When the Light Went Red: The Climb to 895

@twigsplit May 15, 2025 Post #5

There’s no clean answer to who the greatest goal scorer in NHL history is, and that’s part of what makes the debate so rich. It’s not a stat you can sum up with one number. Raw totals, goals per game, playoff dominance, longevity, efficiency, era context, each tells a different story. Depending on how you weigh those variables, the crown could belong to four very different players: Mike Bossy, Mario Lemieux, Wayne Gretzky, or Alex Ovechkin.

Measuring Greatness

On April 6, 2025, Alex Ovechkin scored his 895th career goal, passing Wayne Gretzky for the most in NHL history. The goal came in the second period on the power play, a familiar wrist shot from the left circle. He did it in his twentieth season, matching Gretzky in games played, but with a different kind of flair: fewer assists and more muscle. When you zoom in on goal-scoring titles, Ovechkin’s dominance over his peers and place among the greats becomes apparent.

Ovechkin’s run since 2007–08 is the modern standout, hitting 50+ goals consistently while the rest of the league struggles to crack 40 most years. The game is tighter, and goalies are athletic freaks, yet he’s still outpacing everyone.

He’s won the Rocket Richard Trophy a record nine times (2007–08, 2008–09, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2018–19, 2019–20, 2021–22). Before 1998–99, there wasn’t an official “goal-scoring title” trophy, but we can count the times a player led the league in goals.

Player Year Team Games Goals Points Runner-Up Goals
Leon Draisaitl 2024–25 Edmonton 71 52 106 William Nylander 45
Auston Matthews 2023–24 Toronto 81 69 107 Sam Reinhart 57
Connor McDavid 2022–23 Edmonton 82 64 153 David Pastrňák 61
Auston Matthews 2021–22 Toronto 73 60 106 Leon Draisaitl 55
Auston Matthews 2020–21 Toronto 52 41 66 Connor McDavid 33
David Pastrňák (Tie) 2019–20 Boston 70 48 95 Alex Ovechkin (Tie) 48
Alex Ovechkin 2018–19 Washington 81 51 89 Leon Draisaitl 50
Alex Ovechkin 2017–18 Washington 82 49 87 Patrik Laine 44
Sidney Crosby 2016–17 Pittsburgh 75 44 89 Nikita Kucherov/Auston Matthews 40
Alex Ovechkin 2015–16 Washington 79 50 71 Patrick Kane 46
Alex Ovechkin 2014–15 Washington 81 53 81 Steven Stamkos 43
Alex Ovechkin 2013–14 Washington 78 51 79 Corey Perry 43
Alex Ovechkin 2012–13 Washington 48 32 56 Steven Stamkos 29
Steven Stamkos 2011–12 Tampa Bay 82 60 97 Evgeni Malkin 50
Corey Perry 2010–11 Anaheim 82 50 98 Steven Stamkos 45
Sidney Crosby (Tie) 2009–10 Pittsburgh 81 51 109 Steven Stamkos (Tie) 51
Alex Ovechkin 2008–09 Washingtons 79 56 110 Jeff Carter 46
Alex Ovechkin 2007–08 Washington 82 65 112 Ilya Kovalchuk 52
Vincent Lecavalier 2006–07 Tampa Bay 82 52 108 Dany Heatley 50
Jonathan Cheechoo 2005–06 San Jose 82 56 93 Jaromír Jágr 54
Ilya Kovalchuk 2003–04 Atlanta 81 41 87 Rick Nash/Jarome Iginla 41
Milan Hejduk 2002–03 Colorado 82 50 98 Markus Näslund 48
Jarome Iginla 2001–02 Calgary 82 52 96 Mats Sundin/Bill Guerin/Glen Murray 41
Pavel Bure 2000–01 Florida 82 59 92 Joe Sakic 54
Pavel Bure 1999–2000 Florida 74 58 94 Owen Nolan 44
Teemu Selänne 1998–99 Anaheim 75 47 107 Jaromír Jágr/Tony Amonte/Alexei Yashin 44
Teemu Selänne 1997–98 Washington 73 52 86 Peter Bondra 52
Keith Tkachuk 1996–97 Phoenix 81 52 86 Teemu Selänne 51
Mario Lemieux 1995–96 Pittsburgh 70 69 161 Jaromír Jágr 62
Peter Bondra 1994–95 Washington 47 34 43 Jaromír Jágr 32
Pavel Bure 1993–94 Vancouver 76 60 107 Brett Hull 57
Teemu Selänne (Tie) 1992–93 Winnipeg 84 76 132 Alexander Mogilny (Tie) 76
Brett Hull 1991–92 St. Louis 73 70 109 Kevin Stevens 54
Brett Hull 1990–91 St. Louis 78 86 131 Theo Fleury/Cam Neely/Steve Yzerman 45
Brett Hull 1989–90 St. Louis 80 72 113 Steve Yzerman 62
Mario Lemieux 1988–89 Pittsburgh 76 85 199 Bernie Nichols 70
Mario Lemieux 1987–88 Pittsburgh 77 70 168 Craig Simpson 56
Wayne Gretzky 1986–87 Edmonton 79 62 183 Tim Kerr 58
Jari Kurri 1985–86 Edmonton 78 68 131 Mike Bossy 61
Wayne Gretzky 1984–85 Edmonton 80 73 208 Jari Kurri 71
Wayne Gretzky 1983–84 Edmonton 74 87 205 Michel Goulet 56
Wayne Gretzky 1982–83 Edmonton 80 71 196 Lanny McDonald 66
Wayne Gretzky 1981–82 Edmonton 80 92 212 Mike Bossy 64
Mike Bossy 1980–81 New York 79 68 119 Marcel Dionne 58
Charlie Simmer (Tie) 1979–80 Buffalo 76 56 89 Danny Gare/Blaine Stoughton (Tie) 56
Charlie Simmer 1979–80 Los Angeles 64 56 101 Danny Gare 56
Blaine Stoughton 1979–80 Hartford 80 56 100 Charlie Simmer 56
Mike Bossy 1978–79 New York 80 69 126 Marcel Dionne 59
Guy Lafleur 1977–78 Montreal 78 60 132 Mike Bossy 53
Steve Shutt 1976–77 Montreal 80 60 105 Guy Lafleur 56
Reggie Leach 1975–76 Montreal 80 61 91 Guy Lafleur 56
Phil Esposito 1974–75 Boston 78 61 127 Guy Lafleur 53
Phil Esposito 1973–74 Boston 78 68 145 Rick Martin 52
Phil Esposito 1972–73 Boston 78 55 130 Mickey Redmond 52
Phil Esposito 1971–72 Boston 76 66 133 Vic Hadfield/Bobby Hull 50
Phil Esposito 1970–71 Boston 78 76 152 Johnny Bucyk 51
Phil Esposito 1969–70 Boston 76 43 99 Gary Unger 42
Bobby Hull 1968–69 Chicago 74 58 107 Phil Esposito 49
Bobby Hull 1967–68 Chicago 71 44 75 Stan Mikita 40
Bobby Hull 1966–67 Chicago 66 52 80 Stan Mikita 35
Bobby Hull 1965–66 Chicago 65 54 97 Frank Mahovlich 32
Norm Ullman 1964–65 Detroit 70 42 83 Bobby Hull 39
Bobby Hull 1963–64 Chicago 70 43 87 Kenny Wharram/Stan Mikita 39
Gordie Howe 1962–63 Detroit 70 38 86 Camille Henry 37
Bobby Hull 1961–62 Chicago 70 50 84 Gordie Howe/Claude Provost/Frank Mahovlich 33
Bernie Geoffrion 1960–61 Montreal 64 50 95 Frank Mahovlich 48
Bronco Horvath (Tie) 1959–60 Boston 68 39 69 Bobby Hull (Tie) 39
Jean Béliveau 1958–59 Montreal 64 45 91 Dickie Moore 41
Dickie Moore 1957–58 Montreal 70 36 84 Gordie Howe 33
Gordie Howe 1956–57 Detroit 70 44 89 Jean Béliveau/Maurice Richard 33
Jean Béliveau 1955–56 Montreal 70 47 88 Gordie Howe/Maurice Richard 38
Maurice Richard (Tie) 1954–55 Montreal 67 38 59 Bernie Geoffrion (Tie) 38
Maurice Richard 1953–54 Montreal 70 37 67 Gordie Howe 33
Gordie Howe 1952–53 Detroit 70 49 95 Ted Lindsay 32
Gordie Howe 1951–52 Detroit 70 47 86 Bill Mosienko 31
Gordie Howe 1950–51 Detroit 70 43 86 Maurice Richard 42
Maurice Richard 1949–50 Montreal 70 43 65 Gordie Howe 35
Sid Abel 1948–49 Detroit 60 28 54 Jim Conacher/Roy Conacher/Ted Lindsay/Harry Watson 26
Ted Lindsay 1947–48 Detroit 60 33 52 Elmer Lach 30
Maurice Richard 1946–47 Montreal 60 45 71 Bobby Bauer 30
Gaye Stewart 1945–46 Toronto 50 37 52 Max Bentley 31
Maurice Richard 1944–45 Montreal 50 50 73 Herb Cain 32
Doug Bentley 1943–44 Chicago 50 38 77 Herb Cain/Lorne Carr/Carl Liscombe 36
Doug Bentley 1942–43 Chicago 50 33 73 Joe Benoit 30
Lynn Patrick 1941–42 New York 47 32 55 Roy Conacher/Red Hamill/Bryan Hextall Sr 24
Bryan Hextall 1940–41 New York 48 26 47 Roy Conacher/Sweeney Schriner 24
Bryan Hextall 1939–40 New York 48 24 40 Woody Dumart/Milt Schmidt 22
Roy Conacher 1938–39 Boston 47 26 37 Toe Blake/Alex Shibicky 24
Gordie Drillon 1937–38 Toronto 48 26 52 Georges Mantha 23
Larry Aurie (Tie) 1936–37 Detroit 45 23 42 Nels Stewart (Tie) 23
Charlie Conacher (Tie) 1935–36 Toronto 44 23 38 Bill Thoms (Tie) 23
Charlie Conacher 1934–35 Toronto 48 36 57 Cecil Dillon 25
Charlie Conacher 1933–34 Toronto 48 32 52 Marty Barry 27
Bill Cook 1932–33 New York 48 28 50 Busher Jackson 27
Charlie Conacher 1931–32 Toronto 44 34 48 Bill Cook 33
Charlie Conacher 1930–31 Toronto 38 31 43 Bill Cook 30
Cooney Weiland 1929–30 Boston 44 43 73 Dit Clapper 41
Ace Bailey 1928–29 Toronto 44 22 32 Nels Stewart 21
Howie Morenz 1927–28 Montreal 43 33 51 Aurel Joliat 28
Bill Cook 1926–27 New York 44 33 37 Babe Dye/Howie Morenz 25
Nels Stewart 1925–26 Montreal 36 34 42 Carson Cooper 28
Babe Dye 1924–25 Toronto 29 38 46 Aurel Joliat 30
Cy Denneny 1923–24 Ottawa 22 22 24 Babe Dye 17
Babe Dye 1922–23 Toronto 22 27 39 Billy Boucher 23
Punch Broadbent (Tie) 1921–22 Ottawa 24 31 45 Babe Dye (Tie) 31
Babe Dye 1920–21 Toronto 24 35 40 Cy Denneny 34
Joe Malone 1919–20 Quebec 24 39 49 Newsy Lalonde 37
Newsy Lalonde 1918–19 Montreal 17 23 32 Odie Cleghorn 21
Joe Malone 1917–18 Montreal 20 44 48 Cy Denneny 36

Bobby Hull tops everyone else with seven (1959–60, 1961–62, 1963–64, 1965–66, 1966–67, 1967–68, 1968–69), and Phil Esposito won six titles in a row (1970–71 to 1975–76).

Wayne Gretzky led the league in goals five times (1981–82, 1983–84, 1984–85, 1986–87, 1990–91). Before the modern era, Maurice 'Rocket' Richard, Gordie 'Mr. Hockey' Howe, and Charlie Conacher each matched that total. Mario Lemieux led the league four times.

Ovechkin’s nine clearly stands alone. No one in NHL history has led the league in goals more often. He won his first title in 2007–08 and his last in 2019–20, meaning those nine wins came over 13 seasons, an even more absurd stat.

Among his peers, the gap is glaring. Over those 13 seasons, only Sidney Crosby and Steven Stamkos won more than once, and both trail Ovechkin’s career total by over 250 goals. Historically, his 65 goals in 2007–08 was the most in a season since Lemieux’s 69 in 1995–96 and wasn’t broken again until Auston Matthews scored 69 in 2023–24.

Chasing the Crown

When looking at the full scope of separation from their peers, it’s Gretzky’s statistical dominance that is unparalleled, with his assist total alone outpacing everyone else’s total points. He finished his career with 894 goals and 1,963 assists for a total of 2,857 points in 1,487 games. It’s worth repeating: if you strip away all his goals, every single one, he’d still have the most points ever, from assists alone.

Even against today’s stars, it holds up. Crosby has 1,687 points (625 goals, 1,062 assists) in 1,352 games as of now, and Gretzky’s assists alone still top that total by nearly 300 points. Connor McDavid, the current pace-setter, has 1,082 points (361 goals, 721 assists) in 712 games, insane production, but Gretzky’s assist total is almost double that, achieved over a longer career but still in fewer games than most legends played.

The “no goals, still the best” stat is a testament to Gretzky’s playmaking genius. He didn’t just score; he elevated everyone around him. His single-season record of 163 assists in 1985–86 is more than every other player’s career high in points, except for Lemieux, who topped it twice.

For perspective, McDavid’s career high is 153 points (2022–23), and Crosby’s is 120 (2006–07), with a career-high 138-point pace in an injury-shortened 2011–12. Gretzky’s assist peak dwarfs those. There is no argument as to who the greatest player is, and Gretzky being at the top of the record books for goals was more a byproduct of his overall greatness than of his pure goal-scoring ability.

Ovechkin passing him in goals is a monumental achievement and a tribute to his durability and shot, but Gretzky’s overall point record is a different beast. The game has evolved, with better goaltending and tighter defenses, and even in his era, Gretzky lapped the field. He was four points away from having five straight 200-point seasons. Enough said.

These records are unlikely to be broken. The modern NHL doesn’t produce 200-point seasons anymore. McDavid’s 153 was a throwback, yet still 59 shy of Gretzky’s 212. A player would need Gretzky’s vision, longevity, and an era shift back to wide-open hockey. For now, Ovechkin may take the goal crown, but Gretzky’s point totals and throne remain untouchable.

Numbers Without Limits

Looking at the full history of goal-scoring titles, a few things really jump out. First, the early days of the NHL, back in the late 1910s and 1920s, were obviously a different time. Joe Malone put up 44 goals in just 20 games in 1917–18, which is insane efficiency. Assists weren’t even tracked properly back then, so the point totals look modest, but those goal numbers were huge for the time.

Then fast-forward to what could be called the peak scoring era, the 1980s and early ‘90s. That’s when the floodgates opened. Gretzky’s 92 goals in 1981–82 is still the gold standard, and Brett Hull’s 86 in 1990–91 wasn’t far off. The game was wide open, less defensive structure, goalies with smaller pads, and the top guys feasted. It’s a stark contrast to today.

Malone is a hidden gem when you put his numbers in context and might deserve a spot among the greatest. He led the NHL in goals twice in its first three seasons, 44 goals in 1917–18 and 39 in 1919–20. That 44-goal season with the Montreal Canadiens is wild when you realize it came in just 20 games.

That’s 2.2 goals per game, a pace that dwarfs anything we’ve seen since. For comparison, Gretzky’s 92 goals in 1981–82 came over 80 games, a rate of 1.15 goals per game. Ovechkin’s best, 65 in 2007–08, was 0.79 per game over 82. Malone was more than doubling their output per night.

The era helps explain it. The NHL was brand new, and the game was raw. No forward passing in the offensive zone meant individual skill ruled, and “Phantom Joe” was a cut above. Teams played 20–24 games back then, so totals look smaller, but his dominance was clear. Nobody else in 1917–18 even hit 30 goals.

In context, Malone’s case is wild. He’s not just a relic, he might be the purest goal-scoring machine ever. His marks held up like a fortress for decades, which really hammers home how ahead of his time he was.

His 44 goals in 1917–18 stood as the single-season record until Maurice Richard finally topped it with 50 in 1944–45, a gap of 27 years. And that 39-goal season from 1919–20? It was only eclipsed once in that same stretch, by Cooney Weiland’s 43 in 1929–30. For nearly three decades, nobody could touch Malone’s peaks, even as the league grew and seasons got longer.

The NHL went from 20-game schedules to 50 by the 1940s, giving players double or triple the chances to score, yet Malone’s 44 and 39 were untouchable. Weiland’s 43 in 44 games was a monster year, but it still took 12 years after Malone’s 39, and another decade until Richard cracked 40.

If you prorate 44 in 20 over 50 games, he’s at 110 goals, a number that makes Gretzky’s 92 look tame. Even adjusting for era, it’s unreal. And his 39 in 24 prorates to 81 over 50, still elite.

It took the game evolving, more games, better sticks, a shift to team play, for those records to fall. The longevity of Malone’s records, holding firm from 1917 to 1944, might just seal his case as one of the greatest pure scorers ever.

Origins of Dominance

Moving on, Mike Bossy wasn’t just a great goal scorer, he was the most efficient, lethal, and consistent one the league has probably ever seen. He hit 50 goals in nine straight seasons to start his career, something no one else has done. His career goals-per-game rate is still the highest in NHL history at 0.762, even above legends like Gretzky, Lemieux, and Ovechkin.

What sets Bossy apart is that he wasn’t padding stats late in his career or hanging on to reach milestones. Every season he played, he was elite, and then he retired in his prime.

If the metric is pure goal scoring, accuracy, release, consistency, production relative to games played, it’s hard to put anyone definitively above him. Longevity knocks him off a lot of all-time lists, but if the conversation is how good were they at scoring goals, period, his numbers make a terrifyingly strong argument.

Bossy wasn’t piling up goals on a weak team with nothing to show for it. He was doing it as the centerpiece of a dynasty. The Islanders won four straight Stanley Cups from 1980 to 1983, and Bossy was a driving force the entire way.

That combination of individual efficiency and team dominance is rare. Most elite scorers either had to drag their team or played second fiddle to a deeper supporting cast. Bossy was the primary sniper on a team that kept winning.

Bossy played just 752 regular-season games and scored 573 goals. That’s a 0.762 goals-per-game pace. Now compare that to Ovechkin’s 853 goals in 1,426 games (0.598 GPG) or Gretzky’s 894 goals in 1,487 games (0.601 GPG).

If Bossy had played the same number of games as Gretzky, he would have scored over 1,100 goals. If he matched Gordie Howe’s 1,767 games, he’d have well over 1,300. That blows past both of them.

So if the measure is “how often did this player score, regardless of era or career length,” then prorating Bossy exposes just how far ahead he was. His career is basically the equivalent of someone stepping onto the ice, torching the league every night for 10 straight years, and walking away with no dip in performance.

Perfect Form

Today, Auston Matthews is quietly building one of the most historic goal-scoring resumes of the modern era, and the only reason it hasn’t been fully acknowledged is because it’s happening in real time, and on a team with postseason baggage.

He’s the only player in this era remotely on pace to catch or surpass Ovechkin’s goal totals, and more importantly, he’s doing it at a goals-per-game clip that aligns more with Bossy and Lemieux than with the rest of his peers. Through the end of the 2024–25 season, he’s sitting around 0.64 goals per game, which already places him in elite company, and that includes pandemic-shortened seasons that robbed him of full-year totals in his prime.

Three Rocket Richard Trophies and two runner-up finishes in less than a decade is a historic run. That’s Gretzky–Bossy-level consistency. What sets Matthews apart isn’t just his shot, it’s that he scores in every way. Off the rush, off the cycle, on one-timers, off the forecheck. He’s arguably the most complete goal scorer since Ovechkin, and maybe the most efficient technician of them all.

If he keeps this pace for another five to eight years, and stays healthy, he could land somewhere north of 750 goals. The only thing holding back his legacy isn’t his numbers. It’s the perception, no deep playoff runs, and a style of dominance that feels almost too clean to generate the narrative fireworks others have. But when you strip the drama and just look at the tape and numbers, Matthews belongs in every top-tier goal-scoring conversation. And one day, that might mean all-time.

Looking at pure goal-scoring ability, across pace, efficiency, era, and situational dominance, Mike Bossy and Mario Lemieux are in a league of their own. And the staggering part is that there was no fall-off. Bossy never dipped below 50 goals in a full season. Lemieux, meanwhile, put up 0.754 goals per game over 915 games, despite missing multiple seasons to cancer, chronic injuries, and even a retirement.

The Company They Keep

While the greatest goal scorer conversation often centers on the top handful of names, a fuller view reveals a deeper bench of legends whose scoring shaped the sport in every era. Brett Hull is one of them. With 741 goals, he ranks fourth all-time, and his three straight seasons of 70-plus in the early 1990s place him in rare company. His 86-goal campaign in 1990–91 remains second best all time to only to Gretzky’s 92 and 87 goal seasons.

And yet, Brett’s scoring DNA wasn’t built from scratch. His father, Bobby Hull, was the original template. Known as “The Golden Jet,” Bobby combined breakaway speed with a thunderous slapshot to become the first player to score more than 50 goals in an NHL season, and he led the league in goals seven times. His 610 NHL goals, plus another 303 in the WHA, give him a career total that few have matched across pro leagues.

Phil Esposito dominated a different slice of history. Between 1969 and 1975, he led the league in goals six straight times, including a then-record 76-goal season in 1970–71. He camped in the slot and turned the rebound into a weapon. He may not have had the stylistic flair of a Lemieux or the power of an Ovechkin, but his production was outrageous. Esposito was the first player to shatter the 60-goal barrier more than once, and his success redefined the center position offensively.

Maurice “Rocket” Richard was the game’s first mythological scorer. He reached 50 goals in 50 games in 1944–45, a feat so iconic it still carries his name in the trophy awarded today. He played in a 50-game season, so the margin for error was zero. His finishing ability turned him into a cultural symbol, but the numbers hold too are: eight 30-goal seasons when most of the league wasn’t even scoring 20. He led the NHL in goals five times in a ten-team league, facing the same defenders over and over. And they still couldn’t stop him.

Gordie Howe isn’t usually mentioned as a pure goal scorer, but he led the league five times and finished with 801 goals over an ironman career that spanned five decades. What sets Howe apart is his adaptability. He was an elite scorer in the Original Six era, and still putting up numbers into the 1970s. He never had the single-season highs of some peers, but his longevity and top-level consistency for twenty-plus years built a total no one came close to until Gretzky passed it.

What Could Have Been

Like Bossy, if you prorate Lemieux to 1,500 or even 1,700 games, like many of the ironmen from modern times, his totals jump into the 1,100 to 1,300 goal range. That sounds fictional, but it’s mathematically in line with his output. The production would have tapered, sure, but the point stands: both Lemieux and Bossy, had they stayed healthy, would likely sit above Ovechkin and Gretzky on the all-time list.

But there’s a difference between “could have done it” and “did it.” Bossy scored with surgical consistency. Lemieux did it with raw improvisation. Both left before their skills declined. That makes their peaks almost mythic, but it also makes comparisons harder. They didn’t have the runway to chase volume, only velocity. And in that, they were unmatched.

So who’s the greatest? That depends on what you value. Durability? Longevity? Scoring pace? Skillset? Era? One stat won’t answer it. If it did, the answer would be Ovechkin. But that only captures one dimension. Bossy and Lemieux reached the summit faster than anyone. Ovechkin stayed there longer than anyone. Gretzky made the whole mountain look small.

And when you zoom out, the picture shifts again. Greatness in goal scoring isn’t just about who got to the top. Sometimes it’s about how how long they stayed or how far ahead they were at the time. Bossy, Lemieux, Ovechkin, and Gretzky sit at the center of the debate. But they stand in a lineage where every name reshaped what goal scoring meant in their era.