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Canadians Legend Guy Damien Lafleur (Habs Blonde Demon)

Canadians Legend Guy Damien Lafleur

Canadians legend Guy Damien Lafleur (born September 20, 1951) is a former professional ice hockey player who played right-wing in the NHL from 1971-1991, with the Montreal Canadians, New York Rangers, and Quebec Nordiques. He is a five-time Stanley Cup winner in 1973, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, all with the Montreal Canadians. In 2017 he was named one of the ‘100 Greatest NHL Players‘ in history.

Childhood

Lafleur became enamored with hockey after receiving a hockey stick for Christmas when he was five years old. As a youngster, he played at the Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament from 1962-64, scoring a tournament record 64 points. He would later play for the Quebec Junior Aces of the Quebec Junior Hockey League (QJHL) from 1966-69; in his final year with the Aces, he scored 50 goals and 110 points in only 49 games. As a teenager, in 1969, he joined the Quebec Remparts of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, where he won a Memorial Cup in 1971, scoring 130 goals and 209 points in just 62 games. The Memorial Cup is one of the hardest trophies to win as 60 teams participate, with players aged 16-21.

Canadians Legend Guy Damien Lafleur

Montreal Canadians

Guy Lafleur was picked first overall by the Montreal Canadians in the 1971 NHL Entry Draft. Sam Pollock, who was Montreal’s general manager, was adamant about obtaining one of the two top picks in 1971, being Guy Lafleur or Marcel Dionne; to have access to those players, Pollock convinced Charles Finley, owner of the California Golden Seals, to trade Francois Lacombe and their 1971 first-round pick to Montreal in exchange for Montreals 1970 first-round pick and defenseman Ernie Hicke.

In his first three years in Montreal, Lafleur struggled to meet expectations. Consequently, his confidence suffered; by contrast, Marcel Dionne, the number two pick in Detroit, was an immediate success leading his team in scoring. Although Lafleurs numbers weren’t terrible in his first three years, they do not compare to year four and beyond. From 1974-1980 Lafleur scored 50 goals or more in six consecutive seasons and never registered less than 119 points in any of those seasons, his most productive campaign was in 1976-77 when he won the NHL scoring race defeating second-place finisher Marcel Dionne by 14 points, scoring 56 goals and 136 points, in 1977-78 he reached a career-high finding the back of the net 60 times.

Canadians Legend Guy Damien Lafleur

After winning a fourth straight Stanley Cup in 1979, several key Canadians retired from hockey, Ken Dryden and Jacques Lemaire, resulting in the team’s slow decline, they would lose their bid for a fifth consecutive championship in 1979-80, losing to the Minnesota North Stars in seven games in round two. It was also the last time that Lafleur would score 50 goals or more than 100 points. From 1980-85 Lafleur’s numbers and ice time began to dwindle, having nearly been killed in a car accident on March 24, 1981, when he fell asleep at the wheel and crashed into a fence, causing a metal post to severe part of his ear. When ex-teammate Jacques Lemaire took over head coaching duties, he incorporated a strict defensive style of play that Lafleur struggled to accept; this created a deep and growing divide between them. Eventually, Lafleur asked for a trade, but General Manager Serge Savard declined to trade him for fan backlash fear. With injuries, limited playing time, in-fighting with head coach Jacques Lemaire and the emergence of superstars Mike Bossy and Wayne Gretzky, Lafleur became exasperated and retired from hockey.

Retirement

Lafleur’s retirement was mainly due to his acrimonious relationship with head coach Jacques Lemaire. Lafleur felt that he was still a valuable asset and could produce offense that was more than enough to offset any defensive shortcomings; many of his team-mates agreed and felt that he retired far too soon. Superstar defenseman and teammate Larry Robinson tried to convince him to stay. Still, Guy was at the end of his rope with what he felt to be Lemaire’s stifling defensive style and his diminished ice-time that effectively crippled his electrifying talents “I am empty. I have no more energy left for hockey. Even if I had a big offer, I can’t do it anymore.” He told his wife. Lafleur’s last game was against the Detroit Red Wings; the next day, on November 26, 1984, Serge Savard held a press conference at the Forum, making it official.

Lafleur admitted that he decided to quit hockey after the second period of the Detroit game, after again requesting more ice-time. Apparently, Lemaire promised to give him more ice-time but didn’t deliver; Lafleur guesses that he played 6 minutes that game. Nineteen games into the 1984-85 season, Lafleur had 2 goals and five points.

NHL Comeback

Canadians Legend Guy Damien Lafleur

In 1988 Lafleur returned to the NHL, this time in a Rangers jersey. In an exhibition game against the Edmonton Oilers, he impressed Mark Messier so much that the Oilers Star convinced Rangers general manager Phil Esposito to sign Lafleur to a one-year contract. In his return to Montreal, Lafleur scored 2 goals in a 7-5 loss; every time he touched the puck, Hab fans would erupt in chants of “Guy, Guy, Guy,” Lafleur played his final two seasons in Quebec City for the Nordiques under his former Rangers coach, Michel Bergeron “Le Tigre.”

Nearing the end of his NHL career, Lafleur turned down an offer to join Wayne Gretzky and play for the Los Angeles Kings. In the 1991 Expansion Draft, he received an offer to play for the Minnesota North Stars, but he had decided to retire from professional hockey for the second and last time.

Cancer Diagnosis

On September 26, 2019, Lafleur underwent quadruple-bypass heart surgery. On November 28, 2019, he had a second surgery to remove the upper lobe of a lung and lymph nodes due to his cancer diagnosis. In October 2020, he announced that his lung cancer had returned; Dr. Mustapha Tehfe, oncologist-hematologist at the hospital, said Lafleur would begin immunotherapy and chemotherapy.

Lafleur has joined forces with the Centre Hospitalier de L’Universite de Montreal (CHUM) foundation as an ambassador to help raise money for cancer research in tandem with the Guy Lafleur Fund.

Many other NHL celebrities have pledged their support to aid Lafleur in his fight; Wayne Gretzky, Patrick Roy, Mario Lemieux and Yvon Cournoyer.

Lafleur announced recently that he is in good spirits due to his cancerous mass having shrunk by 30% since his treatments began.

Movie

In the fall of 2020 Christal Films announced that they are currently developing a movie about the life of Guy Lafleur. Producer Christian Larouche has been giving the go-ahead from the Lafleur family. The script will be written by Luc Picard, a director has yet to be determined.

Guy, Guy, Guy.

Achievements

  • 5x Stanley Cup champion (1973, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979)
  • 3x Art Ross Trophy winner (1976, 1977, 1978)
  • 2x Hart Memorial Trophy winner (1977, 1978)
  • 3x Lester B. Pearson Award winner (1976, 1977, 1978)
  • 6x First-Team All-Star Right Winger (1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981)
  • 1x Conn Smythe Trophy winner (1977)

Regular season and playoffs

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1966–67Québec Junior AcesQJHL81120
1967–68Québec Junior AcesQJHL43301949
1968–69Québec Junior AcesQJHL49506011083
1969–70Quebec RempartsQJHL56103671701051525184334
1969–70Quebec RempartsM-Cup1218183623
1970–71Quebec RempartsQMJHL62130792091351422214324
1970–71Quebec RempartsM-Cup7951418
1971–72Montreal CanadiensNHL732935644861452
1972–73Montreal CanadiensNHL6928275551173589
1973–74Montreal CanadiensNHL732135562960114
1974–75Montreal CanadiensNHL70536611937111271915
1975–76Montreal CanadiensNHL8056691253613710172
1976–77Montreal CanadiensNHL8056801362014917266
1977–78Montreal CanadiensNHL786072132261510112116
1978–79Montreal CanadiensNHL80527712928161013230
1979–80Montreal CanadiensNHL7450751251233140
1980–81Montreal CanadiensNHL512743702930112
1981–82Montreal CanadiensNHL662757842452134
1982–83Montreal CanadiensNHL682749761230222
1983–84Montreal CanadiensNHL8030407019120335
1984–85Montreal CanadiensNHL1923510
1988–89New York RangersNHL671827451241010
1989–90Quebec NordiquesNHL391222344
1990–91Quebec NordiquesNHL591216282
NHL totals1,1265607931,353399128587613467

International

YearTeamEvent GPGAPtsPIM
1976CanadaCC715612
1981CanadaWC71012
1981CanadaCC729110
Senior totals214141814

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