending player must sit in the penalty box, and his team must play with one fewer player on the ice. The penalized team is said to be "short-handed", while the other team has a "powerplay". If a player scores while his team is short handed, this is recorded as a short-handed goal.
- Brian Rolston, 33
- Mike Modano, 29
- Todd Marchant, 28
- Martin St. Louis, 28
- Daniel Alfredsson, 22
- Radek Dvorak, 22
- Owen Nolan,[11] 22
- Kris Draper, 21
- Marian Hossa, 21
- Mike Grier, 20
- Mike Richards, 20
- Steve Sullivan, 20
- Mark Recchi, 18
- Marco Sturm, 18
- Craig Conroy, 17
- Paul Kariya, 17
- John Madden, 17
- Ethan Moreau, 17
- Michal Handzus, 16
- Miroslav Satan, 16
- Antoine Vermette, 16
Regular season game-winning goals (active)
- Teemu Selanne, 97
- Mike Modano, 92
- Mark Recchi, 85
- Patrik Elias, 70
- Jarome Iginla, 70
- Alexei Kovalev, 66
- Brian Rolston, 66
- Daniel Alfredsson, 62
- Jason Arnott, 60
- Pavol Demitra, 59
- Patrick Marleau, 59
- Marian Hossa, 58
- Milan Hejduk, 56
- Dany Heatley,[5] 53
- Paul Kariya, 53
- Owen Nolan,[11] 53
- Jamie Langenbrunner, 52
- Vincent Lecavalier, 50
- Miroslav Satan, 50
Regular season overtime goals (active)
If a game is tied after regulation time (which lasts three 20-minutes periods), there will be a period of "overtime" to decide the winner. The player who scores during this extra time is given the overtime goal. All overtime in the NHL is sudden death—meaning the first team to score is the winner—so the player who scores in overtime also has the game-winning goal.
- Patrik Elias, 15
- Olli Jokinen, 12
- Brendan Morrison, 10
- Pavol Demitra, 9
- Milan Hejduk, 9
- Mike Modano, 9
- Teemu Selanne, 9
- Ilya Kovalchuk, 8
- Marc Savard, 8
- Joe Thornton, 8
- Daniel Briere, 7
- Marian Hossa, 7
- Tomas Kaberle, 7
- Saku Koivu, 7
- Alexei Kovalev, 7
- Vyacheslav Kozlov, 7
- Alexander Ovechkin, 7
- Daniel Sedin, 7
Regular season assists (active)
- Mark Recchi, 922
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 809
- Mike Modano, 802
- Doug Weight, 748
- Teemu Selanne, 654
- Joe Thornton, 646
- Daniel Alfredsson, 616
- Paul Kariya, 587
- Alexei Kovalev, 578
- Ray Whitney, 545
- Mathieu Schneider, 520
- Chris Pronger, 509
- Vyacheslav Kozlov, 497
- Marc Savard, 491
- Jason Arnott, 490
- Saku Koivu, 483
- Sergei Gonchar, 482
- Jarome Iginla, 479
- Scott Gomez, 477
- Pavol Demitra, 464
- Owen Nolan,[11] 463
- Brad Richards, 447
- Roman Hamrlik, 442
- Robert Lang, 442
Regular season assists per game (active)
- Minimum 300 assists
- Sidney Crosby, 0.871
- Joe Thornton, 0.706
- Jason Spezza, 0.655
- Pavel Datsyuk, 0.650
- Brad Richards, 0.639
- Marc Savard, 0.628
- Daniel Alfredsson, 0.615
- Doug Weight, 0.613
- Scott Gomez, 0.608
- Henrik Sedin, 0.596
- Paul Kariya, 0.594
- Mark Recchi, 0.587
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 0.573
- Alex Tanguay, 0.560
- Saku Koivu, 0.560
- Dany Heatley,[5] 0.553
- Teemu Selanne, 0.551
- Mike Modano, 0.550
- Pavol Demitra, 0.548
- Martin St. Louis, 0.534
Regular season games played (active)
- Mark Recchi, 1,571
- Mike Modano, 1,459
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 1,412
- Darryl Sydor, 1,291
- Mathieu Schneider, 1,289
- Roman Hamrlik, 1,232
- Alex Kovalev, 1,228
- Doug Weight, 1,220
- Owen Nolan,[11] 1,200
- Teemu Selanne, 1,186
- Vyacheslav Kozlov, 1,182
- Brian Rolston, 1,121
- Todd Marchant, 1,116
- Kris Draper, 1,110
- Adam Foote, 1,107
- Chris Pronger, 1,104
- Jason Arnott, 1,099
Regular season penalty minutes (active)
A penalty is given to a player for committing an infraction during the game. The length of the penalty varies depending on the severity of the offence. The amount of penalty minutes recorded for statistical purposes are:
- minor – 2 minutes
- double minor – 4 minutes
- major – 5 minutes
- misconduct – 10 minutes
- game misconduct – 10 minutes
- Donald Brashear, 2,634
- Brad May, 2,248
- Ian Laperriere, 1,956
- Owen Nolan,[11] 1,793
- Sean O'Donnell, 1,699
- Bryan McCabe, 1,698
- Chris Pronger, 1,536
- Adam Foote, 1,501
- Chris Neil, 1,473
- Brendan Witt, 1,424
- Ed Jovanovski, 1,382
Regular season plus-minus (active)
Plus-minus is a statistic that indicates the relative goal differential when a player is on the ice. If the player is on the ice when his team scores even-strength or short-handed, he is given +1; if he is on the ice when the opposing team scores even-strength or short-handed, he is given -1.
- Nicklas Lidstrom, +432
- Patrik Elias, +198
- Pavel Datsyuk, +176
- Jere Lehtinen, +176
- Chris Pronger, +175
- Brian Rafalski, +167
- Wade Redden, +162
- Daniel Alfredsson, +155
- Alex Tanguay, +155
- Simon Gagne, +143
- Milan Hejduk, +143
- Marian Hossa, +136
- Henrik Sedin, +132
- Joe Thornton, +131
- Henrik Zetterberg, +131
Regular season shots on goal (active)
- Mike Modano, 4,194
- Teemu Selanne, 3,910
- Mark Recchi, 3,688
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 3,552
- Brian Rolston, 3,517
- Paul Kariya, 3,509
- Alex Kovalev, 3,413
- Jarome Iginla, 3,352
- Jason Arnott, 3,149
- Owen Nolan,[11] 3,128
- Mathieu Schneider, 3,092
- Daniel Alfredsson, 2,932
Regular season shooting percentage (active)
Shooting percentage is the percentage of shots on goal which result in a goal.
- Minimum 800 shots
- Alex Tanguay, 18.83 %
- Andrew Brunette, 17.98 %
- Mark Parrish, 17.32 %
- Tomas Holmstrom, 16.89 %
- Thomas Vanek, 16.01 %
- Dany Heatley,[5] 15.66 %
- Brenden Morrow, 15.64 %
- Daniel Briere, 15.54 %
- Teemu Selanne, 15.50 %
- Ryan Malone, 15.37 %
Playoff points (active)
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 175
- Mike Modano, 145
- Mark Recchi, 133
- Chris Pronger, 120
- Patrik Elias, 117
- Alexei Kovalev, 98
- Brian Rafalski, 97
- Scott Gomez, 95
- Marian Hossa, 91
- Daniel Alfredsson, 88
- Chris Drury, 88
- Tomas Holmstrom, 88
- Daniel Briere, 87
Playoff goals (active)
- Mike Modano, 58
- Mark Recchi, 56
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 50
- Chris Drury, 47
- Henrik Zetterberg, 46
- Daniel Alfredsson, 45
- Patrick Marleau, 45
- Alexei Kovalev, 44
- Tomas Holmstrom, 42
- Patrik Elias, 40
- Daniel Briere, 35
- Johan Franzen, 35
- Teemu Selanne, 35
Playoff goals per game (active)
- Alex Ovechkin, 0.714
- Jarome Iginla, 0.518
- Martin St. Louis, 0.511
- Sidney Crosby, 0.484
- Henrik Zetterberg, 0.474
- Evgeni Malkin, 0.468
- Johan Franzen, 0.467
- Patrick Marleau, 0.424
- Daniel Alfredsson, 0.421
- Daniel Briere, 0.407
Playoff powerplay goals (active)
When a team is given a penalty for committing an infraction (such as tripping another player), the offending player must sit in the penalty box, and his team must play with one fewer player on the ice. The penalized team is said to be "short-handed", while the other team has a "powerplay". If a player scores while his team is on the powerplay, this is recorded as a powerplay goal.
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 28
- Mike Modano, 24
- Daniel Alfredsson, 21
- Mark Recchi, 20
- Patrik Elias, 19
- Tomas Holmstrom, 18
- Daniel Briere, 17
- Patrick Marleau, 17
- Henrik Zetterberg, 17
- Evgeni Malkin, 16
Playoff short-handed goals (active)
When a team is given a penalty for committing an infraction (such as tripping another player), the offending player must sit in the penalty box, and his team must play with one fewer player on the ice. The penalized team is said to be "short-handed", while the other team has a "powerplay". If a player scores while his team is short handed, this is recorded as a short-handed goal.
- Brian Rolston, 6
- Kris Draper, 4
- John Madden, 4
- Patrick Marleau, 4
- Dave Bolland, 3
- Daniel Cleary, 3
- Mike Fisher, 3
- Jarome Iginla, 3
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 3
- Todd Marchant, 3
- Rob Niedermayer, 3
- Mike Richards, 3
- Martin St. Louis, 3
Playoff game-winning goals (active)
- Chris Drury, 17
- Mike Modano, 15
- Vyacheslav Kozlov, 12
- Patrick Marleau, 12
- Jamie Langenbrunner, 12
- Daniel Alfredsson, 11
- Daniel Briere, 11
- Johan Franzen, 11
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 11
- Mark Recchi, 10
- Teemu Selanne, 10
Playoff overtime goals (active)
If a game is tied after regulation time (which lasts three 20-minutes periods), there will be a period of "overtime" to decide the winner. The player who scores during this extra time is given the overtime goal. All overtime in the NHL is sudden death—meaning the first team to score is the winner—so the player who scores in overtime also has the game-winning goal.
- Chris Drury, 4
- Brenden Morrow, 3
- Cory Stillman, 3
- Martin St. Louis, 3
- Petr Sykora, 3
- Niclas Wallin, 3
Playoff assists (active)
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 125
- Chris Pronger, 94
- Mike Modano, 87
- Patrik Elias, 77
- Mark Recchi, 77
- Brian Rafalski, 70
- Scott Gomez, 66
- Sergei Gonchar, 59
- Marian Hossa, 57
- Alexei Kovalev, 54
- Jamie Langenbrunner, 53
- Daniel Briere, 52
- Sidney Crosby, 52
- Joe Thornton, 50
Playoff games played (active)
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 247
- Kris Draper, 214
- Mike Modano, 174
- Stephane Yelle, 171
- Adam Foote, 170
- Chris Pronger, 170
- Tomas Holmström, 164
- Mark Recchi, 164
- Darryl Sydor, 155
- Brian Rafalski, 154
- Patrik Elias, 138
Playoff penalty minutes (active)
A penalty is given to a player for committing an infraction during the game. The length of the penalty varies depending on the severity of the offence. The amount of penalty minutes recorded for statistical purposes are:
- minor – 2 minutes
- double minor – 4 minutes
- major – 5 minutes
- misconduct – 10 minutes
- game misconduct – 10 minutes
- Chris Pronger, 322
- Adam Foote, 298
- Kris Draper, 158
- Mathieu Schneider, 155
- Tomas Holmstrom, 152
- Todd Bertuzzi, 131
- Chris Neil, 131
- Mike Modano, 128
- Jamie Langenbrunner, 127
- Colin White, 125
- Sean O'Donnell, 124
Playoff plus-minus (active)
Plus-minus is a statistic that indicates the relative goal differential when a player is on the ice. If the player is on the ice when his team scores even-strength or short-handed, he is given +1; if he is on the ice when the opposing team scores even-strength or short-handed, he is given -1.
- Nicklas Lidstrom, +53
- Chris Pronger, +43
- Brian Rafalski, +43
- Johan Franzen, +37
- Henrik Zetterberg, +35
- Tomas Holmstrom, +26
- Daniel Cleary, +24
- Chris Drury, +24
- Mikael Samuelsson, +23
- Sidney Crosby, +22
- Pavel Datsyuk, +22
- Niklas Kronwall, +22
- Sean O'Donnell, +22
- Jay McKee, +20
Playoff shots on goal (active)
- Nicklas Lidstrom, 616
- Mike Modano, 502
- Marian Hossa, 424
- Chris Pronger, 401
- Patrik Elias, 387
- Henrik Zetterberg, 377
- Mark Recchi, 370
- Scott Gomez, 360
- Daniel Alfredsson, 325
- Alex Kovalev, 325
- Jamie Langenbrunner, 322
- John Madden, 313
Playoff shooting percentage (active)
Shooting percentage is the percentage of shots on goal which result in a goal.
- Minimum 80 shots
- Martin St. Louis, 20.00 %
- Patrick Kane, 19.39 %
- Henrik Sedin, 16.67 %
- Patrick Marleau, 16.67 %
- Dustin Byfuglien, 16.47 %
- Scott Hartnell, 16.13 %
- Maxime Talbot, 16.05 %
- Tomas Holmstrom, 16.03 %
- Jarome Iginla, 15.47 %
- Daniel Briere, 15.42 %
Goaltenders
The statistics listed include the 2009–10 NHL regular season and 2010 playoffs.
All-time leaders (goaltenders)
Active goaltenders (during 2010–11 NHL season) are listed in boldface.
Regular season wins
- Martin Brodeur, 602
- Patrick Roy, 551
- Ed Belfour, 484
- Curtis Joseph, 454
- Terry Sawchuk, 447
- Jacques Plante, 437
- Tony Esposito, 423
- Glenn Hall, 407
- Grant Fuhr, 403
- Chris Osgood, 396
- Dominik Hasek, 389
- Mike Vernon, 385
- John Vanbiesbrouck, 374
- Andy Moog, 372
- Tom Barrasso, 369
- Rogatien Vachon, 355
- Gump Worsley, 335
- Harry Lumley, 330
- Sean Burke, 324
- Nikolai Khabibulin, 306
- Billy Smith, 305
- Olaf Kolzig,[12] 303
- Turk Broda, 302
- Mike Richter, 301
- Ron Hextall, 296
Regular season shutouts
A goaltender achieves a shutout when he does not allow a goal against him, and plays the full game.
- Martin Brodeur, 110
- Terry Sawchuk, 103
- George Hainsworth, 94
- Glenn Hall, 84
- Jacques Plante, 82
- Alex Connell, 81
- Dominik Hasek, 81
- Tiny Thompson, 81
- Ed Belfour, 76
- Tony Esposito, 76
- Lorne Chabot, 73
- Harry Lumley, 71
- Roy Worters, 67
- Patrick Roy, 66
- Turk Broda, 62
- John Ross Roach, 58
- Clint Benedict, 55
- Ed Giacomin, 54
- Bernie Parent, 54
- Curtis Joseph, 51
- Dave Kerr, 51
- Roberto Luongo, 51
- Rogatien Vachon, 51
- Evgeni Nabokov,[13] 50
- Chris Osgood, 50
Regular season goals against average
Goals against average is the average number of goals a goaltender allows over a 60 minute period (the regulation length of a game). It is calculated by multiplying the goals against by 60 minutes, then dividing by the total minutes played.
- Minimum 250 games played
- Alex Connell, 1.912
- George Hainsworth, 1.933
- Chuck Gardiner,[14] 2.024
- Lorne Chabot, 2.028
- Tiny Thompson, 2.077
- Dave Kerr, 2.149
- Dominik Hasek, 2.202
- Martin Brodeur, 2.210
- Ken Dryden, 2.235
- Roy Worters, 2.273
- Roman Turek, 2.306
- Marty Turco, 2.308
- Clint Benedict, 2.315
- Henrik Lundqvist, 2.327
- Gerry McNeil, 2.355
- Bill Durnan, 2.356
- Jacques Plante, 2.379
- Evgeni Nabokov,[13] 2.389
- Manny Legace, 2.410
- Miikka Kiprusoff, 2.439
- John Ross Roach, 2.456
- Cristobal Huet, 2.457
- Chris Osgood, 2.488
- Glenn Hall, 2.493
- Ed Belfour, 2.496
Regular season save percentage
Save percentage is the percentage of shots on goal that a goaltender stops. It is calculated by dividing the number of saves by the number of shots on goal.
- Minimum 250 games played
- Dominik Hasek, .9223
- Roberto Luongo, .9185
- Tim Thomas, .9177
- Henrik Lundqvist, .9175
- Tomas Vokoun, .9163
- Ryan Miller, .9142
- Ilya Bryzgalov, .9140
- Martin Brodeur, .9137
- Miikka Kiprusoff, .9136
- Chris Mason, .9136
- Jean-Sebastien Giguere, .9134
- Cristobal Huet, .9134
- Evgeni Nabokov,[13] .9123
- Manny Fernandez, .9120
- Manny Legace, .9116
- Marty Turco, .9108
- Martin Biron, .9105
- Patrick Roy, .9102
- Dwayne Roloson, .9096
- Guy Hebert, .9092
- Nikolai Khabibulin, .9084
- Jose Theodore, .9083
- Mike Dunham, .9076
- Roman Turek, .9069
- Marc-Andre Fleury, .9065
Playoff wins
- Patrick Roy, 151
- Martin Brodeur, 99
- Grant Fuhr, 92
- Ed Belfour, 88
- Billy Smith, 88
- Ken Dryden, 80
- Mike Vernon, 77
- Chris Osgood, 74
- Jacques Plante, 71
- Andy Moog, 68
- Dominik Hasek, 65
- Curtis Joseph, 63
- Tom Barrasso, 61
- Turk Broda, 60
- Terry Sawchuk, 54
- Gerry Cheevers, 53
- Glenn Hall, 49
- Ron Hextall, 47
- Tony Esposito, 45
- Mike Richter, 41
Playoff shutouts
A goaltender achieves a shutout when he does not allow a goal against him, and plays the full game.
- Martin Brodeur, 23
- Patrick Roy, 23
- Curtis Joseph, 16
- Chris Osgood, 15
- Ed Belfour, 14
- Dominik Hasek, 14
- Jacques Plante, 14
- Turk Broda, 13
- Terry Sawchuk, 12
- Ken Dryden, 10
- Clint Benedict, 9
- Mike Richter, 9
- Gerry Cheevers, 8
- George Hainsworth, 8
- Dave Kerr, 8
- Felix Potvin, 8
- Harry Lumley, 7
- John Ross Roach, 7
- Tiny Thompson, 7
Active leaders (goaltenders)
Regular season wins (active)
- Martin Brodeur, 602
- Chris Osgood, 396
- Nikolai Khabibulin, 306
- Evgeni Nabokov,[13] 293
- Roberto Luongo, 270
- Marty Turco, 262
- Jose Theodore, 245
- Tomas Vokoun, 240
- Miikka Kiprusoff, 239
- Jean-Sebastien Giguere, 220
- Martin Biron, 208
- Patrick Lalime, 200
- Dwayne Roloson, 190
- Manny Legace, 187
- Ryan Miller, 187
Regular season shutouts (active)
A goaltender achieves a shutout when he does not allow a goal against him, and plays the full game.
- Martin Brodeur, 110
- Roberto Luongo, 51
- Evgeni Nabokov,[13] 50
- Chris Osgood, 50
- Nikolai Khabibulin, 41
- Marty Turco, 40
- Tomas Vokoun, 38
- Patrick Lalime, 35
- Jean-Sebastien Giguere, 34
- Miikka Kiprusoff, 34
- Jose Theodore, 29
- Martin Biron, 26
- Cristobal Huet, 24
- Manny Legace, 24
- Henrik Lundqvist, 24
- Dwayne Roloson, 24
Regular season goals against average (active)
Goals against average is the average number of goals a goaltender allows over a 60 minute period (the regulation length of a game). It is calculated by multiplying the goals against by 60 minutes, then dividing by the total minutes played.
- Minimum 250 games played
- Martin Brodeur, 2.210
- Marty Turco, 2.308
- Henrik Lundqvist, 2.327
- Evgeni Nabokov,[13] 2.389
- Manny Legace, 2.410
- Miikka Kiprusoff, 2.439
- Cristobal Huet, 2.457
- Chris Osgood, 2.488
- Jean-Sebastien Giguere, 2.516
- Chris Mason, 2.541
- Ilya Bryzgalov, 2.546
- Tomas Vokoun, 2.558
- Ryan Miller, 2.567
- Roberto Luongo, 2.569
- Patrick Lalime, 2.574
Regular season save percentage (active)
Save percentage is the percentage of shots on goal that a goaltender stops. It is calculated by dividing the number of saves by the number of shots on goal.
- Minimum 250 games played
- Roberto Luongo, .9185
- Tim Thomas, .9177
- Henrik Lundqvist, .9175
- Tomas Vokoun, .9163
- Ryan Miller, .9142
- Ilya Bryzgalov, .9140
- Martin Brodeur, .9137
- Miikka Kiprusoff, .9136
- Chris Mason, .9136
- Jean-Sebastien Giguere, .9134
- Cristobal Huet, .9134
- Evgeni Nabokov,[13] .9123
- Manny Legace, .9116
- Marty Turco, .9108
- Martin Biron, .9105
Playoff wins (active)
- Martin Brodeur, 99
- Chris Osgood, 74
- Nikolai Khabibulin, 39
- Jean-Sebastien Giguere, 33
- Evgeni Nabokov,[13] 32
- Marc-Andre Fleury, 31
- Miikka Kiprusoff, 25
- Cam Ward, 23
- Patrick Lalime, 21
- Marty Turco, 21
- Ryan Miller, 20
- Jose Theodore, 19
- Dwayne Roloson, 18
- Ray Emery, 18
- Antti Niemi, 16
Playoff shutouts (active)
A goaltender achieves a shutout when he does not allow a goal against him, and plays the full game.
- Martin Brodeur, 23
- Chris Osgood, 15
- Jean-Sebastien Giguere, 6
- Patrick Lalime, 5
- Marty Turco, 4
- Cam Ward, 4
- Ilya Bryzgalov, 3
- Ray Emery, 3
- Marc-Andre Fleury, 3
- Brent Johnson, 3
- Henrik Lundqvist, 3
- Michael Leighton, 3
Coaches
The statistics listed include the 2009–10 NHL regular season and 2010 playoffs.
All-time leaders (coaches)
Active coaches (during 2010–11 NHL season) are listed in boldface.
Regular season games coached
- Scotty Bowman, 2,141
- Al Arbour, 1,607
- Dick Irvin, Sr., 1,449
- Pat Quinn, 1,400
- Mike Keenan, 1,386
- Ron Wilson,[15] 1,255
- Bryan Murray, 1,239
- Jacques Lemaire, 1,213
- Jacques Martin, 1,180
- Billy Reay, 1,102
- Marc Crawford, 1,069
- Ken Hitchcock, 1,041
- Brian Sutter, 1,028
- Pat Burns, 1019
- Jacques Demers, 1007
- Roger Neilson, 1000
- Joel Quenneville, 999
- Lindy Ruff, 984
- Paul Maurice, 977
- Sid Abel, 964
- Jack Adams, 964
Regular season coaching wins
- Scotty Bowman, 1,244
- Al Arbour, 782
- Dick Irvin, Sr., 692
- Pat Quinn, 684
- Mike Keenan, 672
- Bryan Murray, 620
- Jacques Lemaire, 588
- Ron Wilson,[15] 582
- Jacques Martin, 556
- Billy Reay, 542
- Joel Quenneville, 535
- Ken Hitchcock, 533
- Marc Crawford, 507
- Pat Burns, 501
- Toe Blake, 500
- Glen Sather, 497
- Lindy Ruff, 483
- Roger Neilson, 460
- Brian Sutter, 451
- Terry Murray, 440
Regular season coaching points percentage
Points percentage is determined by the number of points a team earns (equal to the number of ties and overtime losses, plus twice the number of games) divided by the total possible points (equal to twice the number of games).
- Minimum 200 games coached
- Tom Johnson, .738
- Bruce Boudreau, .689
- Scotty Bowman, .657
- Claude Ruel, .648
- Mike Babcock, .642
- Toe Blake, .634
- Floyd Smith, .626
- Dave Tippett, .622
- Fred Shero, .612
- Gerry Cheevers, .604
- Dave Lewis, .604
- Joel Quenneville, .604
- Glen Sather, .602
- Don Cherry, .601
- Brent Sutter, .600
- Tommy Ivan, .599
- Randy Carlyle, .598
- Claude Julien, .591
- Jimmy Skinner, .591
- Cecil Hart, .590
Playoff games coached
- Scotty Bowman, 353
- Al Arbour, 209
- Dick Irvin, 188
- Pat Quinn, 183
- Mike Keenan, 173
- Pat Burns, 149
- Glen Sather, 126
- Ken Hitchcock, 121
- Toe Blake, 119
- Billy Reay, 117
- Jacques Lemaire, 112
- Bryan Murray, 112
- Fred Shero, 110
- Roger Neilson, 106
- Jack Adams, 105
Playoff coaching wins
- Scotty Bowman, 223
- Al Arbour, 123
- Dick Irvin, 100
- Mike Keenan, 96
- Pat Quinn, 94
- Glen Sather, 89
- Toe Blake, 82
- Pat Burns, 78
- Ken Hitchcock, 66
- Fred Shero, 63
- Jacques Lemaire, 60
- Mike Babcock, 58
- Billy Reay, 57
- Jacques Demers, 55
- Jack Adams, 52
- Bryan Murray, 52
- Lindy Ruff, 52
Playoff coaching win percentage
- Minimum 25 games coached
- Glen Sather, .705
- Toe Blake, .689
- Claude Ruel, .667
- Mike Babcock, .644
- Scotty Bowman, .632
- Jean Perron, .625
- Dan Bylsma, .622
- Hap Day, .613
- Randy Carlyle, .607
- Tommy Gorman, .600
- Larry Robinson, .596
- Lindy Ruff, .591
- Al Arbour, .589
- Bob Hartley, .583
- Mike Milbury, .575
- Fred Shero, .573
Stanley Cups
- Scotty Bowman, 9
- Toe Blake, 8
- Hap Day, 5
- Al Arbour, 4
- Punch Imlach, 4
- Dick Irvin, Sr., 4
- Glen Sather, 4
- Jack Adams, 3
- Pete Green, 3
- Tommy Ivan, 3
Active leaders (coaches)
Regular season games coached (active)
- Ron Wilson,[15] 1,255
- Jacques Lemaire, 1,213
- Jacques Martin, 1,180
- Marc Crawford, 1,069
- Joel Quenneville, 999
- Lindy Ruff, 984
- Paul Maurice, 977
- Barry Trotz, 902
Regular season coaching wins (active)
- Jacques Lemaire, 588
- Ron Wilson,[15] 582
- Jacques Martin, 556
- Joel Quenneville, 535
- Marc Crawford, 507
- Lindy Ruff, 483
- Terry Murray, 440
- Paul Maurice, 412
Regular season coaching points percentage (active)
Points percentage is determined by the number of points a team earns (equal to the number of ties and overtime losses, plus twice the number of games) divided by the total possible points (equal to twice the number of games).
- Minimum 200 games coached
- Bruce Boudreau, .689
- Mike Babcock, .642
- Dave Tippett, .622
- Joel Quenneville, .604
- Brent Sutter, .600
- Randy Carlyle, .598
- Claude Julien, .591
- Lindy Ruff, .562
Playoff games coached (active)
- Jacques Lemaire, 112
- Joel Quenneville, 104
- Ron Wilson,[15] 95
- Mike Babcock, 90
- Terry Murray, 89
- Lindy Ruff, 88
- Jacques Martin, 85
- Marc Crawford, 83
Playoff coaching wins (active)
- Jacques Lemaire, 60
- Mike Babcock, 58
- Lindy Ruff, 52
- Joel Quenneville, 51
- Ron Wilson,[15] 47
- Terry Murray, 46
- Marc Crawford, 43
- Jacques Martin, 38
Stanley Cups (active)
- Mike Babcock, 1
- Dan Bylsma, 1
- Randy Carlyle, 1
- Marc Crawford, 1
- Peter Laviolette, 1
- Jacques Lemaire, 1
- Joel Quenneville, 1
- John Tortorella, 1
See also
- List of NHL statistical leaders by country
- List of NHL players with 1000 points
- List of NHL players with 1000 assists
- List of NHL players with 500 goals
- List of NHL players with 100 point seasons
- List of NHL players with 50 goal seasons
- List of NHL players with 50 goals in 50 games
- List of NHL players with 1000 games played
Notes and references
- ^ a b c Stan Mikita was born in Czechoslovakia, in what is now Slovakia. His family moved to Canada when he was young, and he played internationally for Canada.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Brett Hull was born in Canada but played internationally for the United States.
- ^ a b c d e f g Peter Stastny was born in Czechoslovakia, in what is now Slovakia. He played internationally with three countries (in order): Czechoslovakia, Canada, and Slovakia.
- ^ a b c Peter Bondra was born in the Ukrainian SSR of the former Soviet Union. However, his family moved to their native Czechoslovakia (now Slovakia) when he was young, and he represented Slovakia internationally.
- ^ a b c d e f g Dany Heatley was born in West Germany (now Germany) to Canadian parents, and represents Canada internationally.
- ^ a b c Mark Howe was born in the United States, and represented both the U.S. and Canada internationally.
- ^ a b c Steve Thomas was born in England, United Kingdom but represented Canada internationally.
- ^ a b Willi Plett was born in Paraguay but moved to Canada as a boy.
- ^ a b Paul MacLean was born in France but raised in Canada. He represented Canada internationally.
- ^ Steve Smith was born in Scotland, United Kingdom but represented Canada internationally.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Owen Nolan was born in Northern Ireland, United Kingdom but was raised in Canada, with whom he played internationally.
- ^ Olaf Kölzig was born in South Africa, but represents Germany internationally.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Evgeni Nabokov was born in the Kazakh SSR of the former Soviet Union, and represented Kazakhstan early in his career. However, he now represents Russia internationally.
- ^ Chuck Gardiner was born in Scotland, United Kingdom, but came to Canada at a young age.
- ^ a b c d e f Ron Wilson was born in Canada but coaches internationally for United States.
- Virtually all players on this list from Russia, Kazakhstan, or the Ukraine were actually born in the Soviet Union—in the Russian SFSR, Kazakh SSR, and Ukrainian SSR, respectively. The Soviet Union officially dissolved at the end of 1991. No players born strictly in Russia, Kazakhstan, or the Ukraine have yet entered the NHL.
- Virtually all players on this list from the Czech Republic or Slovakia were actually born in Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia officially dissolved at the end of 1992. No players born strictly in the Czech Republic or Slovakia have yet entered the NHL.
- Career player statistics tables from NHL.com
- Leaders and Records Index from hockey-reference.com
- NHL Coach Register from hockey-reference.com