Keenan and Babcock played the same kind of mind games with players. They should never have been allowed to coach an NHL game. Thankfully neither is in the NHL now.
@@davidmiles6845the thing that’s sad about both Keenan and Babcock is knowing that they were good coaches but had rotten personalities which led to them being out of the NHL. If only their personalities didn’t overshadow their amazing coaching techniques then maybe things would be different. Just a thought
@Lama-Su He tried out for Canada in 1984, but they didn't take him. Then he tried out for the United States, and they took him. From then on he said he will always play for team USA. He gave Canada the 1st choice to take him. They had their chance
What i loved the most of Brett and Roenick were they were the only players who were fearless about making any comment to the Media which the NHL hates that.
I remember listening to the late great Dan Kelly on KMOX radio in St. Louis in the 1980s when Hull was just starting there for the Blues. Once when Dan was watching Hull shoot the puck he said to his broadcasting sidekick "Did you see that puck?" He hit the puck so hard that you couldn't see it. Dan was obviously amazed by this and conveyed it to the audience and his sidekick. It was a sign of things to come. Turned out he was a scoring phenom. Great player! He and Adam Oates were a great duo. o
Hull and Oates! I saw Brett play his 2 seasons at University of Minnesota Duluth I was a season ticket holder at that time 84 85 85 86. What a great talent! A decent guy too! Let's Go Blues!
That's Brett's DNA talking there! He lucked out in life that way, and he was also lucky to have coaches who PUSHED him to be a better hockey player! But Brett was right about coaches removing the FUN!!! BTW, I was at Okanagan Hockey School in 1969-70ish! Larry Hale pushed me to be better that summer! I was also a drinker and was HUNG-OVER the 1st day's session! On the bus to Penticton I met an American goalie, and we shared a motel room the day we arrived. We met 2 girls and got some beers! PARTY TIME!!! Larry Hale RIP was ribbing me about it! My dad was also named Robert, and was a drunk who was also a great skater. I had a B&W photo of dad and Bobby Hull shaking hands at Brown Bros Ford. (summer of 1971) Bobby endorsed Ford and my dad set sales records as Sales Mgr. I was away in Hawaii so I missed that meeting, but I saw the photos later.
Just watching and listening to him talk about hockey and especially the Blues brings me back to being a kid watching him between 1988-'94 in the Old Arena and even the Kiel Center till '98. Went to about 15 games overall in the old Arena between October 89 to April 94. It was a phenomenal place for hockey games and other events like Brett mentioned.
My favorite season in hockey was the 90-91 season when Brett scored 86 goals (Hull and Oates) and we had Scott Stevens as captain on defense. I went to many Blues games and watched Brett score goals and get hat tricks. That was so much fun. LET'S GO BLUES!!!
that's so interesting to see. Brett was my right winger in the video clip at the 8:10 minute, Rich Kromm was our left winger, facing off at center ice at "le Colisée" in Quebec City (in Feb of '77) was so exciting, Jean Beliveau had come into our dressing room to say hi and to meet Brett just prior to that game.
How cool is Brett Hull? Glad I caught this interview, he had an interesting path to super stardom. I was lucky to watch him play, he patented the one timer
Love watching these videos. I’m not a hockey fan but this gentleman’s intelligence is really high. It’s interesting that the early coaches didn’t understand and didn’t know how to get more out of Mr Hull. His creative nature, his athletic accuracy, he responded to positive feedback better then verbal beatings. Mr Hull is clearly a monster player. Limitless ability.
Tons of respect for Hull after he retired and I learned what type of guy he was in the 90's. He spoke his mind and did things his own way but it wasn't unjustified. If he saw something was BS he called it out or resisted it. He was a great teammate who was completely honest. Because of this he has GREAT stories from his career, told by him or about him. Brett needs to write his memoirs. Or hire someone to write his biography. (I know he has a bio from '92, but I want a complete and honest one from today). I'd definitely read it. Oh and his roomie and teammate for 6 years Kelly Chase said that he actually LET UP in games and didn't rack up his stats against doormats like some players would. For instance, when he got the hat-trick in a blow-out he would ease up on the other team on not go for five. He also passed on all empty-netters because he saw them as "cheap goals". He said if he did those two things he could have scored at least 100 MORE goals. (That would put him behind only Gretzky on the all time goal list). Unreal. What a sniping legend. And I LOVE the editing at 39:45 :D
I loved watching Brett play. Still remember him scoring the winning goal for my Stars and well I'm still a Stars fan I followed him to the Red Wings while he was still playing as well ❤❤❤
Brett Hull used the "dead space" to appear out from "stealth mode" to score a ton of great goals. Many times I saw highlights on ESPN of him. I want to meet him someday.
Was fortunate to have watched Brett Hull play, in college and pro. Marvelled at his scoring ability in St. Louis, and then as a season ticket holder here in Detroit. The '02 team was stacked, and being there when they won the cup was awesome! Wonderful interview, wished it would've been longer!
He's such a great interview. I could listen to him talk about hockey and his career forever. As a Wings fan, those 3 years he was here were so much fun. I had never heard he was close to going to Chicago in the summer of 98. Chicago was awful in 99 and I don't think he helps much. That was the year Chelios was traded away. Would love to see what that alternate universe is like.
What's so great about this interview is the deep dive on Brett's early years, which are extraordinary, what most of us are most interested in learning about.
As a kid growing up in the 60's Bobby Hull was my idol, when his son Brett came along, his scoring ability was amazing and it always seemed so effortless. Loved that he seemed to always have a smile on his face. Amazing player and person as well!!
8:24 I really like how Brett Hull mentions how he loved opening the scoring of a game, having the first goal of a game. Because that is actually an official stat being tracked by the NHL, and whenever I've mentioned it to anybody they just scoff and ask what the point of that stat is. So I think its great that an all-time legend of the game mentions that statistic. Here is the all-time top 10 in players having the first goal of a game: Regular season 1. Alex Ovechkin 142 2. Jaromir Jagr 135 3. Brett Hull 131 4. Gordie Howe 127 5. Teemu Selanne 119 6. Joe Sakic 117 7. Jarome Iginla 114 8. Sidney Crosby 112 9. Bobby Hull 111 10. Mark Messier 110 Playoffs 1. Wayne Gretzky 19 2. Mario Lemieux / Brett Hull 18 3. Steve Yzerman / Stephane Richer / Jean Beliveau 17 4. Sidney Crosby / Joe Sakic / Jaromir Jagr 16 5. Mark Messier / Bobby Hull / Glenn Anderson 15
My Dad used to take me to see him play when he played for the Moncton Golden Flames. I so remember him scoring 50 in his rookie season. I loved seeing the old footage of his days with the Golden Flames. Thanks for the memories Brett Hall.
Great interview. Loved the game film from the 1986 Stanley Cup Finals in Montreal. Brett took a pass from Paul Reinhart who was a great Flames player (father of Sam, Max and Griffin). Brett got called up from Moncton in AHL. Good Times...
The "Silver Jet" as he is called, is a legend in his own right. Dennis Hull may have played in his brother's shadow, but he was every bit as feared by goalies as the slap-shot of his famous brother. As they say now, Dennis had a "bomb," a very hard, heavy and tough to stop shot. I was fortunate to see both Hulls - Bobby and Dennis - play in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and then Dennis alone after Bobby jumped to the WHA. After retiring from the NHL, Dennis Hull began doing speaking engagements and quickly won a reputation as a great speaker and raconteur, full of great stories, jokes and amusing quips. For those who still care about hockey in those now past days of the 1970s, Dennis is a treasure. I still remember Dennis Hull and the other Hawks taking warm-up in the old Stadium, and how when his shot would hit the boards or plexiglass, it would sound like thunder or maybe artillery going off. Remember him and Stosh, Stan Mikita, laughing it up, too. Jim Pappin, Pit Martin, J.P. Bordeleau, Chico Maki, Cliff Koroll,KEith Magnuson, etc. on down the line...
Heard Gretzky on a recent podcast call Brett Hull the smartest guy he knew in hockey and one of the nicest as well. Loved watching him play. Not a complete player, but a great scorer. He is who he is, and unashamedly knows it. A rare quality these days.
Love Brett Hull one of the best to ever play the game and also amazing and nicest person you can meet!!!! I met Brett in 1998 at Lake Tahoe he was in a celebrity gulf tournament coming out of a restaurant on top of the Hotel we were staying. I said Hi and asked for his autograph but did not have a pen and paper and He waited so I can get the pen and he signed a $100 bill I had!
Great guest! Loved his comments about the old Arena, just an incredible place to watch to hockey. Also liked his comments about Mike Keenan, an absolute prick. I heard something similar from a former player who was working in the Blues front office at the time.
Brett’s release was magic. One of the first guys I saw who’d drastically change the angle by dragging the puck into his feet & letting it go. That + using a really whippy stick just made the puck explode off his blade. Incredible shooter. Auston Matthews has that similar release. Pulling the puck hard into his feet to change the angle and then just letting it rip.
Man... this show could have been 2 hours long. They didn't go into that much detail about the Keenan years and didn't mention the Quenneville years at all STL... or him becoming a US citizen to play for Team USA and turning down Team Canada, then winning gold in the World Cup of Hockey. They didn't talk about the controversy when Oates was traded from STL and how that effected him, and how playing with Janney as his center was different than Oates. They could have talked about him and Chase partying and stealing Bob Berry's car and taking it to the east side. And I felt they didn't talk enough about him leaving STL, as that was a huge deal. There was a lot more to it than what was talked about here. Tons of good stuff they didn't get into. But the early ears with him in Juniors and in college was good stuff.
I mean this as a huge compliment because I am a huge Brett Hull and Bobby Hull fan...Brett is the greatest lazy goal scorer in the history of the NHL. His talent is absolutley sickening!!
In 1992 at the Paul Coffey Invitational Golf Tournament in Toronto I gave Bobby Hull Jr. 12 Brett cards to have signed and he said he'd mail them to me for my peewee hockey players. I'm still hoping they are lost in the mail and might arrive. haha What a gentleman and great guy Brett Hull is.
Interesting, I had read somewhere (basically 3rd hand info at best) that supposedly Hull refused to score empty netters the season he had 86. Like it was a pride thing or something like that. Turns out he would've wanted to be on the ice and try and get the empties -- as well as be in the penalty kill, too. And there's definitely nothing wrong with that, the greatest goal scorers always have a healthy amount of what some might view as selfishness when they want to score that one more goal. Goals win games. A very good interview, Brett seems like a great guy. And a legend of the game, obviously.
I looked up how they scored: When Brett had 86 goals (57 were even strength, 29 were power play, 0 shorthanded and 0 empty netters) When Wayne had 92 goals (68 were even strength, 18 were power play, 6 were shorthanded, 4 were empty netters) When he had 87 goals (55 were even strength, 20 were power play, 12 were shorthanded, 6 were empty netters)
His dad is so under rated, by today's whipper snappers. One of the fastest skaters ever, one of the hardest shots ever... I grew up in the Bobby Hull era... Without bothering to look up anything, I'm thinking if you combine Bobby's NHL and WHA scoring totals, and do the same with Gretzky and Howe ... Wayne would still be number one... But They'd be pretty close... and like 1,2,3 on the all time scoring list... The Golden Brett was a really great player, maybe the best one timer ever, such a quick and accurate release, and so magical alongside Adam Oates... But BUT BUT... I gotta say in all honesty, the Golden Jet, in his prime, was even better...
Its funny he doesnt talk about ..his fear for coming on the ice with us bigger guys in kimberly incinarena in ek winnipeg ...i was friends with his brothers n the wilson boys ..we all played in cyrs super summer hockey league ..brett would come out n play a lil ..he wasnt a great skater yet but his shot at age 11 or 12 was pretty decent ..but i gotta tell ya ..we"d laugh cause he had a mouth like a sailor..only 5xs worse ...i remember being at a jets blues game many years later with his brother bobby jr...we went outside the room aftet ..brett came out to say hi ...it was priceless ..the same funny brett ..what a character ..im sure him being around all of us older guys influenced him a lil in a positive vibe and he carried with him in his sense of humour ...n what a star he became ...awesome!!
43:15 - That was a controversial goal, and shouldn’t have been allowed per the rules at the time… but that game was going on too long (as many playoff games were at the time) and no one complained. The announcers even defended the decision to not review it and the rules changed in the offseason.
You could say that again. Biggest mistake Calgary ever made was trading him. They said he was lazy, didn't back check. Calgary could have been more than a one year dynasty if they'd kept him. Calgary had so much talent then. Terry Crisp was ancient history after one Stanley Cup and it's been a never ending rotation ever since. Corporate town. I live 6 blocks from the Saddledome and haven't been to a game since forever.
One of my biggest regrets is not seeing Hull win the cup with the Blues. Curse you Red Wings, you ruined my childhood. Hull had one of the best one-timers in the game.
Should've talked about the '96 World Cup of Hockey. Brett could've played for either Canada or USA. He chose USA. Pissed off people in Canada. Being Bobby's son and all. USA wins in Game 3 of the finals in Montreal!!!!
It was Canada's fault. He picked them as his 1st choice back in the 1987 Canada Cup, but they didn't pick him, so he went to the United States team and played. After that, he said he would always play for the United States in any international tournaments
He couldn’t have played for Canada because they didn’t pick him. That’s why he played for the US. Back then we called him a trader cause then, you played for where you were born. Not citizenship. Obviously now it’s different.
People today just can't possibly understand how ABSURD that goal crease rule was. It made no sense right from day one and most intelligent people predicted that it was going to be an issue come playoff time. As Hull explained, they did change the rule that if you had possession of the puck and entered the crease, without interfering with the goaltender and scored, the goal would stand. But more importantly, if the puck entered the crease FIRST and then someone's skate and the puck went in (again, assuming the goalie wasn't interfered with), that goal would also count. And that is what happened on the winning goal they showed. The puck entered the crease first, then the player's skate, then the puck went in and the goalie was flat on his stomach and was never touched, the result being it's a good goal.
Honestly, Brett should just walk around wearing his Stanley Cup ring, and any Buffalo Babies who cry to him saying "No Goal", he should simply hold up his first with his ring and smile!
Hull is not a sniper at 15.2 % . you need close or above 20%. a lot of people mix between sniper, scorer and shooter sniper = % shots, scorer = goals, shooter = shots . ovechkin is not a sniper but a scorer and a shooter . he has only 12.8%. Ovi has a lots of goals because he shoots a lot. More than 6,500 shots to date. Just like In the army the sniper kills few people and a sniper never use a machine gun to kill hundreds of enemies.
The shots at Mike Keenan in this interview are hilarious.
Keenan and Babcock played the same kind of mind games with players. They should never have been allowed to coach an NHL game. Thankfully neither is in the NHL now.
@@davidmiles6845the thing that’s sad about both Keenan and Babcock is knowing that they were good coaches but had rotten personalities which led to them being out of the NHL. If only their personalities didn’t overshadow their amazing coaching techniques then maybe things would be different. Just a thought
How can you not like Brett Hull.
He's a chip off the old block.
You’re joking right lmao?
If you live in Buffalo...
Easy, he played for USA instead of Canada in the Olympics despite being Canadian
@Lama-Su He tried out for Canada in 1984, but they didn't take him. Then he tried out for the United States, and they took him. From then on he said he will always play for team USA. He gave Canada the 1st choice to take him. They had their chance
What i loved the most of Brett and Roenick were they were the only players who were fearless about making any comment to the Media which the NHL hates that.
They were the two best American players ever and they were actually interesting to listen to.
I remember listening to the late great Dan Kelly on KMOX radio in St. Louis in the 1980s when Hull was just starting there for the Blues. Once when Dan was watching Hull shoot the puck he said to his broadcasting sidekick "Did you see that puck?" He hit the puck so hard that you couldn't see it. Dan was obviously amazed by this and conveyed it to the audience and his sidekick. It was a sign of things to come. Turned out he was a scoring phenom. Great player! He and Adam Oates were a great duo. o
Dan was the BEST
Hull and Oates! I saw Brett play his 2 seasons at University of Minnesota Duluth I was a season ticket holder at that time 84 85 85 86. What a great talent! A decent guy too! Let's Go Blues!
No way. Brett Hull. Nice surprise,think I'll crack a few beers 🍻
Hear hear.
A few?
Wade Boggs
Hully was my favorite player growing up... have all his cards...had his VHS tapes I would even go down on 1 leg on a one timer what a beauty!!!🍻🍻
Get Brett on the TNT broadcast now! A great personality of the game.
That's Brett's DNA talking there! He lucked out in life that way, and he was also lucky to have coaches who PUSHED him to be a better hockey player! But Brett was right about coaches removing the FUN!!!
BTW, I was at Okanagan Hockey School in 1969-70ish! Larry Hale pushed me to be better that summer! I was also a drinker and was HUNG-OVER the 1st day's session! On the bus to Penticton I met an American goalie, and we shared a motel room the day we arrived. We met 2 girls and got some beers! PARTY TIME!!! Larry Hale RIP was ribbing me about it! My dad was also named Robert, and was a drunk who was also a great skater. I had a B&W photo of dad and Bobby Hull shaking hands at Brown Bros Ford. (summer of 1971) Bobby endorsed Ford and my dad set sales records as Sales Mgr. I was away in Hawaii so I missed that meeting, but I saw the photos later.
Yes …we need guys like Brett on these programs!
Just watching and listening to him talk about hockey and especially the Blues brings me back to being a kid watching him between 1988-'94 in the Old Arena and even the Kiel Center till '98. Went to about 15 games overall in the old Arena between October 89 to April 94. It was a phenomenal place for hockey games and other events like Brett mentioned.
Brett is the reason I'm a Blues fan today.
I am a Hawks fan but became a part-time Blues fan with Mr. Goalie playing there after expansion. Also the LEGEND "Frank St. Marseille"! LMBO
Same
I met Brett and was able to get his autograph here in Dallas. He was a great guy!
My favorite season in hockey was the 90-91 season when Brett scored 86 goals (Hull and Oates) and we had Scott Stevens as captain on defense. I went to many Blues games and watched Brett score goals and get hat tricks. That was so much fun. LET'S GO BLUES!!!
Man he looks like his Dad! been a Bobby Hull fan since I was a kid in the 60's in Chicago, great career for Brett!
Dead ringer for Bobby …
that's so interesting to see. Brett was my right winger in the video clip at the 8:10 minute, Rich Kromm was our left winger, facing off at center ice at "le Colisée" in Quebec City (in Feb of '77) was so exciting, Jean Beliveau had come into our dressing room to say hi and to meet Brett just prior to that game.
Great! Bobby Kromm’s son?
@@lonestarbug yes, Rich was a great player to have on your line, he skated really well and made lots of plays, didn't score often.
How cool is Brett Hull? Glad I caught this interview, he had an interesting path to super stardom. I was lucky to watch him play, he patented the one timer
Him and ovechkin have the best one timers of all time!!
As a Leaf fan I’ll have to mention Auston Matthews one timer also
Love watching these videos. I’m not a hockey fan but this gentleman’s intelligence is really high. It’s interesting that the early coaches didn’t understand and didn’t know how to get more out of Mr Hull. His creative nature, his athletic accuracy, he responded to positive feedback better then verbal beatings. Mr Hull is clearly a monster player. Limitless ability.
most coaches don;t respect selfishness or laziness. do they now
Tons of respect for Hull after he retired and I learned what type of guy he was in the 90's. He spoke his mind and did things his own way but it wasn't unjustified. If he saw something was BS he called it out or resisted it. He was a great teammate who was completely honest. Because of this he has GREAT stories from his career, told by him or about him. Brett needs to write his memoirs. Or hire someone to write his biography. (I know he has a bio from '92, but I want a complete and honest one from today). I'd definitely read it. Oh and his roomie and teammate for 6 years Kelly Chase said that he actually LET UP in games and didn't rack up his stats against doormats like some players would. For instance, when he got the hat-trick in a blow-out he would ease up on the other team on not go for five. He also passed on all empty-netters because he saw them as "cheap goals". He said if he did those two things he could have scored at least 100 MORE goals. (That would put him behind only Gretzky on the all time goal list). Unreal. What a sniping legend.
And I LOVE the editing at 39:45 :D
I loved watching Brett play. Still remember him scoring the winning goal for my Stars and well I'm still a Stars fan I followed him to the Red Wings while he was still playing as well ❤❤❤
You are my hero growing up. I do not even watch hockey anymore. Now im old enough to enjoy the humor. Thanks great interveiw .. Bad interveiwer
Adem otts my god the memoryes imforgot
42 mins in ok the intervew guy is good
Humble .. Glad too hear
If greskey never alive this guy would be the best
5247 wow ya f u interveiw guy
I would love to hang out with Brett Hull. Seems like a genuinely funny guy who enjoys life!
Brett Hull used the "dead space" to appear out from "stealth mode" to score a ton of great goals. Many times I saw highlights on ESPN of him. I want to meet him someday.
Was fortunate to have watched Brett Hull play, in college and pro. Marvelled at his scoring ability in St. Louis, and then as a season ticket holder here in Detroit. The '02 team was stacked, and being there when they won the cup was awesome! Wonderful interview, wished it would've been longer!
Interesting interaction between Brett and Joe. Brett's story was very interesting. I thoroughly enjoyed the conversation. Thank you.
Fantastic interview!!
Great to get to know Brett Hull a bit more
He's such a great interview. I could listen to him talk about hockey and his career forever. As a Wings fan, those 3 years he was here were so much fun.
I had never heard he was close to going to Chicago in the summer of 98. Chicago was awful in 99 and I don't think he helps much. That was the year Chelios was traded away. Would love to see what that alternate universe is like.
What's so great about this interview is the deep dive on Brett's early years, which are extraordinary, what most of us are most interested in learning about.
he's an underrated hall of famer. best one timer ever. the distance he was dangerous with that was amazing
As a kid growing up in the 60's Bobby Hull was my idol, when his son Brett came along, his scoring ability was amazing and it always seemed so effortless. Loved that he seemed to always have a smile on his face. Amazing player and person as well!!
8:24
I really like how Brett Hull mentions how he loved opening the scoring of a game, having the first goal of a game.
Because that is actually an official stat being tracked by the NHL, and whenever I've mentioned it to anybody they just scoff and ask what the point of that stat is.
So I think its great that an all-time legend of the game mentions that statistic.
Here is the all-time top 10 in players having the first goal of a game:
Regular season
1. Alex Ovechkin 142
2. Jaromir Jagr 135
3. Brett Hull 131
4. Gordie Howe 127
5. Teemu Selanne 119
6. Joe Sakic 117
7. Jarome Iginla 114
8. Sidney Crosby 112
9. Bobby Hull 111
10. Mark Messier 110
Playoffs
1. Wayne Gretzky 19
2. Mario Lemieux / Brett Hull 18
3. Steve Yzerman / Stephane Richer / Jean Beliveau 17
4. Sidney Crosby / Joe Sakic / Jaromir Jagr 16
5. Mark Messier / Bobby Hull / Glenn Anderson 15
His father remains my hockey hero. The Golden Jet, the greatest nickname in the history of sports.
My favorite player growing up and wore the number 16 because of him. What a great guy!
My Dad used to take me to see him play when he played for the Moncton Golden Flames. I so remember him scoring 50 in his rookie season. I loved seeing the old footage of his days with the Golden Flames. Thanks for the memories Brett Hall.
Great interview. Loved the game film from the 1986 Stanley Cup Finals in Montreal. Brett took a pass from Paul Reinhart who was a great Flames player (father of Sam, Max and Griffin). Brett got called up from Moncton in AHL. Good Times...
Loved having him in Detroit. Great interview!
awesome video....never knew all that about BH. discounting empty netters, the highest goal total in history
Who remembers Dennis Hull? He was legendary.
He was awesome and funny as hell too.
"The Third Best Hull" was THE BEST book ever on sports! HILARIOUS!!!
he wasnt that good
@@harrisfoster1066 Untrue.
The "Silver Jet" as he is called, is a legend in his own right. Dennis Hull may have played in his brother's shadow, but he was every bit as feared by goalies as the slap-shot of his famous brother. As they say now, Dennis had a "bomb," a very hard, heavy and tough to stop shot. I was fortunate to see both Hulls - Bobby and Dennis - play in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and then Dennis alone after Bobby jumped to the WHA. After retiring from the NHL, Dennis Hull began doing speaking engagements and quickly won a reputation as a great speaker and raconteur, full of great stories, jokes and amusing quips. For those who still care about hockey in those now past days of the 1970s, Dennis is a treasure.
I still remember Dennis Hull and the other Hawks taking warm-up in the old Stadium, and how when his shot would hit the boards or plexiglass, it would sound like thunder or maybe artillery going off. Remember him and Stosh, Stan Mikita, laughing it up, too. Jim Pappin, Pit Martin, J.P. Bordeleau, Chico Maki, Cliff Koroll,KEith Magnuson, etc. on down the line...
Heard Gretzky on a recent podcast call Brett Hull the smartest guy he knew in hockey and one of the nicest as well. Loved watching him play. Not a complete player, but a great scorer. He is who he is, and unashamedly knows it. A rare quality these days.
Love Brett Hull one of the best to ever play the game and also amazing and nicest person you can meet!!!! I met Brett in 1998 at Lake Tahoe he was in a celebrity gulf tournament coming out of a restaurant on top of the Hotel we were staying. I said Hi and asked for his autograph but did not have a pen and paper and He waited so I can get the pen and he signed a $100 bill I had!
I used to watch the Blues at the checkerdome in STL. Amazing barn.
You mean The Arena?
As a young boy in central Ohio, I listened to every game Dan Kelly and Gus Kyle called at the Arena on KMOX. @@giantfactory
Hull was a frightening shooter, and what made him so dangerous is he could score from damn near anywhere! Very intelligent player!
Amazing honesty from Brett. Very interesting conversation. Like talking with Phil Esposito - no BS.
Great interview . Well worth watching .
Brett was a member of the Winnipeg Monarchs when he was playing in Quebec City.
I watched you play in Moncton with the Golden Flames. Mike Vernon was in net.
Amazingly candidacy great player with a great sense of fun for hockey fans to enjoy his enjoyment to playand score
Great guest! Loved his comments about the old Arena, just an incredible place to watch to hockey. Also liked his comments about Mike Keenan, an absolute prick. I heard something similar from a former player who was working in the Blues front office at the time.
Spellbound listening to Brett.
Can't be all bad...he loves a drink! I.got his dad's autograph when I was 12 in 1966.
Great interview of a great player and a better person!
Brett’s release was magic. One of the first guys I saw who’d drastically change the angle by dragging the puck into his feet & letting it go. That + using a really whippy stick just made the puck explode off his blade. Incredible shooter.
Auston Matthews has that similar release. Pulling the puck hard into his feet to change the angle and then just letting it rip.
Watch Lanny MacDonald, same release, my personal favourite Mike Bossy.
Man... this show could have been 2 hours long. They didn't go into that much detail about the Keenan years and didn't mention the Quenneville years at all STL... or him becoming a US citizen to play for Team USA and turning down Team Canada, then winning gold in the World Cup of Hockey. They didn't talk about the controversy when Oates was traded from STL and how that effected him, and how playing with Janney as his center was different than Oates. They could have talked about him and Chase partying and stealing Bob Berry's car and taking it to the east side. And I felt they didn't talk enough about him leaving STL, as that was a huge deal. There was a lot more to it than what was talked about here. Tons of good stuff they didn't get into. But the early ears with him in Juniors and in college was good stuff.
I mean this as a huge compliment because I am a huge Brett Hull and Bobby Hull fan...Brett is the greatest lazy goal scorer in the history of the NHL. His talent is absolutley sickening!!
Loved Bret Hull!!! Hell of a shot.
In 1992 at the Paul Coffey Invitational Golf Tournament in Toronto I gave Bobby Hull Jr. 12 Brett cards to have signed and he said he'd mail them to me for my peewee hockey players. I'm still hoping they are lost in the mail and might arrive. haha What a gentleman and great guy Brett Hull is.
Great interview!
Interesting, I had read somewhere (basically 3rd hand info at best) that supposedly Hull refused to score empty netters the season he had 86. Like it was a pride thing or something like that. Turns out he would've wanted to be on the ice and try and get the empties -- as well as be in the penalty kill, too. And there's definitely nothing wrong with that, the greatest goal scorers always have a healthy amount of what some might view as selfishness when they want to score that one more goal. Goals win games. A very good interview, Brett seems like a great guy. And a legend of the game, obviously.
I looked up how they scored:
When Brett had 86 goals (57 were even strength, 29 were power play, 0 shorthanded and 0 empty netters)
When Wayne had 92 goals (68 were even strength, 18 were power play, 6 were shorthanded, 4 were empty netters)
When he had 87 goals (55 were even strength, 20 were power play, 12 were shorthanded, 6 were empty netters)
Pug with a horn... things I didn't expect to hear in this interview
#TimelessStories #GreatlyAppreciated #Thank4PostingFree
Very enjoyable interview, Hillary is a real down to earth person!
A huge talent!
Good interview 👍
Flames/Habs final, what a time to be alive
Bman, I agree with you there. Both smart coaches.
I think He’s still Hammered from when the St. Louis Blues won the Stanley Cup.
In 99 I was 13 and that game was amazing. Dad let me stay up and just enjoy the game. I'll never forget that.
Love ya, HULLY! True hockey player!
That Detroit team was amazing....
#16 The Golden Brett!
His dad is so under rated, by today's whipper snappers. One of the fastest skaters ever, one of the hardest shots ever... I grew up in the Bobby Hull era... Without bothering to look up anything, I'm thinking if you combine Bobby's NHL and WHA scoring totals, and do the same with Gretzky and Howe ... Wayne would still be number one... But They'd be pretty close... and like 1,2,3 on the all time scoring list... The Golden Brett was a really great player, maybe the best one timer ever, such a quick and accurate release, and so magical alongside Adam Oates... But BUT BUT... I gotta say in all honesty, the Golden Jet, in his prime, was even better...
The amazing thing is 2 HOFers named Hull. Unbelievable
Never mentioned his uncle Dennis.
Love brett always will be a redwing!
He played 52-years-old off so cool I had to look it up to make sure he was joking around.
This was great.
my childhood hero!
A guy in my hockey pool could never pronounce his name correctly. He always called him Brent Hull. 😂
Its funny he doesnt talk about ..his fear for coming on the ice with us bigger guys in kimberly incinarena in ek winnipeg ...i was friends with his brothers n the wilson boys ..we all played in cyrs super summer hockey league ..brett would come out n play a lil ..he wasnt a great skater yet but his shot at age 11 or 12 was pretty decent ..but i gotta tell ya ..we"d laugh cause he had a mouth like a sailor..only 5xs worse ...i remember being at a jets blues game many years later with his brother bobby jr...we went outside the room aftet ..brett came out to say hi ...it was priceless ..the same funny brett ..what a character ..im sure him being around all of us older guys influenced him a lil in a positive vibe and he carried with him in his sense of humour ...n what a star he became ...awesome!!
43:15 - That was a controversial goal, and shouldn’t have been allowed per the rules at the time… but that game was going on too long (as many playoff games were at the time) and no one complained. The announcers even defended the decision to not review it and the rules changed in the offseason.
Oates had 45g plus 97 assists in his best season. pretty nice numbers. 86 g season i think oates was 13 +69a
So disappointed when Brett was traded away from Calgary. In the 80’s Calgary was on the top of the NHL
You could say that again. Biggest mistake Calgary ever made was trading him. They said he was lazy, didn't back check. Calgary could have been more than a one year dynasty if they'd kept him. Calgary had so much talent then. Terry Crisp was ancient history after one Stanley Cup and it's been a never ending rotation ever since. Corporate town. I live 6 blocks from the Saddledome and haven't been to a game since forever.
As a leafs fan i had wished he played for Toronto and yes he was in his own but Oats was his feeder
I saw him play in duluth, note mark Pavlich played there too…
too bad hull and oates didn't play more years together. great scoring chemistry.
One of my biggest regrets is not seeing Hull win the cup with the Blues. Curse you Red Wings, you ruined my childhood. Hull had one of the best one-timers in the game.
I always said this.. Bobby Hull the best & hardest slap shot.. Bret had the best & hardest wrist shot ...
met brett once, shook hands, wrists the size of my ankles... & i'm 6'1, 200lbs.
Notice how all of the clips were the Canadian broadcasts. HIGH STICK! lol Brett is a Canadian American beaut.
Thx for interviewing a Canuck
Did you hear the about?
Brett had comic books in his image, set of three and I still have them. Yes Keenan was a prick!
Smaller than a prick
Wowww !
His father was one of the greats
Should've talked about the '96 World Cup of Hockey. Brett could've played for either Canada or USA. He chose USA. Pissed off people in Canada. Being Bobby's son and all. USA wins in Game 3 of the finals in Montreal!!!!
It was Canada's fault. He picked them as his 1st choice back in the 1987 Canada Cup, but they didn't pick him, so he went to the United States team and played. After that, he said he would always play for the United States in any international tournaments
@@daved15351986 IIHF World Championship. Ended up joining USA in that tournament and scoring 7 goals in 10 games.
He played great in that tournament!
He couldn’t have played for Canada because they didn’t pick him. That’s why he played for the US. Back then we called him a trader cause then, you played for where you were born. Not citizenship. Obviously now it’s different.
Stanley Cup Winner with Dallas Stars ⭐️
And Red Wings!
Penticton vees legend.
I love the soft ball questions...
He’s from Winterpeg, Manisnowba and doesn’t mention it.
People today just can't possibly understand how ABSURD that goal crease rule was. It made no sense right from day one and most intelligent people predicted that it was going to be an issue come playoff time. As Hull explained, they did change the rule that if you had possession of the puck and entered the crease, without interfering with the goaltender and scored, the goal would stand. But more importantly, if the puck entered the crease FIRST and then someone's skate and the puck went in (again, assuming the goalie wasn't interfered with), that goal would also count. And that is what happened on the winning goal they showed. The puck entered the crease first, then the player's skate, then the puck went in and the goalie was flat on his stomach and was never touched, the result being it's a good goal.
I will never forgive the blackhawk front office for not drafting brett hull-he would have been a major hockey hero in chicago
Bobby Hull would be the last player to leave practice. Everyone else was gone and he was still signing autographs.
Honestly, Brett should just walk around wearing his Stanley Cup ring, and any Buffalo Babies who cry to him saying "No Goal", he should simply hold up his first with his ring and smile!
If you have to even ask if you’re friends then you already know the answer.
Hull is not a sniper at 15.2 % . you need close or above 20%. a lot of people mix between sniper, scorer and shooter
sniper = % shots, scorer = goals, shooter = shots . ovechkin is not a sniper but a scorer and a shooter . he has only 12.8%. Ovi has a lots of goals because he shoots a lot. More than 6,500 shots to date. Just like In the army the sniper kills few people and a sniper never use a machine gun to kill hundreds of enemies.