Barry Pederson

Barry Pederson

Infobox Ice Hockey Player


image_size =
position = Centre
played_for = Boston Bruins
Vancouver Canucks
Pittsburgh Penguins
Hartford Whalers
nickname =
shot = Right
height_ft = 5
height_in = 11
weight_lb = 185
nationality = CAN
birth_date = Birth date and age|1961|3|13|mf=y
birth_place = Big River, SASK, CAN
draft = 18th overall
draft_year = 1980
draft_team = Boston Bruins
career_start = 1980
career_end = 1992

Barry Pederson (born March 13, 1961, in Big River, Saskatchewan), is a retired professional ice hockey center who played 12 seasons in the National Hockey League between 1980 and 1992. While he was for a time one of the top playmaking centers in the sport, he is unfortunately best remembered as the player traded for Cam Neely in one of the most lopsided trades in NHL history.

Playing career

Pederson was drafted 18th overall by the Boston Bruins in the 1980 NHL Entry Draft after a glittering junior career with the Victoria Cougars. He would return for one more season in Victoria after being drafted, putting up a dazzling 147 points in 55 games, and another 5 points in a 9 game stint in Boston.

He would break into the NHL in exceptional style in the 1981–82 season, setting Bruin rookie records for goals (44, which still stands) and points (92) and finishing runner-up to Dale Hawerchuk for the Calder Trophy as the league's top rookie. Included in his 92 points was a 7 point effort against the Hartford Whalers which also remains a Bruin rookie record. Pederson and star winger Rick Middleton had instant chemistry, and would be one of the league's most dangerous duos for several seasons.

In 1982–83, he emerged as a full-fledged star, finishing with 46 goals and 107 points. He led the Bruins in assists and points, and finished 5th in league scoring (the only player in the top 8 not to eventually make the Hockey Hall of Fame). In the playoffs, he would take his game to another level, as he and Middleton wreaked havoc combining for 65 points in just 17 games before losing out to New York Islanders in the conference finals. Pederson finished 3rd in playoff goals and points despite not reaching the finals.

Pederson would continue his exploits in 1983–84, posting 39 goals and 77 assists for 116 points. His assist and point totals again led the Bruins, and his point total placed him 6th in the NHL. His 77 assists were 3rd in the league behind only Wayne Gretzky and Paul Coffey. He would play in his second consecutive NHL All-Star Game, and was selected to represent Canada at the 1984 Canada Cup tournament that summer.

At this point Pederson, despite being only 23, was one of the brightest young players in the game, and his career was on par with players like Denis Savard, Michel Goulet, Ron Francis and Dale Hawerchuk, all of whom have gone on to the Hall of Fame. However, his career would take a turn in the summer of 1984 when he was diagnosed with a benign tumor in his shoulder. He would return for 22 games in the 1984–85 season, posting only 12 points, before a second more serious surgery had to be performed on his shoulder. This procedure required surgeons to remove part of his shoulder muscle, and forced him to miss the remainder of the season.

Pederson returned to Boston's lineup for the 1985–86 season, but didn't perform at the level he had prior to his injury. He finished the season with respectable totals of 29 goals and 76 points, good for 4th on the team but a 40-point drop from his last healthy year two seasons previous. At the conclusion of the season, Boston GM Harry Sinden, fearing that he wouldn't return to form, dealt him to the Vancouver Canucks for Cam Neely and a first-round draft pick.

Sinden's hunch would prove correct, although Pederson was still a fine player in his first couple seasons in Vancouver. In 1986–87, he finished with 24 goals and team-leading 52 assists for 76 points, and was named Canuck MVP by both the team's media and fans. In 1987–88, he would again lead the team in assists with 52, and added 19 goals for 71 points. He remains one of only 4 player in Canuck history (André Boudrias, Thomas Gradin and Henrik Sedin the others) to record back-to-back 50-assist seasons.

In 1988–89, Pederson would slump to just 16 goals and 41 points while missing almost 20 games due to injury. Dogged by comparisons to Neely, the Canucks would deal him to the Pittsburgh Penguins 16 games into the 1989–90 season. He would continue to struggle in Pittsburgh, finishing the season with just 6 goals and 31 points in 54 games between the Canucks and Penguins. Now primarily a utility player, he would appear in just 46 games in 1990–91, but was a member of the Penguin team that won the Stanley Cup Championship that year.

Released by the Penguins that summer, he signed with the Hartford Whalers but was released after only 5 games. He would sign with the Bruins and finish out his career where he started. At the end of the 1991–92 he retired at the age of only 31.

In recent years, Pederson has worked for NESN as a studio analyst during Bruins telecasts.

Cam Neely trade

In the summer of 1986, Barry Pederson was a valuable commodity. Still just 25, he was considered one of the best young centers in the game. He had already posted two 100-point seasons, and was only two years removed from finishing 3rd in the NHL in assists and 6th in points. To the offense-starved Vancouver Canucks, who were the 3rd-lowest scoring team in the league the previous year, he looked like a saviour and had the added attraction of being a 'local boy' - while originally from Saskatchewan, he'd played his junior hockey nearby in Nanaimo and Victoria from the age of 15 onward.

However, Boston management were convinced that, despite his age, his best years were behind him as a result of two surgeries during the 1984–85 to remove a tumor from his shoulder. On June 6, 1985, the Canucks sent young winger Cam Neely to the Bruins along with a first-round draft pick in the 1987 NHL Entry Draft for Pederson. The 9th overall pick in the 1983 NHL Entry Draft, Neely's development had stagnated and he finished the 1985–86 season with just 14 goals. However, Boston coveted his size and toughness, and considered him a potential heir apparent to Bruin warriors of the past such as Terry O'Reilly and Wayne Cashman.

Neely's game would take off immediately, as he scored 36 goals in his first year in Boston. The next year he scored 42 and was named a 2nd team All-Star. By the 1989–90 season, he was the most feared power forward in the game, equally respected for his natural scoring touch as for his ferocious fighting ability. At the same time, Pederson's career would go into a spiral. After a solid start in Vancouver, by the time Vancouver dealt him away in 1989 he was a marginal NHL player. He would register less than 100 points past the age of 27, and was out of the game by 1992.

While Neely's career was cut horribly short by injury, he still registered three 50-goal seasons, is a legend in Boston, and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2005. To add insult to injury, Vancouver poor season following the deal turned the draft pick into the #3 overall selection in the 1987 NHL Entry Draft, with which the Bruins selected Glen Wesley. Wesley would develop into an All-Star defender for the Bruins, and go on to a stellar 20-year career.

The Neely-Pederson trade is, as such, regarded as one of the most lopsided deals in the history of the NHL. Most Canuck fans also consider it to be the biggest blunder in the history of the franchise, and it remains a sore topic over 20 years later.

Career statistics

--- Regular season --- ---- Playoffs ----Season Team Lge GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1976-77 Nanaimo Clippers BCJHL 64 44 74 118 31 -- -- -- -- --1977-78 Nanaimo Clippers BCJHL 63 51 102 153 68 -- -- -- -- --1977-78 Victoria Cougars WCHL 3 1 4 5 2 -- -- -- -- --1978-79 Victoria Cougars WHL 72 31 53 84 41 -- -- -- -- --1979-80 Victoria Cougars WHL 72 52 88 140 50 16 13 14 27 311980-81 Victoria Cougars WHL 55 65 82 147 65 15 15 21 36 101980-81 Boston Bruins NHL 9 1 4 5 6 -- -- -- -- --1981-82 Boston Bruins NHL 80 44 48 92 53 11 7 11 18 21982-83 Boston Bruins NHL 77 46 61 107 47 17 14 18 32 211983-84 Boston Bruins NHL 80 39 77 116 64 3 0 1 1 21984-85 Boston Bruins NHL 22 4 8 12 10 -- -- -- -- --1985-86 Boston Bruins NHL 79 29 47 76 60 3 1 0 1 01986-87 Vancouver Canucks NHL 79 24 52 76 50 -- -- -- -- --1987-88 Vancouver Canucks NHL 76 19 52 71 92 -- -- -- -- --1988-89 Vancouver Canucks NHL 62 15 26 41 22 -- -- -- -- --1989-90 Vancouver Canucks NHL 16 2 7 9 10 -- -- -- -- --1989-90 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 38 4 18 22 29 -- -- -- -- --1990-91 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 46 6 8 14 21 -- -- -- -- --1991-92 Hartford Whalers NHL 5 2 2 4 0 -- -- -- -- --1991-92 Boston Bruins NHL 32 3 6 9 8 -- -- -- -- --1991-92 Maine Mariners AHL 14 5 13 18 6 -- -- -- -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NHL totals 701 238 416 654 472 34 22 30 52 25

Coaching statistics

Season Team Lge Type1994-95 Boston College NCAA Assistant coach

ee also

*List of WHL seasons
*List of NHL seasons
*List of NHL players

External links

*hockeydb|4209
* [http://www.hockeydraftcentral.com/1980/80018.html Profile at hockeydraftcentral.com]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Barry Pederson — Données clés Nationalité  Canada Né le 13 mars 1961, Big River (Canada) Taille 1,8 m (5 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Barry Pederson — Kanada Barry Pederson Personenbezogene Informationen Geburtsdatum 13. März 1961 Geburtsort Big River, Saskatchewan, Kanada …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Pederson — is a patronymic surname meaning son of Peder . People with the surname Pederson* Barry Pederson, retired player from National Hockey League * Con Pederson, visual effects, animation, writer * Denis Pederson, player with the Eisbaren Berlin of the …   Wikipedia

  • Pederson — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Barry Pederson (* 1961), kanadischer Eishockeyspieler Denis Pederson (* 1975), kanadischer Eishockeyspieler Mark Pederson (* 1968), kanadischer Eishockeyspieler Mogens Pederson (Mogens Pedersen, Magno… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Barry Dean — Données clés Nationalité  Canada Né le 26 février 1955, Maple Creek (Canada) Taille 1,85 m (6 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Barry Gibbs — Données clés Nationalité  Canada Né le 28 septembre 1948, Lloydminster (Saskatchewan) Taille …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Barry Tallackson — Vereinigte Staaten Barry Tallackson Personenbezogene Informationen Geburtsdatum 14. April 1983 Geburtsort Grafton, North Dakota …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Barry Beck — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Beck. Barry Beck Données clés Nationalité  Canada Né le …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Denis Pederson — Kanada Denis Pederson Personenbezogene Informationen Geburtsdatum 10. September 1975 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • New England Sports Network — NESN logo Launched 1984 Owned by Fenway Sports Group (80%) Delaware North (20%) Picture format 480i (SDTV) 1080i (HDTV) Slogan …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”