Best Player in Every NHL Team’s History | IceHockeyMan

Best Player in Every NHL Team’s History | IceHockeyMan

Best Player in Every NHL Team’s History

Date: March 31, 2026

By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

Who is the single greatest player each NHL franchise has ever called its own? This is where legacy, dominance, trophies, influence, identity and franchise-level impact all collide. Some choices are untouchable. Others will start wars in comment sections. That is exactly what makes this conversation one of the best in hockey.


How This IHM Ranking Was Built

This is not just a list of the most famous names. The real question is bigger: which player most fully represents the competitive peak, historical weight and identity of a franchise?

To build this franchise-by-franchise breakdown, the IHM lens focuses on five factors:

  • Peak dominance - how overpowering the player was at his best
  • Franchise legacy - how strongly the player is tied to that team’s identity
  • Statistical control - goals, points, wins, records and consistency
  • Trophy and playoff impact - awards, Cups and pressure-game influence
  • Historical footprint - whether the player changed how that franchise or position was viewed

Also important: if one player had legendary runs for multiple teams, he gets attached to the franchise where his legacy feels most definitive.


Franchise Icons - Team by Team

Anaheim Ducks - Teemu Selänne

No player is more deeply woven into Ducks history than Teemu Selänne. His speed, scoring instincts and charisma gave Anaheim a true global icon. He brought elite finishing, star power and long-term identity to a young franchise, then capped it with a Stanley Cup in 2007. For Anaheim, Selänne is not just the best player. He is the emotional face of the organization’s rise.

Boston Bruins - Bobby Orr

This one is almost beyond debate. Bobby Orr did not merely dominate from the blue line - he rewrote what a defenseman could be. His skating, creation, scoring and total command of the game changed hockey permanently. For Boston, Orr is more than a franchise legend. He is one of the sport’s great structural disruptors.

Buffalo Sabres - Dominik Hašek

Gilbert Perreault built the offensive heartbeat of the franchise, but Dominik Hašek reached a level few goaltenders in history have touched. In Buffalo, he turned chaos into survival and survival into contention. His style was unconventional, but the results were pure elite control. The Sabres have had stars. Hašek was a force multiplier.

Calgary Flames - Jarome Iginla

Iginla remains the complete symbol of Calgary hockey - skill, toughness, captaincy, consistency and big-moment credibility. He scored, led, fought through hard eras and carried the franchise with dignity. Even in a strong Flames history, no one feels more central to the organization’s competitive identity than Iginla.

Carolina Hurricanes / Hartford Whalers - Ron Francis

Francis gave this franchise elite production without needing theatrical attention. He drove offense, played a detailed two-way game and gave the organization continuity across eras. His statistical control of franchise history is overwhelming, and his impact reaches from Hartford roots into Carolina relevance. Quiet greatness is still greatness.

Chicago Blackhawks - Stan Mikita

Chicago has iconic names, but Mikita’s blend of production, intelligence and evolution gives him the edge. He was not only an offensive engine, but also one of the league’s smartest centers of his era. His transformation as a player and his sustained excellence make him the deepest long-term choice for the Blackhawks.

Colorado Avalanche / Quebec Nordiques - Joe Sakic

Sakic was the calm center of everything - elite shot, elite timing, elite leadership. He produced at a historic level while making the franchise feel stable, dangerous and championship-ready. Great captains do not just perform. They regulate the standard around them. Sakic did that for two different franchise identities in one continuous run.

Columbus Blue Jackets - Sergei Bobrovsky

For Columbus, this is about franchise-level importance. Bobrovsky gave the Blue Jackets legitimacy in net, elite Vezina-level play and one of the biggest playoff moments in team history. His best seasons were the kind that change how a team is perceived around the league. Until another Blue Jacket builds a longer playoff-driven legacy, Bobrovsky stays on top.

Dallas Stars - Mike Modano

Few players define a market the way Modano defined hockey in Dallas. He was the skill face of the franchise, the American star, the offensive reference point and a central part of the team’s championship identity. He did not just lead statistically. He helped make the Stars matter in a non-traditional market.

Detroit Red Wings - Nicklas Lidström

This is one of the hardest franchise calls in the NHL, which tells you how powerful Lidström’s case really is. Detroit has giants everywhere in its history, but Lidström gave the Red Wings something uniquely rare: complete defensive order with elite offensive intelligence and championship calm. He was precision under pressure. Shift after shift, year after year.

Edmonton Oilers - Wayne Gretzky

The easiest selection on the list. Gretzky is not only Edmonton’s greatest player. He is the measuring stick for offensive genius in hockey history. The Oilers were the stage for his most explosive dominance, and the league still lives inside statistical shadows he created decades ago.

Florida Panthers - Pavel Bure

Some players own a franchise through longevity. Others do it through pure intensity of impact. Bure belongs to the second category. His Florida stretch was explosive, terrifying for defenders and offensively disproportionate to almost anything the franchise had seen. In a shorter window, he still bent the Panthers around his speed and finishing.

Los Angeles Kings - Anze Kopitar

Kopitar is the modern Kings identity in one player: responsible, intelligent, difficult to play against, productive and built for playoff hockey. He does not always get loud praise because his greatness is rooted in completeness rather than flash. But franchise greatness is not always about noise. Sometimes it is about control.

Minnesota Wild - Mikko Koivu

Kirill Kaprizov may yet take this spot one day, but Koivu still represents the deepest version of Wild identity - captaincy, structure, defensive conscience and long-term loyalty. He was never built around glamour. He was built around trust. For a franchise still shaping its history, that matters.

Montreal Canadiens - Jean Béliveau

For a franchise this rich, picking one name is almost unfair. But Béliveau combines class, production, championships and era-defining stature in a way that feels uniquely Montreal. He was not just a winner. He was elegance with authority. In Canadiens history, that combination carries enormous weight.

Nashville Predators - Pekka Rinne

Rinne is Nashville’s foundational pillar. He stabilized the crease, gave the franchise top-end identity and anchored the deepest competitive stretch the organization has known. For long periods, the Predators’ entire ceiling was tied to his ability to erase mistakes and hold structure together under pressure.

New Jersey Devils - Martin Brodeur

This is not only a franchise pick. It is an all-time positional pick. Brodeur defined the Devils’ most successful era and, in many ways, helped define the tactical reputation of the team itself. Volume, durability, puck-handling and results - few goalies have ever carried more organizational weight.

New York Islanders - Mike Bossy

Bossy’s scoring efficiency remains absurd, even by historical superstar standards. He gave the Islanders finishing power at a level that made dynasty hockey feel inevitable. His touch around the net was ruthless, repeatable and clean. In a franchise full of championship names, Bossy remains the sharpest offensive blade.

New York Rangers - Brian Leetch

The Rangers have had major names, major eras and major personalities, but Leetch delivered elite two-way brilliance from the back end while also becoming central to one of the most important championship moments in franchise history. For a defenseman to carry that much offensive and historical gravity in New York matters.

Ottawa Senators - Daniel Alfredsson

Alfredsson is the Ottawa Senators. That is the shortest and strongest case. He carried the franchise through its modern rise, gave it credibility, leadership and consistency, and left a mark far beyond raw points. Some players become symbols almost by accident. Alfredsson earned it season by season.

Philadelphia Flyers - Bobby Clarke

For the Flyers, the answer had to come from the core of their identity: hard, relentless, unapologetic and built to lead. Clarke was all of that, plus elite production and trophy-level impact. He was not merely a star in Philadelphia. He was the standard-setter for what Flyers hockey came to mean.

Pittsburgh Penguins - Mario Lemieux

This is where greatness becomes myth-level. Lemieux combined size, touch, imagination and scoring destruction in a way very few players ever have. Injuries took away massive chunks of his career, and he still produced an all-time résumé. On top of that, his value to Pittsburgh extends beyond the ice. He saved the franchise itself.

San Jose Sharks - Patrick Marleau

This may be one of the list’s most debated calls, because Joe Thornton’s playmaking case is huge. But Marleau’s durability, franchise attachment, all-time games played status and long-range organizational imprint give him the nod. He feels like the player most inseparable from Sharks history.

Seattle Kraken - Jared McCann

Seattle is still in the early-building stage, so this is a young conversation. For now, McCann owns the offensive benchmark and remains the clearest individual face of the franchise’s first scoring identity. This spot is still open to future takeover, but at this moment, it belongs to him.

St. Louis Blues - Brett Hull

Hull’s St. Louis run was a goal-scoring detonation. The volume, pace and fear factor were off the charts. Bernie Federko has the franchise completeness case, but Hull’s peak offensive violence with the Blues pushes him over the top. Some peaks are simply too extreme to ignore.

Tampa Bay Lightning - Nikita Kucherov

This is one of the most modern and most interesting franchise debates. Stamkos gave Tampa leadership, goals and championship captaincy. Kucherov, however, has elevated into a level of offensive command that is impossible to soften. When the game slows for him, everyone else looks late. That is franchise-best territory.

Toronto Maple Leafs - Dave Keon

The Leafs have a massive history, which makes Keon’s place even more impressive. His defensive intelligence, skating, leadership and championship contribution made him one of the most complete centers the franchise has ever had. In a city that values both style and sacrifice, Keon’s profile holds up powerfully.

Utah Mammoth - Clayton Keller

For Utah, the conversation is still being written in real time. Keller gets the nod because he is the most advanced high-end offensive talent connected to the current identity, and he has already shown the kind of production pace that gives a new market a true lead figure. This story is early, but right now he is the answer.

Legacy note: For the old Jets/Coyotes line, Shane Doan remains the defining franchise figure. He was loyalty, endurance and leadership in one long desert-era run.

Vancouver Canucks - Henrik Sedin

Bure had the electricity. Linden had the emotional bond. Naslund had the scoring peak. Henrik Sedin gets the final edge because of how fully he controlled the offensive identity of the Canucks over time. Vision, timing, possession control and franchise records push him into the top seat.

Vegas Golden Knights - Jonathan Marchessault

Vegas moves fast, so these rankings will always be vulnerable to change. But Marchessault’s original-misfit status, franchise scoring leadership and Conn Smythe-winning championship run still give him the strongest case. Jack Eichel is applying heavy pressure to this spot, but Marchessault still owns the defining résumé.

Washington Capitals - Alex Ovechkin

This is another no-doubt selection. Ovechkin is Washington hockey. Records, one-timers, physical force, identity, charisma and the long-awaited Cup - no Capital has ever approached his total franchise impact. Even on an all-time league scale, his case is historic.

Winnipeg Jets - Mark Scheifele

For the modern Jets/Thrashers line, Scheifele now has the strongest overall argument. The production, the role, the playoff involvement and the long-term franchise centrality are all there. He may not be the cleanest public-consensus pick everywhere, but from a franchise-building standpoint, his case is strong and mature.


The Hardest Franchise Debates

Not every team gives you a clean answer. Some franchises force a real split between peak dominance and long-term identity.

  • Detroit: Lidström vs Howe vs Yzerman is an all-time impossible room
  • Montreal: Béliveau vs Richard vs Lafleur vs Roy is a dynasty-level argument
  • Tampa Bay: Kucherov vs Stamkos is a modern era civil war
  • San Jose: Marleau vs Thornton depends on whether you value longevity or playmaking gravity
  • Minnesota: Koivu holds the legacy edge, but Kaprizov is the active threat to flip the table
  • Vegas: Marchessault holds it today, but Eichel is building a serious future case

What This List Really Shows

The most interesting thing about this exercise is not the winners. It is the pattern behind them.

Some franchises are built around scorers. Some around goaltenders. Some around captains. Some around players who transformed the entire tactical ceiling of a team.

That is why lists like this matter. They reveal what each organization truly values at its core: explosive offense, championship control, emotional leadership, defensive order or generational star power.


Coach Mark Comment

When I look at a list like this, I do not start with raw points or trophies. I start with one question: if I had to build the psychological identity of a franchise around one player, who would carry the standard every night?

That is why some names become bigger than statistics.

Bobby Orr changed the geometry of the ice. Lidström made elite defending look almost silent. Iginla gave Calgary emotional force. Sakic gave Colorado calm under pressure. Brodeur and Hašek did not just make saves - they changed the risk tolerance of the teams in front of them.

This is where many fans get the debate wrong. The best player in franchise history is not always the one with the loudest highlights. Very often it is the player who made the entire team function at a higher tactical and emotional level.

The strongest franchise players do three things at once: they produce, they stabilize, and they define behavior.

That is real greatness.


Fan Pulse

Which franchise has the toughest all-time player debate right now?

  • Detroit Red Wings
  • Montreal Canadiens
  • Tampa Bay Lightning
  • San Jose Sharks
  • Another one - drop it in the comments

This one should create war in the comments section, and that is exactly the point.


Q&A: Best Player in Every NHL Team’s History

How do you judge the best player in a franchise’s history?

You look at peak performance, franchise records, trophies, playoff impact, longevity and how strongly that player shaped the team’s identity.

Is the best franchise player always the leading scorer?

No. Some teams are more clearly defined by elite goaltending, leadership, defensive dominance or championship influence than by pure point totals.

Why can a goalie be the best player in team history?

An elite goalie can completely change a franchise’s competitive ceiling, especially if he carries average or flawed rosters deep into contention.

Why was Bobby Orr such a transformational player for Boston?

He changed the role of the defenseman by combining skating, offense and game control at a level hockey had never seen before.

Why is Wayne Gretzky the clear choice for Edmonton?

Because his peak with the Oilers remains one of the greatest stretches of offensive domination in the history of professional sports.

Why does Mario Lemieux still rank above Sidney Crosby in Pittsburgh?

Lemieux’s peak talent, scoring dominance and franchise-saving legacy still give him the edge, even though Crosby has an extraordinary case of his own.

Why is Nicklas Lidström such a strong choice for Detroit?

He combined defensive perfection, offensive intelligence, longevity and championship impact in one of the deepest franchise histories in hockey.

Could current players still take these spots in the future?

Yes. Players like Kaprizov, Eichel and others are still building their cases and could eventually become the top player in franchise history.

Why does longevity matter so much in franchise debates?

Because long-term excellence creates identity, trust and emotional connection with the organization and its fan base.

What is the biggest mistake fans make in debates like this?

They often compare highlight value instead of total franchise impact. Greatness is bigger than flash.

Which franchise debate is the most controversial?

Detroit, Montreal, Tampa Bay and San Jose are among the hardest because each has multiple players with elite but very different cases.

Why are these all-time franchise lists valuable for fans?

They help explain what each team has historically been built around - offense, defense, goaltending, captaincy or championship structure.