@Maple Leafs de Toronto

En 2016, Dave Keon a été nommé « La plus grande feuille de tous les temps » – pourquoi exactement ?


Pas de haine – il a été vainqueur de Calder et 4 fois champion de la coupe avec 15 ans chez les Leafs et est 3e de tous les temps et 4e de tous les temps, mais je me souviens quand cela a été annoncé, j’ai été un peu surpris alors que j’ai grandi en idolâtrant et en lisant sur les joueurs plus âgés et les Leafs célèbres et il n’a jamais atteint autant que les gars des années 90 ou Frank ou Borje ou Sittler ou Armstrong ou Bower.

Était-ce juste une affaire de publicité ou pourquoi exactement s’est-il classé n°1 sur cette liste ?


GregGolden6

28 Comments

  1. kylemclaren7

    He didn’t come up because he was estranged from the franchise for years. He is absolutely in that tier of players and frankly the very top subtier of those guys without question.

  2. RealCanadianDragon

    You literally just said it.

    Calder winner

    4 time cup champion

    Top 3-4 in points, goals, assists

    Who tops that in this franchise?

    Only « knock » on him is that majority of fans wouldn’t remember his days because be played in the 60s and 70s.

    Any fan under the age of 45 as of 2016 wouldn’t have even remembered (if they were even alive) to see him play.

  3. FightMongooseFight

    There’s a lot of drama around Keon and his estrangement from the organization through the Ballard years.

    But if you want to keep it simple, none of the guys above him in points or goals won anything while playing for the Leafs.

    He’s the most productive Cup winner the Leafs have ever had, and he won 4. He was also legendary for backchecking and playing a two-way game.

    Basically, imagine if Doug Gilmour had played for the Leafs for over a decade, worn the C for half that time, and won multiple cups. That’s Keon.

  4. buster_rhino

    He was my 77 year old dad’s favourite player.

  5. -kielbasa

    My 69 year old dads favourite player, you just had to be there

  6. Zealousideal_Shop446

    No other great even stayed as long as Keon that I can think of. Ballard drove away any all time great player and other than that the only options are Sundin and Matthews and they haven’t won anything

  7. Awkward_Bag_1205

    Because Teeder Kennedy was dead and most if not all the voters on the GLOAT committee were people who had no living memory of ever having seen him play.

    Yes, I know Kennedy finished 3rd in the voting anyway. But he was the heart and soul of the 1945-51 dynasty, which won 5 Cups yet has never received as much recognition or appreciation as the 1962-67 dynasty. (Undoubtedly because the latter group was on TV every Saturday night and the guys from the ’40s were not.)

    For what it’s worth, a group of hockey historians decided to try to determine who would have won the playoff MVP award each year if it had existed prior to 1965. They decided that Kennedy would have won three.

  8. My dad’s license plate is 14. Literally two digits. Dave Keon is goated.

  9. Himera71

    A good modern comparison to Dave Keon would be Patrice Bergeron. The Selke didn’t exist in his day, but he would have won multiple trophies if it did. His best offensive season era adjusted would have netted him over 90 points, and he was the team’s shutdown centre.

  10. ItchyHotLion

    My father would be 81 if he were alive today and Keon was his favourite player followed by Sittler, my grandfathers favourite player was Ted Kennedy followed by Keon..I skipped Sittler and went straight to Wendel Clark.

  11. dunken_pirate

    For those of us who seen him play know why. He was just a great all round player.

  12. irkybirky

    In those days Keon was a god, not like what Marner thinks he was lol. He was my favourite player and seen him play at the Gardens. Even had his mini stick. Keon is Leaf royalty.

  13. Whyceeit

    He played his heart out every game and showed up in the playoffs.

  14. ItchyHotLion

    The best factoid about Keon that encapsulates his career is this one from Wikipedia .

    In the 1967 Cup Final, he shut down Jean Béliveau, the star centreman of the Montreal Canadiens, in the last two games of the series and was voted the most valuable player of the playoffs, winning the Conn Smythe Trophy. Keon’s eight points are the fewest ever by a non-goalie Conn Smythe winner, and he remains the only Leaf to have won the trophy named for the former owner of the club.

  15. 99Booger

    My favourite memory is him ragging the puck for 33 seconds on the penalty kill in the ‘67 final. Classic Keon.

  16. Charlie Conacher, Ted Kennedy, and Syl Apps were all better.

  17. gretzky9999

    He could stick handle in a phone booth.

  18. braveheart2019

    4 time cup champion vs no time cup champion for most others.

  19. DistributionOk7393

    My dad’s fav. Ballard robbed us if his memory. 

  20. FredericoKrugerini

    Harold Ballard was a piece of shit. Leafs fans should have annual tailgate parties on April 11 (the day he died) in part to educate the younger fans just how much Ballard royally fucked and desecrated the organization.

  21. Met him at St. Joseph’s in Highland Creek. They had a back up service for us sinners who missed the home parish Sunday 9 or 11. Even then, after everything he’d accomplished, humble af. We didn’t talk or anything, I was just a kid looking at Dave fucking Keon in line for the wafer.

  22. aporter0509

    Won 4 cups and was a very good two way centre. Besides that, there’s not many truly great Leafs in the post 1967 era.

  23. rogerjcohen

    In his prime in the mid-1960s, he was the fastest skater in the NHL, along with Henri Richard and Kenny Wharram.

  24. asquinas

    His sister was a teacher at my school. In this house, Dave Keon is a hero. End of story. 

Write A Comment

Pin