Denis Charles Potvin (born October 29, 1953) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey defenceman and team captain for the New York Islanders of the National Hockey League (NHL). In his youth, Potvin excelled for the Ottawa 67's for his play that saw him touted as the potential next Bobby Orr. Potvin was drafted as the first-overall pick by the Islanders in 1973. He would play all fifteen seasons in the NHL with the Islanders.

In his first season with the team, Potvin won the Calder Memorial Trophy for his rookie play, the first Islander to win a major award. In the 1977–78 season, he won the James Norris Memorial Trophy for his defensive play, an award he would win two further times in his career. He served as captain of the team from 1979 to 1987 and led the team to the Stanley Cup championship in four consecutive years from 1980 to 1983. A reliable presence for the Islanders in physicality and his slap shot, he passed Orr for most goals as a defenceman and became the first player in his position to score 300 goals in NHL history, doing so in his final season in 1988. In over 1,000 games as a player, he recorded 310 goals and 742 assists for a total of 1,052 points, with each category being the most for a defenceman in NHL history when he retired. In 1991, alongside his teammate, Mike Bossy, he was among the first Islanders to be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. He was the first Islander to have his jersey retired by the team in February 1992. In 2017, he was named one of the 100 Greatest NHL Players in history.

After his playing career ended, he served as a commentator, starting with SportsChannel America from 1988 to 1993. He was the first color commentator for the Florida Panthers in 1993 until 2009. He became the commentator for television broadcasts of the Ottawa Senators on Sportsnet from 2010 to 2014 before he was re-hired by the Panthers, where he worked until he retired as a broadcaster in 2019.

Early life

Potvin was born in Vanier, Ontario. He got interested in playing hockey from a young age, with older brother Jean bringing him to the Hull Arena for skating sessions in the summer. Potvin's father Armand came to an agreement with the junior hockey team Ottawa 67s. The young Potvin (age fifteen in 1968) was initially signed with the agreement to play home games with his older brother Jean (who would serve as his on-ice bodyguard) while spending the rest of his time studying at Rideau High School. However, a hazing incident left with him a shaved head and he hid from school at a pool hall until the school called the family. His father decided that if he wasn't going to go to school, he might as well put all of his effort in hockey. Potvin would play five seasons for the team and scored 329 points in 254 games and immediately saw high expectations thrust upon him. He noted in a 2022 interview about his first game with Ottawa:

My first game with the 67’s, we played against Niagara Falls. And the next day — just because I played my first game as a 14-year-old — the newspaper headline read, ‘The Next Bobby Orr. So I felt that expectation was there all the time. The media would always remind me. Yes, the pressure was there, I knew it.

When he finally was to turn 20 in 1973, the minimum age that a player could be drafted at the time in the NHL, he was selected by the New York Islanders.

Playing career

Potvin was drafted first overall in the 1973 NHL Amateur Draft on May 15, 1973, by the struggling expansion New York Islanders. This team had recorded the worst record in modern NHL history the previous season. Right after Bill Torrey drafted Potvin, Montreal Canadiens general manager Sam Pollock made several offers to Torrey, hoping to trade for Potvin. Pollock's strategy was to offer a "quick-fix" package of veteran players to exchange for the top draft pick. Torrey ultimately turned down the offer since he felt Potvin would be a long-term asset to his team.

Upon joining the Islanders, Potvin wanted to wear number 7 on his uniform but was forced to take number 5, as forward Germain Gagnon was wearing number 7. Potvin entered the NHL with high expectations; some regarded him as the savior of the Islanders' franchise, and by others as potentially the next Bobby Orr. While he did not dominate the game in the same way as Orr, Potvin became an immediate star: He won the Calder Memorial Trophy as rookie of the year in 1973–74 and the James Norris Memorial Trophy as league's top defenceman in 1975–76 ending Orr's eight-year reign. At age 22, Potvin scored 31 goals and 98 points, the highest totals by a defenceman other than Orr. That year he finished second to Bobby Clarke in the voting for the Hart Memorial Trophy as the NHL's most valuable player.

Potvin was known for being intelligent, articulate, and outspoken off the ice. Throughout the 1970s, these traits often alienated his Islander teammates, as they made Potvin appear arrogant. He offended many hockey fans by stating publicly he had played better in the 1976 Canada Cup than Bobby Orr, and that Orr's selection as tournament MVP was for sentimental reasons. However, as Potvin matured, he became seen as a great leader as he learned to use these same qualities to positively affect his teammates.

Upon Orr's decline and retirement in the late 1970s, Potvin became widely acknowledged (along with Larry Robinson) as the premier defenceman in the game. He also won the Norris Trophy in 1977–78 and 1978–79. The latter was his best offensive season, when he scored 31 goals and 70 assists in only 73 games, becoming the second defenceman (Orr being the first) to score 100 points in a season. He had an impressive +71 plus-minus rating that season and finished fourth in the balloting for the Hart Trophy. Between 1974–75 and 1980–81, Potvin was named to the NHL's first all-star team five times and the second all-star team once; the only season he missed the all-star teams was 1979–80, when he was only able to play 31 games due to injury.

The 1978–79 season saw him record his first 100-point season. It was on February 25 that Potvin participated in a game that went down in lore for the Islanders-Rangers rivalry. The Islanders and Rangers were contending for playoff position when Potvin delivered a bodycheck (which he described as "a solid, shoulder-to-shoulder hit") on Rangers player Ulf Nilsson, who saw his right ankle buckle awkwardly as he laid on the ice in pain. It was later found that he had a fractured low end of his fibula and a torn deltoid ligament. While both Nilsson and Potvin blamed the ice (which had hosted a basketball game the previous day) for the injury, Rangers fans let Potvin know what they thought of him with boos for the rest of the night. It saw the talented but young Islanders finish first place in the overall standings and looking to challenge for the cup. They made it all the way to the semifinal round of the 1979 Stanley Cup playoffs before the Rangers upset the Islanders; the two teams would meet four times in the next five seasons and the Islanders would win each time, which only amplified what became known as the "Potvin sucks!" chant (decades later, Potvin would do a clothing line with a play on words called "Potvin Socks"). Clark Gillies stepped down as captain during the off-season and Potvin became the team's third captain, a position he held until relinquishing it in 1987. In the 1979–80 season, Potvin's first year as captain, the Islanders won their first of four Stanley Cups. Potvin was a key part of the Islanders during the team's early 1980s glory years: in addition to the four consecutive Stanley Cup championships and five straight finals appearances, in the eight seasons he served as captain, the Islanders never failed to reach the Stanley Cup playoffs. Potvin was very productive offensively in the playoffs, with his best year being the 1981 playoff run when he scored 8 goals and 17 assists for 25 points in 18 games. In the 1983–84 season, Potvin made a comeback of sorts, scoring 85 points and making the NHL's second all-star team.

Potvin was a more traditional defender than Orr and an extremely physical player. He averaged just under one point per game over his career (0.992), while Orr averaged 1.39 points per game. Late in his career, Potvin suffered a series of injuries that impeded his performance, leading to his retirement following the 1987–88 season. He retired as the NHL's leader in goals and points as a defenceman. His career totals were later surpassed by Ray Bourque, Paul Coffey, and others, and as of 2014, he sits fifth in career goals and seventh in career points amongst defencemen.

Potvin claimed to have received an offer from Mike Keenan to come out of retirement and play for the arch-rival New York Rangers in 1993. Keenan has yet to substantiate these claims. Potvin admitted that although he believed it was a joke, he did contemplate a comeback. After a brief skate, he decided his body could no longer handle the rigours of the game.

In 2023, he was named the 19th best player of the NHL modern era by the The Athletic.

Broadcasting career

Potvin was a studio analyst for SportsChannel America television broadcasts from 198892, paired with host Bob Papa. Potvin was a color commentator for Florida Panthers television broadcasts from 1993, paired with play-by-play announcers Jeff Rimer, Dave Strader, and Steve Goldstein for over 16 seasons before being replaced by former Panthers player Bill Lindsay in 2009.

In September 2010, Potvin was hired as the Ottawa Senators' television colour commentator, working with Dean Brown on Rogers Sportsnet. In August 2014, he was rehired as colour commentator by the Florida Panthers, working with Steve Goldstein on Fox Sports Florida. As a colour commentator, he is known for his bizarre and inflammatory comments, such as claiming that Daniel and Henrik Sedin "...only use [their] fingers to lick the peanut butter off their bread". On July 29, 2019, he retired from broadcasting.

Personal life

Potvin was born in Vanier, Ontario, but grew up in nearby Hull, Quebec. Potvin's brother, Jean Potvin, was also an NHL defenceman and the brothers were teammates for some years with the Islanders. Jean died in 2022. Both were cousins of former NHL player Marc Potvin, who died in 2006.

In 1983, Potvin's estranged wife accused him of repeatedly beating her while he was under the influence of alcohol and drugs. She cited this as a reason for the renegotiation of the financial terms of their divorce; the court rejected the renegotiation request. Of the proceedings, Potvin said, "It could have destroyed me, except that it was totally untrue, and the judge saw that." He subsequently remarried to Valerie Cates, a model.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1968–69Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.4612253783
1969–70Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.461318319752139
1970–71Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.5720587820011461026
1971–72Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.48154560188
1972–73Ottawa 67'sOHA-Jr.61358812323296101622
1973–74New York IslandersNHL77173754175
1974–75New York IslandersNHL7921557610517591430
1975–76New York IslandersNHL78316798100135141932
1976–77New York IslandersNHL8025558010312641020
1977–78New York IslandersNHL803064948172246
1978–79New York IslandersNHL733170101581047118
1979–80New York IslandersNHL318334144216131924
1980–81New York IslandersNHL74205676104188172516
1981–82New York IslandersNHL6024376183195162130
1982–83New York IslandersNHL6912546660208122022
1983–84New York IslandersNHL78226385872015628
1984–85New York IslandersNHL77175168961032510
1985–86New York IslandersNHL742138597830110
1986–87New York IslandersNHL58123042701022421
1987–88New York IslandersNHL7219325111251456
NHL totals1,0603107421,0521,35618556108164253

International

YearTeamEventGPGAPtsPIM
1976CanadaCC718916
1981CanadaCC725712
1986CanadaWC71456
Senior totals214172134

Career achievements, records and facts

  • Retired having scored 310 goals and 742 assists for 1,052 points (at the time, the NHL career leader in all those categories for defensemen ) in 1,060 games, adding 1,356 penalty minutes.
  • First NHL defenseman to reach 300 goals in regular season, and 1,000 career points.
  • First player to reach 100 playoff assists in NHL history.
  • Retired as the NHL career leader in playoff goals, assists, and points for defensemen.
  • Led the 1976 Canada Cup tournament in assists (8), points (9), and penalty minutes (16).
  • Won the James Norris Memorial Trophy as the NHL's best defenseman in 1976, 1978, and 1979.
  • In 1991, he was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame and Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame.
  • Most shorthanded assists in a single game (2)
  • His jersey #5 was retired by the Islanders on February 1, 1992, the first such honor bestowed by the franchise.
  • In 1998, he was ranked number 19 on The Hockey News' list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players.
  • In 2002, he was inducted into the Nassau County Sports Hall of Fame.
  • One of only three players (Bryan Trottier and Josh Bailey being the others) to play 1,000 games in an Islanders uniform.

See also

External links

  • Biographical information and career statistics from , or , or , or , or
Preceded byBilly HarrisNHL first overall draft pick 1973Succeeded byGreg Joly
Preceded byBilly HarrisNew York Islanders first-round draft pick 1973Succeeded byClark Gillies
Preceded byClark GilliesNew York Islanders captain 197987Succeeded byBrent Sutter
Preceded byBobby OrrWinner of the Norris Trophy 1976Succeeded byLarry Robinson
Preceded byLarry RobinsonWinner of the Norris Trophy 1978, 1979Succeeded byLarry Robinson
Preceded bySteve VickersWinner of the Calder Memorial Trophy 1974Succeeded byEric Vail