@Bruins de Boston

Quand les joueurs de la LNH ont été interrogés sur Bobby Orr



Lorsqu’on interroge les joueurs de la LNH à propos de Bobby Orr Bobby Orr n’est pas seulement une légende des Bruins de Boston – il a changé pour toujours la façon dont le hockey est joué. Dans cette vidéo, nous examinons ce que les joueurs de la LNH de toutes les générations disent VRAIMENT lorsqu’on les interroge sur Bobby Orr. De son incroyable patinage à son attaque révolutionnaire depuis la ligne bleue, les stars et légendes d’aujourd’hui expliquent pourquoi Orr est toujours considéré comme l’un des plus grands défenseurs – et des plus grands joueurs – de l’histoire de la LNH. Vous entendrez comment les joueurs décrivent sa vitesse, sa vision, son leadership et l’impact qu’il a eu sur le sport. Beaucoup parlent du célèbre but volant, de ses championnats avec les Bruins et de la façon dont il a inspiré les générations futures. Cette vidéo célèbre l’héritage de Bobby Orr à travers les voix des personnes qui connaissent le mieux le jeu : les joueurs qui ont suivi ses traces. Si vous êtes un fan des Bruins, un amoureux de l’histoire du hockey ou si vous respectez simplement la grandeur, c’est un incontournable. ⭐ Regardez maintenant pour voir comment les joueurs de la LNH réagissent lorsque le nom de Bobby Orr apparaît – et pourquoi sa légende perdure. N’oubliez pas d’aimer, de commenter votre moment préféré de Bobby Orr et de vous abonner pour plus de contenu de narration sur la LNH !

43 Comments

  1. Only thing I remembered about Orr these days. Was he's told he'll get part team ownership to sign on the line. Which they totally screwed him and he'd be the richest ex player today.

  2. I think a super offensive defensemen could be the most valuable position in hockey because it's like you have 4 forwards, and if you have skilled shooters they make very valuable set up plays deep in the offensive zone. I watched Phil Housley support Temu Selanne in his rookie year in Winnipeg, I attended many games live, it's a super deadly combo, as teams learned night after night that year. You just need a good goalie that can handle a higher number of 2 on 1 breakouts. And it makes for way more exciting hockey both ways.

  3. You can sit back and watch people passionately debate who was better….Gretzky or Lemieux or Howe….then throw in the name Orr…..and people start to mumble and speak lower, etc. To say someone is the greatest hockey player who lived, first you must say he's better than Orr, and that's pretty darned hard to do.

  4. Dennis Leary is right, no socks. When I was kid in the 70s I read a book on Bobby Orr that had pictures of him putting on his uniform. In the last pic he was standing there fully dressed, no socks. I have never worn socks with my skates ever since.

  5. I came to the conclusion that he outskated everyone, I watched the playoffs a few years ago and they all looked like they skated like Bobby Orr.

  6. Orr and Brad Park only played 10 games together. The Bruins were 6-1-3. There's a couple highlights of them together in this video. "We was robbed".

  7. you guys beat him clarke. you were up there too. never missed a game when he played for the Flin Flon Bombers along with his right winger Reggie Leach. No team could beat them in Jr. Hockey.

  8. And Reggie Leach could shoot both ways. Break down the right wing close the boards cut across the blue line and fire a wrist shot shooting left. Using the 2 defensemen as a screen. And the shot was as accurate as the Russians when they were Communists. I seen them 2. Also the puck was in the net against the Edmonton Oil Kings. Now that was great hockey.

  9. I remember going to Detroit to watch the Bruins play the Wings. I swear that the puck was on Orr's stick for at least 45 of the 60 minutes of play. Watching hockey on tv, you couldn't really tell, but being in the arena it was obvious. I was lucky enough to see him play in Detroit several times – just WOW.

  10. Clone Nureyev, Dimaggio, Ruth, Ali, Goya, Gretzky, Secretariat, Northern Dancer, Sugar Ray, and you're close to getting Orr in his prime.

  11. Orr was pretty good when he was healthy and on his game .He definitely was a top 20 defender and quite possibly a top 10 in his short but exciting prime of his career .

  12. I remember that game when he dropped his glove then proceeded to skate All over the rink with the puck and I knew he was going to end up going back with the puck and opponents chasing him and pick up that glove and that's exactly what he did.didnt Eve break his stride bent down scooped his hand right into his glove straightend up and kept right on going Eventually he passed the puck to someone else and went to the bench .the entire living room was laughing.the guy was my greatest joy even above Tom Brady.

  13. I saw Bobby play as a Blackhawk. It was my first hockey game so I really didn't know anything. Yet he stood out from the rest. Later I would find out that what I saw wasn't even close to what he was like in his prime.

  14. My dad was friends with Bruins legend Milt Schmidt and we had season tickets to the Gahden. I was sitting about 25 rows behind Glenn Hall on Mother's Day 1970 when Bobby Orr scored the most legendary goal in history. EVERY single person in attendance knew "Orr's gonna score." It was the greatest day of my life.

  15. I seen bobby play for the parry sound shamrocks one game.he totally destroyed my hometown team. He was 16 year old playing tier 2 jr.b. and dominated every shift.then thevphone rang and he was off to oshawa.such a great player and an even greater human being.

  16. It's amazing how unprofessional the NHL was back then. You had some players making more money in the off-season then they did playing. The NHL was a professional beer league. Orr was the first player to sign a $1 million dollar contract (being for 5 seasons) When Bobby Orr started, the average salary in the NHL was $17,000. That would be like the average salary in the NHL being $140,000 today.

  17. When Bobby arived in Boston within two years hockey rinks in metro Boston doubled. Everybody wanted to be the next Bobby Orr. Years later after he retired I ran in a road race and he was the honorary sponsor. After race was over he signed autographs until everyone who wanted one got an autograph. It could be on a napkin. He looked everyone in the eye, asked them their name and said their name to them. It was like that person was the only one there. I have seen superstars and he is number 1 on the list. Signing auto's untilall gets one and then stay and shake hands with parents and grand parents. The epitpme of class. Parents must have been proud of him.

  18. They still have tributes all over parry sound 50 years later for a guy who played pro hockey for 9 years in the states and stayed there 😂

  19. Last Bruins goal was assisted by Jean Ratelle & his last Bruins assist was on a goal by Jean Ratelle.🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒

  20. Waited in line for three hours as a kid to get an autographed picture. Still recall his thighs were like tree trunks!

  21. To quote former Bruins coach, Don Cherry, "there were many all star players, great players, great scorers, great defensemen, then there was Bobby Orr"

  22. Was fortunate enough to meet him a few times in the mid 70's when he played fastball during the summer. Super nice, humble guy.

  23. Wayne, Mario, Gordie, Bobby… all have a case to be #1.

    … if you are an old French guy maybe you can say Rocket

  24. For me, I already knew Orr is the greatest, but the video of him & Park together is heaven.

  25. I was from the Philadelphia area, loved the Flyers, but "Bobby Orr" was my favorite hockey player of all time. I would play ice hockey with my friends on a frozen lake or pond and always mimicked Bobby Orr. To me, "Orr #4" was the greatest hockey player I have ever seen, and of all time. I could not believe all that he was able to do with a puck and skates, not to mention that he played after so many knee operations. He may be the toughest hockey player of all time.

  26. For hockey fans that do not grasp that Bobby Orr was the greatest: In one season he had a +120 season. That means the Bruins outscored their opponents by 120 goals when he was on the ice. They scored 1.5 goals more than their opposition every game throughout an entire regular season when Bobby Orr was on the ice. Bobby Orr was the closest thing to an unfair advantage or the equivalent of a power play at full strength.

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