Showing posts with label 1968-69 NHL Season. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1968-69 NHL Season. Show all posts

Monday, March 23, 2026

A One-Man Offense: Eddie Joyal’s Hat Trick Heroics with the 1968-69 Los Angeles Kings

eddie joyal los angeles kings 1968-69 o-pee-chee 40 nhl hockey card

During the 1968-69 NHL season, Eddie Joyal delivered the finest offensive campaign of his career, leading the Los Angeles Kings with 33 goals. Among those tallies were the only two hat tricks of his NHL career, both remarkable performances in which Joyal accounted for every bit of offense his team produced.

The first came on December 4, 1968, when the Kings hosted the Philadelphia Flyers at the Forum. Philadelphia opened the scoring early in the first period, but Joyal responded with a game-tying goal, his seventh of the season, beating Bernie Parent with assists from Bill White and Real Lemieux. The game remained deadlocked until the third period, when Joyal took over completely.

He broke the tie midway through the final frame with an unassisted marker, then sealed the victory with another goal late in the period to complete the hat trick and secure a 3-1 win for Los Angeles. Joyal led all players with seven shots on goal in the contest, while Kings goaltender Gerry Desjardins turned aside all but one of the 14 shots he faced.

Joyal’s second hat trick came on February 19, 1969, in a road game against the Minnesota North Stars. Once again, he was the driving force offensively, scoring three goals, his 25th, 26th, and 27th of the season, and adding an assist on a Bill Flett goal. Despite his efforts, the Kings fell 7-4 in a high-scoring affair. Joyal fired eight shots on goal, matching Minnesota’s Bill Goldsworthy, who also had a big night for the home side.

Over the course of his NHL career, Joyal appeared in 465 games between 1962-63 and 1971-72, skating with the Detroit Red Wings, Toronto Maple Leafs, Los Angeles Kings, and Philadelphia Flyers. He later extended his professional career in the WHA, playing 239 regular-season games and adding six playoff appearances with the Edmonton Oilers.

Stories From The Epic History Of NHL Hockey (Volume IV) cover

Stories From The Epic History Of NHL Hockey (Volume IV)

Dive into unforgettable tales from NHL history — the biggest moments, legendary players, and classic rivalries.

Buy on Amazon
The PDF versions of some of our hockey books are now available for free download: Take a look!

Sunday, February 1, 2026

The 1969 NHL “Nothing Game” That Rewrote the Record Book

The final game of the 1968-69 NHL regular season meant little in the standings for the Chicago Blackhawks and Detroit Red Wings. Both Original Six clubs had already been eliminated from postseason contention. Yet on March 30, 1969, at Chicago Stadium, the two rivals delivered one of the most statistically bizarre and historically rich games in league history.

Chicago skated away with a wild 9-5 victory, but the boxscore told a far deeper story than the score alone.

Blackhawks defenseman Pat Stapleton etched his name into the NHL record book by becoming just the second blueliner in league history to record six assists in a single game, tying a 25-year-old mark set by Babe Pratt in 1944. Stapleton’s assists were spread across the lineup: two on goals by Pit Martin, two on Stan Mikita goals (both scored shorthanded), and single helpers on tallies by Ken Wharram and Bobby Hull.

Stapleton’s assist on Hull’s goal with just 11 seconds remaining in the second period carried historic weight of its own. That goal was Hull’s 58th of the season, setting a new NHL single-season record at the time, one that would stand until Phil Esposito surpassed it two years later.

Detroit had its own milestones on the night. Gordie Howe posted two goals and two assists for a four-point performance, finishing the season with 103 points. While not a record, it was part of a landmark season in NHL history, 1968-69 marked the first time players crossed the 100-point threshold, with Esposito and Hull reaching the mark earlier that year.

Back on the Chicago side, Pit Martin turned in one of the most efficient scoring performances ever recorded, scoring four goals on just four shots. For Detroit, Frank Mahovlich found the net for his 49th goal of the season, the closest the Big M would come to the elusive 50-goal plateau during his NHL and WHA career.

Stories From The Epic History Of NHL Hockey (Volume IV) cover

Stories From The Epic History Of NHL Hockey (Volume IV)

Dive into unforgettable tales from NHL history — the biggest moments, legendary players, and classic rivalries.

Buy on Amazon
The PDF versions of some of our hockey books are now available for free download: Take a look!

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Esposito, Hull, Howe: The Race to the NHL’s First 100-Point Season


Before 1968-69, no NHL player had ever scored 100 points in a single season. The closest came in the mid-60s: Bobby Hull with 97 points in 1965-66, and Stan Mikita matching the feat the next year. Mikita even won the 1967-68 Art Ross Trophy with just 87 points. But the next season would change NHL history forever.

In 1968-69, not one, but three hockey legends shattered the 100-point barrier for the first time: Phil Esposito, Bobby Hull, and Gordie Howe.

Phil Esposito: The First to 100

On March 2, 1969, Boston Bruins centre Phil Esposito reached the milestone in style. Facing the Pittsburgh Penguins at Boston Garden, Esposito scored his 39th goal of the season just 17 seconds into the third period, assisted by Ken Hodge and Ted Green. That goal marked point number 100.

He wasn’t done, adding a shorthanded goal later in the period, assisted by Hodge and Bobby Orr, on the way to a 4-0 win. Esposito ended the year with 126 points, earning his first of five Art Ross Trophies.

Bobby Hull: The Golden Jet Follows

On March 20, 1969, in the same Boston Garden, Bobby Hull of the Chicago Blackhawks became the second man to hit 100 points. Needing two points going into the game, Hull scored his 54th goal with less than three minutes left, then struck again just 13 seconds later for the magic number.

Hull closed the season with 107 points, finishing second to Esposito in the scoring race.

Gordie Howe: Mr. Hockey Joins the Club

Finally, on March 30, 1969, Gordie Howe entered the Detroit Red Wings last game of the season with 99 points. Against Hull’s Blackhawks, Howe scored his 43rd goal just 33 seconds into the second period for point number 100.

He added another goal and two assists for a four-point night, finishing the season with 103 points, good for third in the Art Ross race.


Quiz: NHL’s First Triple 100-Point Season (1968-69)

Much more NHL hockey trivia can be found at our Hockey Trivia website!
  1. Who was the first player in NHL history to reach 100 points in a single season?
    Bobby Hull
    Phil Esposito
    Gordie Howe
  2. In which month of 1969 did Phil Esposito hit the 100-point milestone?
    January
    March
    February
  3. How many points did Bobby Hull finish with in the 1968-69 season?
    100
    107
    126
  4. Gordie Howe reached his 100th point against which team?
    Boston Bruins
    Chicago Blackhawks
    New York Rangers
  5. How many points did Phil Esposito total in 1968-69?
    107
    103
    126