The Career of Guy LaFleur

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2025

Комментарии • 207

  • @sylviolebrun3032
    @sylviolebrun3032 5 лет назад +38

    I am old enough to remember that. That's my early years as young Bruins fan. That 1979 dagger was painfull ! Guy was flying on the ice, and what a shot !

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      If it makes you feel any better, he missed captaining a Cup-winner by one year.

    • @FischerFan
      @FischerFan 2 года назад

      Ah yes! 'Twas his Hammer of Thor on poor Gilles Gilbert.

  • @4beats56
    @4beats56 5 лет назад +33

    I am old enough to remember the flower flying up the ice with his hair flowing in the wind. Man those were the days.

    • @wilnerolivier7971
      @wilnerolivier7971 5 лет назад +3

      You were lucky to see him play in his prime!!

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      @@wilnerolivier7971 I didn't see him play at all.

    • @parissimons6385
      @parissimons6385 3 года назад

      Initially, Guy Lafleur was thought to be a bust in the NHL, being brought in as heir apparent to Jean Beliveau. But once he reached his stride, Guy Lafleur and Yvan Cournoyer ("the roadrunner") on the same team, both with their hair streaming in their speed... Wow! With Jacques Lemaire, both Mahovlich brothers, Steve Shutt, Bob Gainey, Guy Lapointe, Serge Savard, Larry Robinson, Ken Dryden, etc. Salad days for the Habs during the 1970s!

  • @dezfoto7534
    @dezfoto7534 3 года назад +7

    Guy Lafleur will always be my all-time favourite player. I had his Canadian Tire poster on my wall when I was growing up and it drove my dad nuts because he was a Leafs fan, lol.

  • @smits98
    @smits98 5 лет назад +12

    I remember watching Guy at an old-timers game in Winnipeg sometime in the late 90's. His skating was still pure magic. I always appreciated how much Guy loved playing, which could be seen in his eagerness to continue to lace them up well into his 50's.

  • @TalkingHabsMedia
    @TalkingHabsMedia 5 лет назад +21

    Lafleur is my hockey Idol and i'm working on a video on him too,you beat me to it,lol
    The Hockey Guy Rocks! Thanks for this video Shannon!

  • @Sydley
    @Sydley 5 лет назад +10

    Thanks for this! Guy was my first favourite player, until Paul Coffey came along.
    I do recall one incident - close to the time of the car accident - that may also have contributed to his decline. After an early Habs playoff exit, he joined Team Canada for the World Championships and was knocked unconscious during a game vs Holland. The ironic thing about this injury was - because of IIHF regulations - he was forced to wear a helmet for this time since he got rid of it in 1974.
    One more additional note: My all-time favourite line combination was Team Canada in the '81 Canada Cup: Gilbert Perrault (LW) - Gretzky (C) - Lafleur (RW)

    • @robertchflynn
      @robertchflynn 4 года назад

      that '81 line really didn't click that well as I recall. Not to the extent we had expected...

    • @Sydley
      @Sydley 4 года назад

      @@robertchflynnI respectfully beg to differ. that line combined for 33 points in that tournament. They were flying until Perreault suffered that injury against Sweden. it all went to pot after that.

  • @nikosthebluesfan8481
    @nikosthebluesfan8481 5 лет назад +32

    I love these career videos, so much details.

  • @garnold44
    @garnold44 5 лет назад +51

    If I recall correctly, Lafleur stopped playing with a helmet after year 3 because he thought it was holding him back. And then year 4!

    • @burny6666
      @burny6666 5 лет назад +6

      Actually, he was playing on the 4th line in most of his first 3 years. It was Bowmen's policy back then to restrict young guys to the 3rd and 4th line, no matter how good they were. Lafleur didn't escape that policy. If he had played with Richard, Mahovlich or Lemaire, he would have put up a lot more points in his rookie seasons.

    • @garnold44
      @garnold44 5 лет назад +3

      @@burny6666 I never heard that one but I believe you. I thought (I lived in Mtl at the time) it was more the helmet and ice time (which would result from your point). Found these quotes: Lafleur: Because other guys didn’t wear helmets at the time and in practice I was not wearing it. In my mind I was on the ice and it seems like I was getting my confidence back and I was playing a lot better in the practice than I was in the games. So that’s why I decided to take the helmet off. ALSO: "But the only reason why I started to have success was because of the amount of ice time I was getting. I was playing more, I was playing on a regular shift". Thx bud!

    • @burny6666
      @burny6666 5 лет назад +5

      @@garnold44 Yeah, I learned that from a Documentary on LaFleur's career, and in an interview. And it was confirmed by my uncles who had season tickets at the time.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад +2

      @@burny6666 Good thing, or we would've missed the waving hair.

    • @garnold44
      @garnold44 5 лет назад +2

      @@burny6666 Thanks bud. Ain't it great to be talking about LaFleur again!

  • @ourlittleadventures519
    @ourlittleadventures519 Год назад +3

    Another fantastic video, thanks!
    Guy was my first favorite player. I was very young, maybe 6-7 watching hockey with my father when this guy used to fly down the wing with his hair waving back almost poetically caught my eye, Guy Lafleur. I was mesmerized. God bless Guy 🙏

  • @acorrive
    @acorrive 2 года назад +2

    I watched the Habs in the ‘70s. What a team. I was there for the Stanley Cup parade in Montreal in 1976. In those days you could get close to the players. Great time. Now that The Flower has just passed away, hockey has lost another legend. RIP Guy.

  • @evanhutchinson9206
    @evanhutchinson9206 Год назад +1

    I didn't get to watch Guy Lafleur play on live TV because I am too young, but I grew up seeing documentaries on TV about him, seeing him taking part in interviews, footage of his magnificent play, and hearing my mom and dad talking about his greatness. He was a true icon, not just as a hockey player but as a public personality. His state funeral last year was really emotional. I remember talking about him with friends and coworkers (older and younger), and having a conversation with my mom (who witnessed his achievements back in the day) the day news of his passing came out. Men like Lafleur brought people together regardless of age, culture, language. I think he was truly one of the greats, not just as a hockey player, but as a sportsperson.
    Thank you for producing these videos and sharing your passion. I really enjoy these "career of" videos of yours, they are great material!

  • @sottoblue6510
    @sottoblue6510 2 года назад +2

    It's pointed out elsewhere a couple questions you asked. He did request a trade from Montreal and retired because they refused. And that Haworth trade was a throwaway in order to get Lafleur eligible to work front office for the Nordiques (I had to reread that when I saw it because I thought that was strange for an off-ice job). Having watched Lafleur play, it was amazing to think he was so dominant being so beautiful to watch. He and Perrault were top scorers and still amazingly graceful. I had hoped to see this from Barzal as an Islander fan, but getting to that next level of scoring is really showing what made these players special, and I think I took that for granted. The 70s Habs were some really graceful and clean hockey to see. They literally skated circles around other teams. Hockey today is awesome, but that was great too.

  • @humankirk9196
    @humankirk9196 3 года назад +5

    Lafleur retired due to conflicts with his former linemate who became his defense-minded coach, Jacques Lemaire, not dissimilar to the disaster of Mario Tremblay coaching Patrick Roy. Except Guy Lafleur was a bigger star (and aging) and there was absolutely no way it would be politically tolerated to trade Guy. Even today his name is frequently chanted by the fans anytime he appears. Trading him would be as shocking as trading Gretzky.
    The love for him runs very deep among French Canadians. It is not just about the statistics, it is the passion of his play, tje beauty of his blond hair flying when at full speed, it is the critical goals he scored, it is his love of life, he became the latest French Canadian icon playing on the one French Canadian team.
    So faced with the only choice of playing under Lemaire or retiring, he retired. On his return as a Ranger -- at the time these things were totally unscripted -- he got multiple standing ovations even as he scored against the home team, not because of his loyal service to the home team but because fans identified with him for the man he was.

  • @bernied4313
    @bernied4313 5 лет назад +4

    Lafleur was everywhere at the time, he even had a little romance with Mireille Mathieu pop singer from France.

  • @smarty432
    @smarty432 2 года назад +1

    Fell in love with hockey because Guy Lafluer was flying down the ice with his hair flowing and then blasted that booming slap shot past the goalies in the 70's all the time. RIP!

  • @dgib1694
    @dgib1694 3 года назад +3

    My mum could only follow the puck when Lafleur when it was on his stick...
    The decline was premature, because his own center Lemaire became coach and changed the whole philosophy of the team. Priority was given to defense and "responsible play". His offensive output back then was directly related to ice time given to him by Lemaire, which was greatly reduced. He left MTL with bitterness at the time.

  • @petermontagnon4440
    @petermontagnon4440 5 лет назад +5

    Guy was an amazing player!!! I watched him all the tome he played . An amazing player!!!

  • @kellyanastasia2752
    @kellyanastasia2752 2 года назад +1

    Watching Guy Lafleur skate was a thing of beauty. So majestic and a stride that looked almost effortless. Head always up ready to give or receive the puck. La fleur etait parfaite!!!

  • @Jay87539
    @Jay87539 5 лет назад +1

    I saw LaFleur in the late 80's pushing his Flower Power fruit punch at an IGA store in Winnipeg.The line to meet him stretched through the whole store and he was the nicest guy ever.A couple suits were telling him he had a plane to catch,and he blew them off and sighned more stuff for a few minutes!!!

  • @ballhockey10
    @ballhockey10 2 года назад

    Thanks for the video. I saw him live once and will never forget it.

  • @drivesecure2476
    @drivesecure2476 5 лет назад +4

    Good video Guy La Fleur was a great hockey player speed great hands a threat every time on the ice

  • @ShantyIrishman
    @ShantyIrishman 5 лет назад +3

    Too young to have watched Guy LaFleur play, but old enough to remember him in the Molson commercial.

  • @gogades
    @gogades 5 лет назад +2

    The thing about Lafleur is that not only did he dominate - he did it with style. This guy was spectacular - no garbage goals banging away it until it trickles it. He was a breath a fresh air in an otherwise terrible NHL decade.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      Bobby Orr had style, too bad he didn't last.

  • @pierremajor8712
    @pierremajor8712 3 года назад

    I am old enough to have gone to games at the Forum during the 70’s. (7 rows from ice level to the right of the goal Ste-Catherine street entrance) I was lucky enough that my Father would get season tickets on a regular basis. I still can hear the skates cutting into the ice and the pucks hitting the glass and boards, In Quebec we were spoiled, 6 cups in the Seventies. Le Demon Blond would get you out of your seat, literally. And when he scored, like the Rocket, it was so much louder than any other Hab. I was so fortunate to have seen them at the time.

  • @thanewage403
    @thanewage403 5 лет назад +2

    I met Guy after an old timers game when I was young, along with Bobby Hull and others, including Gretzky, who was a prick. But Guy was great, even remembered my father from a meeting they had in the past.

  • @HarryJoiner
    @HarryJoiner 5 лет назад

    weird: here it is the off season, and i'm still watching your videos every day, beginning to end. the nhl should put you on their payroll. your videos rock. thanks so much for all you do for the game!

  • @catherinelynnfraser2001
    @catherinelynnfraser2001 5 лет назад

    ❤️❤️❤️🌸 enormous talent and flair. His Gallic shrug was iconic.

  • @johntyrell1740
    @johntyrell1740 5 лет назад +2

    Glad to have an autograph of him 😊

  • @yoholmes273
    @yoholmes273 3 года назад +1

    The greatest NHL draft fleece job ever was Montreal snatching the first overall pick away from The Oakland Seals, winning The Stanley Cup then picking The Fantastic Flower numero uno overall to continue the dynasty.

  • @masonrahal6980
    @masonrahal6980 4 года назад

    Really solid/relatable analysis. Well delivered.

  • @KurdTillDeath
    @KurdTillDeath 5 лет назад

    love these vids shannon
    thank you for keeping me sane for off-season

  • @ericbaker2025
    @ericbaker2025 5 лет назад +1

    Shannon as always my friend excellent video. I love the HABS and LaFleur! He was known for his no helmet and his hair flowing while on skates.

  • @gymrat2647
    @gymrat2647 5 лет назад +1

    Legend and enjoyed hearing guy,guy,guy when he hit the ice

  • @rhong2377
    @rhong2377 2 года назад

    Great video! Thanks so much.

  • @FalseCredential
    @FalseCredential 5 лет назад +3

    I would love to see videos for Bobby Clarke and Bill Barber! Thank you for the great content!

  • @FischerFan
    @FischerFan 3 года назад +1

    Note about the 1980 playoffs. The Canadiens were upset, but not until the second round by Minnesota.
    Lafleur played only three playoff games; the Habs' 3-game preliminary round sweep of Hartford. In the third game of the series; Lafleur was put out of the playoffs by Pat Boutette who stuck out his knee and caught him.
    Bobby Hull and Gordie Howe, both members of the Whalers, played their very last NHL game. The career stats reveal it was, in all honesty, the last game played by the real Guy Lafleur, too.

  • @marcsauriol9130
    @marcsauriol9130 Год назад +2

    after Bobby Orr and before Wayne Gretzky, there was Guy Lafleur

  • @answeris4217
    @answeris4217 5 лет назад +1

    Guy Lafleur played as a ringer for Rockland while playing for Turso. Basically he played for two towns in two different age group at the same time.
    Larry Robinson talked about playing against Guy when he was playing Pewee. That's how much of a fenom he was.
    He had news articles on him as a pewee after Quebec city's world pewee tournament for beating all the scoring records.

  • @vinc8804
    @vinc8804 2 года назад +3

    Rest in peace to a legend

  • @BudSchnelker
    @BudSchnelker 11 месяцев назад

    On the back of Wayne Gretzky's rookie card was the caption "Wayne is considered the best prospect to turn pro since Guy Lafluer". That was the state of the NHL in 1979.

  • @mikalevio
    @mikalevio 5 лет назад +1

    in the canada cup he played on a line with wayne gretsky and gilbert perrault in exhibition games and it was the best line i have ever seen...unfortuneatly gilbert broke his leg and the line split up

  • @hockeytownluv2012
    @hockeytownluv2012 5 лет назад +1

    What a great player!

  • @cofoppyplop
    @cofoppyplop 5 лет назад +1

    I still remember that tagline in that hockey commercial for I don't remember what. The line was: Can Guy Lafleur skate? Can Larry Robinson check? Can Don Edward kick 'em out?. The rest is lost in the sands of time for me

  • @Waachiye
    @Waachiye 5 лет назад +1

    Whether a fan of *”Le Bleu-Blanc-Rouge”* or not, Guy *”Le Démon Blond"* Lafleur was *must watch* TV whenever he took to the ice. And that in a nutshell, is all of you who never had the distinct pleasure of watching him play *’need to know’.*

  • @robertchflynn
    @robertchflynn 4 года назад +3

    Lafleur is a top 15 player of all time but I would argue that no one looked better on the ice in full flight...

  • @MANSIKKAPUURO-jl9zm
    @MANSIKKAPUURO-jl9zm 3 года назад +2

    MY IDOL AND HEROE

  • @nebula6084
    @nebula6084 2 года назад +2

    Came here after the announcement of his death, Rest In Peace Flower

  • @danwalsh6919
    @danwalsh6919 5 лет назад +3

    Would love to see a video on Larry Robinson ! A ring per finger! Great video

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      Most underrated defenseman ever. Yes, you can be a Hall-of-Famer, and, be underrated.

    • @FischerFan
      @FischerFan 2 года назад

      @@matthewdaley746 I believe Larry Robinson was inducted into the Hall of Fame without anyone else.

  • @Bum_Hip
    @Bum_Hip 5 лет назад +6

    Shannon, can you please do a solo video on The Sharks/North Stars expansion n draft that you mentioned?

  • @nathanbaca5131
    @nathanbaca5131 5 лет назад

    I love this "Career of" series.

  • @philly5-014
    @philly5-014 5 лет назад +5

    Hearing he's going to Leafs

  • @doctorx3
    @doctorx3 5 лет назад +1

    Maybe not the greatest player in Canadians history, but almost certainly the most universally beloved. Damned near everybody in hockey either respects or looks up to Guy LaFleur.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      Except Don Cherry, I'll show myself out.

    • @humankirk9196
      @humankirk9196 3 года назад

      All fans of the sport of hockey recognizes when someone brings beauty and excitement. Helmets are necessary for player safety... but man would it be nice to see someone's hair flying in the wind like that and score another beauty

    • @FischerFan
      @FischerFan 2 года назад

      @@matthewdaley746 That's not entirely true. Grapes has gone on the record stating the two most exciting players he had ever seen were Bobby Orr and Guy Lafleur.

  • @SITRUUNAUTZFY
    @SITRUUNAUTZFY 4 года назад +1

    one of my idols

  • @ll7868
    @ll7868 5 лет назад +1

    I remember watching the Nords in the early 90s up until they moved to Colorado, man did they suck, I actually felt sorry for them.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      On-ice suckage spilled over onto the ledgers, you can guess what happened afterwards.

  • @charleshartz4814
    @charleshartz4814 5 лет назад +2

    Guy, Guy, Guy

  • @Scandinavian1962
    @Scandinavian1962 5 лет назад +5

    Do one about Juha Widing
    !

  • @dnasty312
    @dnasty312 2 года назад +1

    #Godspeed, Flower 🙏🏻
    *🏒🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆#10*

  • @OttawaRocks
    @OttawaRocks 2 года назад

    Those were the days. RIP Thurso's finest, Guy Lafleur. Mes condoleances a sa famille.

  • @lancemilliken9078
    @lancemilliken9078 5 лет назад +1

    It is incredible that he took three years off and came back. That is absolutely ridiculous that he can maintain a skill level high enough to compete at the highest level

    • @appletile2887
      @appletile2887 2 года назад

      Coach Lemaire tried to change LaFleur into a player he wasn't...hockey wasn't fun anymore. That's what happened to Cole Caulfield under DuCharme....1 goal in 30 games 22 the rest of the way under St. Louis

  • @JeanCuillerier
    @JeanCuillerier Месяц назад

    amazing....would of been fun if you added team Canada where he played ...aand the one where he played with Gretsky on the same line! It was fun! to watch you

  • @catherinelynnfraser2001
    @catherinelynnfraser2001 5 лет назад

    I remember the disco album and the fragrance “for the man who likes to win”. I was disappointed that none of this was in the Hockey Hall of Fame museum.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      Disco, and, everything associated with it, has been intentionally expunged from society at large's collective consciousness.

  • @michaelleroy9281
    @michaelleroy9281 9 месяцев назад

    The Canadiens got Guy La Fleur with a #1draft choice from the Seals the gift that keeps on giving

  • @bskinny9009
    @bskinny9009 5 лет назад +1

    60 goal scorer one year, great slapshot, the flower.

  • @herrbaron72
    @herrbaron72 2 года назад +1

    Great video.
    But over the numbers, what make his legend was his ability to score that desperately needed goal.
    I'm sure Don Cherry still has nightmares about that goal in the 3rd period of the 7th game in 1979.

  • @Phoiba
    @Phoiba 5 лет назад +2

    Do a video about teams against the cap and teams with the most cap.

  • @patch8376
    @patch8376 5 лет назад

    His Flower Power beverage was underrated. Got overshadowed by the wave of Gatorade.

  • @answeris4217
    @answeris4217 5 лет назад

    Quebec city was LaFleur second home. He used to drive there when he could and party. Then again he would drive to Rockland to party

  • @teresajoy4804
    @teresajoy4804 2 года назад

    Actually, Lafleur did request to be traded in the 84/85 season but Savard, who was the GM at the time, was afraid on how the MC fans would react if he did. Lafleur's only other recourse was to retire. He didn't put up the "numbers" because, under the coaching of Lemaire, the team had adopted a more defensive minded strategy something that didn't suit Lafleur's playing style. According to Guy, he wasn't getting enough playing time because of this. When he did, his shifts were relegated to about 20 seconds claiming it wasn't enough time to build momentum hence the poor outcome. Lafleur DID NOT want to retire but felt he was pressured into doing so since the Habs wouldn't trade him. His "comeback" was well thought out. The biggest obstacle Guy faced was finding a team that would sign him. The NY Rangers did just that. Phil Esposito, the Rangers GM at the time, put a lot of stock into his comeback to the NHL. Even though Guy didn't put up those old numbers he proved he still had something left to contribute.

  • @jacknumberone600
    @jacknumberone600 5 лет назад

    The great Guy! he did a card show here, took a smoke break, I mooched a DuMaurier kingsize off him! He was better even than people think.

  • @mikalevio
    @mikalevio 5 лет назад +28

    he was a great player and its funny that he was a chainsmoker while he played...cannot imagine it helped

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад +1

      @Eirik Rødberg Lemieux had cancer, although it wasn't related to smoking, and, certainly wasn't the reason for his skills.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      @putsome basilonit Absolutely, at least he didn't take to drugs.

    • @tomjones2121
      @tomjones2121 4 года назад +2

      Esposito was a chain smoker too

    • @jpecci4832
      @jpecci4832 3 года назад

      I heard he used to suck down cigarettes between periods with Flyer Bobby Clark have drinks together after the game.

    • @Joe-to8og
      @Joe-to8og 3 года назад

      Apparently, it didn't hurt.

  • @Tomatohater64
    @Tomatohater64 5 лет назад +4

    Back in the 70s, Lafleur and his Canadians made my Penguins look like the minor league affiliate of the California Golden Seals. They would routinely beat us 10 -1, 8-2, 7-0, 9-3. You get the idea.

  • @justjohnny420
    @justjohnny420 2 года назад

    rip legend

  • @asleep909
    @asleep909 5 лет назад +1

    You hinted at his party life...you forgot to mention his DISCO RECORD! Guy LaFleur's Power Play!

  • @CdeHavillandMosquito
    @CdeHavillandMosquito Год назад

    Guy was my very young age hero. But, then, the Nordiques happened.
    For a time he was just someone we had to fight through.
    At the end, before the end, he became a Nord!
    He really was the next Béliveau.

  • @bluebear1985
    @bluebear1985 4 года назад

    That's interesting that Minnesota very briefly held his rights. I believe his old Canadiens teammate Bob Gainey was coach there at the time, so it's hard to say if he would have lasted the season had he stuck around just a bit longer.

  • @PeterCPRail8748
    @PeterCPRail8748 5 лет назад

    As much as a hate the Montreal toilet seats. He was one my favourite player looking back at old time hockey.

  • @CountElvis
    @CountElvis 5 лет назад

    This is why Bill Torrey was so protective of his draft picks- he worked for the Seals and saw what happened to them.

  • @Hexinvir
    @Hexinvir 2 года назад

    You should make more videos for some more iconic canadiens players, like Beliveau, Dryden, Plante etc.

  • @jeffmiller8115
    @jeffmiller8115 5 лет назад

    Great display of Guy’s career, could you consider doing one on Gary Unger? He was a star for the Blues during the early 70’s, or maybe Red Berenson?

  • @John572d4
    @John572d4 2 года назад

    He might have unretired because of the Habitants playoff streak against Boston being broken the previous spring, & may have felt that if he had somehow stayed with Montreal during that time (through ‘88) that he could have prevented it (from ending).

  • @AweShiyte
    @AweShiyte 5 лет назад

    The Guy LaFleur thing almost sounds like the Ottawa Senators situation today, except the first overall pick was traded, instead of being 4th overall by lottery.

  • @ryguy6577
    @ryguy6577 5 лет назад

    What a genuis general manager

  • @smithryansmith
    @smithryansmith 5 лет назад +1

    basically, if Guy Lafluer had been drafted by the Seals, he would have been just like Marcel Dionne. A great French-Canadian player no one remembers because he played in California on a losing team.

    • @patch8376
      @patch8376 5 лет назад +1

      Dionne's judged too harshly for never having won a cup. Lafleur wouldn't have carried LA over Montreal, Islander, and Edmonton teams. Gretzky couldn't win a cup in LA either. It's a team sport.

    • @smithryansmith
      @smithryansmith 5 лет назад

      @@patch8376 total agreement. Had Dionne player for the Habs, he'd be the legend Guy is. Had Guy played for the Seals, he'd be the forgotten talent Dionne is.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      @@smithryansmith He might have even rage quit hockey, although that's unlikely.

    • @humankirk9196
      @humankirk9196 3 года назад

      Marcel Dionne never won anything in Junior either. Lafleur beat Dionne's team for the Richardson Cup and won the Memorial Cup in 1971, with Lafleur as team captain. Dionne didnt just never win the Cup, he never even made it past the second round.
      Lafleur isnt just remembered for which sweater he wore, but for his team accomplishments and for how beautifully he played. People are constantly rediscovering his famous 1979 Game 7 too-many-men tying goal against the archrival Bruins. Guy Lafleur was a clutch player who scored beautiful goals when it mattered most.

  • @BrettHornby
    @BrettHornby 5 лет назад

    Perfect name for a Montreal Canadien legend from Quebec.

  • @SMC01ful
    @SMC01ful Месяц назад

    God, what a classy player. His peak years were well before my time. However, just look at how he skates..

  • @purgedome2386
    @purgedome2386 5 лет назад +2

    A bruin fan talking bout a hab legend.. what has this world come too.. heheh..
    Le Demon Blond retiring early I think came down to ol' Jacques Lemaire and also Guy's pride.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      The fact that neither was there for the Cup the next year was somewhat karmic, however.

    • @cloudsopowera6248
      @cloudsopowera6248 5 лет назад +1

      kinda similar to Dave Keon.
      Guy Lafleur wanted out of Montreal but the Habs then-GM Serge Savard refused to grant his wish

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад +1

      @@cloudsopowera6248 To be fair, Savard won three Conference titles, and, two, Cups, as GM, in addition to his Hall of Fame playing career. He obviously knew what he was doing with the team.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад +1

      @Jimbus Rift Maybe, but he won another Cup before Chelios did, and, even the best, are human.

    • @appletile2887
      @appletile2887 2 года назад

      He was slowly dismantling a dynasty

  • @Joe-to8og
    @Joe-to8og 3 года назад

    He did have a major knee injury in the 1980 playoffs. That and some personal problems away from the game caused his playing to suffer.

  • @smithryansmith
    @smithryansmith 5 лет назад

    You did Brett Hull a few days ago. He's a hall of famer, too.

  • @Ballpython77
    @Ballpython77 5 лет назад +2

    in 84-85 he had a diminish role in the team because of Jacques Lemaire, they didn't agree on anything and Guy got so frustrated, he retired.

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад +1

      If only he'd waited one more year.

    • @wilnerolivier7971
      @wilnerolivier7971 5 лет назад

      @@matthewdaley746 Would've won a Cup with a young goalie named Patrick Roy!!

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад +1

      @@wilnerolivier7971 Perfect ending to a perfect career, alas, it wasn't to be.

    • @cloudsopowera6248
      @cloudsopowera6248 5 лет назад

      Guy later admitted that if he had publicly said he wanted out of Montreal, things could've been difference from him beyond the 70s dynasty

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      @@cloudsopowera6248 I still will always remember the glory years, however he turned out.

  • @robertchflynn
    @robertchflynn 4 года назад

    his old centre Jacques Lemaire was coach the year Lafleur retired as a Montreal Canadian. I don't recall too much of what actually occurred but I do recall Lafleur was playing very little for most of those games. I really hated Lemaire for doing that, although I was a kid rooting for my hero so pretty biased at the time. I think had Lafleur been traded he would have had a couple of good years left. However, no doubt Montreal was unlikely to do that either...

  • @johnbrowne3950
    @johnbrowne3950 5 лет назад +1

    As a Bruins fan I hated all of the Canadiens and especially Guy Lafleur before I met him. Turns out he's a great guy, darn it.

  • @IRON-DEER322
    @IRON-DEER322 5 лет назад +1

    number 4 Jean Beliveau! :D

  • @CoupleOCux
    @CoupleOCux 5 лет назад

    You should do a video on the San Jose expansion. I’m a little confused/curious on how the seals/north stars are related to the sharks. You very well might have done one already tho lol

  • @MaverickWall238
    @MaverickWall238 2 года назад

    RIP

  • @renlessard
    @renlessard 9 месяцев назад

    Guy has a disco album he was so big

  • @Kariakas
    @Kariakas 6 месяцев назад

    It's worked out great but who knows, Marcel Dionne would have been something else on that Habs team also.

  • @DARK24-7
    @DARK24-7 2 года назад

    RIP Mr.Lafleur...

  • @sylviolebrun3032
    @sylviolebrun3032 5 лет назад +7

    You don't have Nordiques magnets ?? lol

  • @svenusling
    @svenusling 5 лет назад +1

    Was he in the all star games in 1991 as the board says or 1981 as you say? :)

    • @matthewdaley746
      @matthewdaley746 5 лет назад

      @Eirik Rødberg Back when more people cared about the All-Star Game.

  • @ABT212
    @ABT212 5 лет назад +3

    Flower Power