logo
Hockey Hall of Fame: Zdeno Chára, Alexander Mogilny, Joe Thornton among 8-member class of 2025

Hockey Hall of Fame: Zdeno Chára, Alexander Mogilny, Joe Thornton among 8-member class of 2025

Yahoo24-06-2025
Zdeno Chára will be one of eight members of the 2025 Hockey Hall Fame class who will be inducted in November. (Photo by Dave Sandford/NHLI via Getty Images)
Jennifer Botterill, Zdeno Chára, Brianna Decker, Duncan Keith, Alexander Mogilny, Jack Parker, Danièle Sauvageau, and Joe Thornton will make up the Hockey Hall of Fame class of 2025, Selection Committee chair Ron Francis announced on Tuesday.
The 18-member Selection Committee met on Monday and Tuesday to nominate and elect a class of eight players and builders. Players must not have played in a professional or international game in any of the previous three seasons. Builders are eligible even if they are still active in the game.
Advertisement
Candidates must receive at least 75% of the vote from the Selection Committee in order to be elected.
Jennifer Botterill (Player) — A three-time Olympic gold medalist, Botterill helped Canada win five IIHF World Championship gold medals while averaging over a point per game in her international career (62 goals, 164 points, 162 games). Before starring on the international level, Botterill was a standout player at Harvard and was a back-to-back winner of the Patty Kazmaier Award, which recognizes the top women's collegiate player.
Zdeno Chára (Player) — "Big Z" played for the New York Islanders, Ottawa Senators, Boston Bruins and Washington Capitals over a 1,680-game NHL career that saw him score 209 goals and 680 points. An unmistakeable presence on the ice at 6-foot-9, Chara was one of the best defensemen of his era winning the 2008-09 Norris Trophy as the league's top blue liner. He was also a three-time NHL first team All-Star and was a part of the 2010-11 Stanley Cup winning Bruins squad. Chára also holds the hardest shot record with a 108.8 mph blast during one of his five Hardest Shot competition victories during NHL All-Star Weekend. Internationally, Chára won silver medals at the IIHF World Championship and the 2016 World Cup of Hockey representing Slovakia.
Brianna Decker (Player) — Decker finished her decorated hockey career in 2017 with a mantle full of individual and team honors. While playing collegiately at Wisconsin, she won the 2011-12 Kazmaier Award. She began her international career while still in college and would go on to win six gold and two silver medals at the IIHF World Championships, along with one gold and two silvers at the Olympics. Decker also claimed two CWHL Clarkson Cups and the NWHL's Isobel Cup, where she was also two-time league MVP.
Advertisement
Duncan Keith (Player) — Keith spent all but one season of his 17-year NHL career with the Chicago Blackhawks where he helped the franchise win three Stanley Cups. During that time he also won two Norris Trophies, was named the 2015 Conn Smythe Trophy winner as playoff MVP and was twice voted a first team NHL All-Star. Over his career, he scored 106 goals and recorded 646 points. He was also a part of the 2010 and 2014 Canadian Olympic teams that claimed gold.
Alexander Mogilny (Player) — Mogilny was the first Soviet player to defect west and when he arrived in the NHL he quickly made his mark. His 76-goal season in 1992-93 tied him for the NHL's goal scoring lead with Teemu Selänne. He would finish with 127 points that season. A year later the Sabres named him the first European captain in league history. When it was all said and done, the six-time All-Star scored 473 goals and recorded 1,032 points. He's a member of the IIHF's Triple Gold Club after winning the Stanley Cup, Olympics and IIHF World Championship. He also helped the Soviet Union to gold at the World Junior Championship.
Jack Parker (Builder) — Parker coached Boston University for 40 years and helped the Terriers claim three NCAA national championships and six Hockey East tournament titles. He's a three-time Spencer Penrose Award winner as the top Division-I men's coach and owns the record for most wins with one school with 897 and the most NCAA tournament appearances with 24.
Advertisement
Danièle Sauvageau (Builder) — Sauvageau is the first woman to be elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in the builder category and earned the honor following a coaching career that saw her guide Canada's women's team to a silver medal at the 1998 Olympics and then gold four years later in Salt Lake City. She's been part of seven Olympics with Canada serving as head coach, general manager and consultant.
Joe Thornton (Player) — Thornton's 24-year NHL career saw him suit up for the Boston Bruins, San Jose Sharks, Toronto Maple Leafs and Florida Panthers after being the No. 1 overall pick in the 1997 NHL draft. He fell short of Stanley Cup glory, but did win an Art Ross Trophy as the league's leading scorer, a Hart Trophy as NHL MVP and was a first team NHL All-Star. Thornton did find success on the international stage with Canada winning gold at the 1997 World Junior Championships, 2010 Olympics, and two World Cups of Hockey. "Jumbo" finished with 430 goals and 1,539 points in 1,714 games. He is one of only 16 players in NHL history to have reached the 1,500-point mark.
The Hockey Hall of Fame class of 2025 will be inducted in Toronto on Monday, Nov. 10.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stephen Nedoroscik returns from Olympic fame, plans to ride the pommel horse through LA 2028
Stephen Nedoroscik returns from Olympic fame, plans to ride the pommel horse through LA 2028

NBC Sports

time2 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Stephen Nedoroscik returns from Olympic fame, plans to ride the pommel horse through LA 2028

Stephen Nedoroscik was the breakout star of the Paris Olympic men's gymnastics competition as Pommel Horse Guy, earning team and individual bronze medals. But after taking nine months off from the sport, he is not assured more glory at this week's Xfinity U.S. Championships It's his first meet since the 2024 Games and, he hopes, his first meet on the road to a return Olympic trip at LA 2028. 'Three months leading up to a competition after a nine-month break is pretty crazy,' he said in a press conference Wednesday on the eve of nationals in New Orleans. 'So entering the gym after that long break, I kind of gave myself this little bit of buffer time to decide, is it worth pushing for USAs (national championships)? Or is it worth just taking my time with this comeback? Nick Zaccardi, 'But, pretty quickly, I started getting my skills back, like within the first few weeks, and I started feeling really confident in myself. I said, 'You know what, why not just go for it?' The worst that happens is it doesn't go well, and that's something I'm OK with. But how cool would it be if I went here and did good and after only three months of training and nine months off and just be amazing? So I wanted to take this opportunity, give it my all and kind of be self-forgiving with whatever the result is. There's a lot of reasons I might not have come here, but I've moved past all of those, and I've decided I want to be here, and I want to give it my all.' Nedoroscik followed the Paris Olympics by placing fourth on 'Dancing with the Stars' in the fall. He then toured with the show into April and played some chess. He returned to gymnastics training in Florida in May. He said his pommel horse routine this week is 'probably insanely hard for me to do, considering the circumstances.' He was the oldest on the five-man Olympic team, four of whom are competing this week. 'I'm 26 now. For a lot of gymnasts, that's kind of pushing it,' he said. 'But I've always told myself, I want to be done with the sport when my body's done with the sport. And I'm still getting better. I'm still getting better in the gym every day, and I feel like I'd be doing myself almost a dishonor to not see how far I could go with the sport. I want to continue going. When I start feeling myself, start plateauing and my body starts giving out, I think that'll be when I am finally ready to be done with the sport.' The six-man roster for October's World Championships will be named after the two-day competition in New Orleans (Thursday and Saturday for the men). There is no team event at this year's worlds. Just the individual all-around and the apparatus finals, including pommel horse (which Nedoroscik won at the 2021 Worlds). To automatically secure a spot at 2025 Worlds, a gymnast must this week win one of the six apparatus titles with a difficulty score at least equal to the best posted at the Asian and European Championships back in the spring. If fewer than six men do that across all of the events, then the rest of the team is chosen by a committee. Patrick Hoopes, who actually outscored Nedoroscik on pommel horse at the Olympic Trials, is in the nationals field and has been competing all year — both internationally and as an NCAA champion for Air Force. Hoopes had a 6.0 difficulty score at the World University Games last month. The top difficulty score from Europe and Asia was 6.2. On June 28, Nedoroscik posted a training video of a 5.8 difficulty routine — with errors, he noted — in his first week back doing full sets. He mixes that competitive mindset — including the ability to solve a Rubik's Cube in eight seconds — with a playful demeanor. Nedoroscik captioned a recent post commemorating a year since Paris with a closing line, 'Stay loose n goofy.' 'You have to be a little bit crazy to do one event for as many years as I've done it,' he said. 'But for me, it's all about going after those marginal gains. How can I make this one thing I've done for 10 years a little bit better?'

Could Recently Traded Forward Return to Oilers in 2026?
Could Recently Traded Forward Return to Oilers in 2026?

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Could Recently Traded Forward Return to Oilers in 2026?

What are the odds that Evander Kane, who was recently traded by the Edmonton Oilers to the Vancouver Canucks, could return to Edmonton next season? Apparently, pretty good, according to one source. It would be unexpected to see Kane and the Oilers reunite, but in some ways, it's not the strangest, most unheard of idea. Frankly, weirder things have happened. The 2 Mutts Podcast account on posted the following:" #Canucks LW Evander Kane had 2 goals & 2 assists in a Division 1 Beer league game at Castledowns Rink in Edmonton last night for the BroadStreet Bullies, a team he played for in the summer of 2023. Kane played under the name Fa Afo again. Kane is spending his summer in Edmonton. It's his new home. Some conversations on returning to the Oilers organization after he plays out his final year of this current contract. " To say the least, this is an interesting report which this author suggests you take with a bit of a grain of salt. The 2 Mutts Podcast has a somewhat polarizing relationship with their followers on social media. Claiming to have gotten several insider stories correct and that they work hard to get news that other sources can't, they've also been wrong as often they've been correct with their reports. In a post back on July 8th, they even joked, " Are we now the official Oilers Insiders in the City of Edmonton? Haha We are getting a lot of DM's from #LetsGoOilers fans saying so. Seems like we've been right on a lot of great things this season for Oilers fans…. Tell us if we are wrong below." Whether you consider them insiders or not, the idea of Kane returning to Edmonton is intriguing. What Are the Odds Kane Returns? I would suggest that Kane has about the same, if not better odds, of re-signing with the Canucks or testing the free agency waters as he does going back to the Oilers. That said, here's what we know: Evander Kane was a useful Oiler who didn't ruffle feathers inside the organization like he did with past organizations. He was well liked, was great in the community, and calls Edmonton home. Kane was traded, mostly because of his salary cap hit. The Oilers needed to clear space to make other moves and trading him to the Canucks, where he had history in Vancouver, was a viable option they took advantage of. Kane is the kind of power forward that teams, including the Oilers love. When he's healthy, he's a difference-maker. He can cause problems based on the number of penalties he takes, but he's an impact forward who can play a physical brand of hockey and score in bunches. Kane did not leave on bad terms. He wrote when he broke the news of his trade, " I want to take a moment to sincerely thank the entire organization, my teammates, and the incredible community of Edmonton." He added: "To the Oilers Ownership, front office, coaching staff, and trainers—thank you for believing in me and giving me the opportunity to be a part of such a respected and passionate franchise. Your support meant everything, and I'll always be grateful for the chance to compete in the blue and orange." - Does this mean he'll return next season? Of course not. Does it mean the book is closed on his time with the Oilers? Maybe not. Kane is on the final season of his current contract, after which he'll become an unrestricted free agent. As the salary cap climbs, if Kane is at a point in his career where he's thinking more about fit and family than he is about money, he might be open to giving the Oilers a team-friendly rate to bring him back. If he plays well in Vancouver, there's no reason for Edmonton to at least not give it a look. Adam Henrique, Kasperi Kapanen, David Tomasek and several Oilers are on expiring contracts at the end of this coming season. That may open the door to some cap flexibility if the terms are good and the situation is right. Trending Story 8 More Years for Jake Walman?: Oilers Thinking Long-Term Deal The Edmonton Oilers may be closing in on a significant long-term extension with defenseman Jake Walman, with growing signs pointing to an eight-year deal. Kane is looking at an important season. If he plays well, there will several doors that open for him to get a new deal and is favorable with a rising salary cap. If he's injured, struggles, or becomes a problem in Vancouver --where drama seems to follow the organization -- Kane could find that he becomes a player other teams are leery to give a shot to. Whether any of that equates to a reconnection with the Oilers remains to be seen.

Tkachuk Family Announced As NHL 26 Deluxe Edition Cover Athletes
Tkachuk Family Announced As NHL 26 Deluxe Edition Cover Athletes

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Tkachuk Family Announced As NHL 26 Deluxe Edition Cover Athletes

Matthew, Brady, and Keith Tkachuk will grace the deluxe edition cover of NHL 26. A five-time All-Star and 1997 Maurice Richard Trophy winner, Keith Tkachuk will appear on the cover in a St. Louis Blues jersey. He played 543 regular season games for the Blues over parts of nine seasons and currently serves as the team's Director of Recruitment. The last Blues player to be on the cover was Vladimir Tarasenko in NHL 17. A four-time All-Star and captain of the Ottawa Senators, Brady Tkachuk becomes the first Senators player to appear on the cover of an EA NHL game. Craig Anderson was available as a custom cover on NHL 14, and Jason Spezza was on the cover of NHL 2K8. Matthew Tkachuk was announced at the standard edition cover athlete on Aug. 4. The father-son trio have combined for 969 career goals. NHL 26 is set to release Sept. 12, those who pre-order the deluxe edition get access Sept. 5. For more NHL Gaming news make sure you bookmark The Hockey News Gaming Site or follow our Google News Feed. Photo Credit: EA SPORTS NHL

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store