Monday, April 13, 2026

The Unsung – Pat Verbeek.

Patrick Martin Verbeek (born May 24, 1964)
Played for: New Jersey Devils (1982–1989), Hartford Whalers (1989–1994), New York Rangers (1994–1996), Dallas Stars (1996–1999, 2001–03), Detroit Red Wings (1999–2001)
Pat Verbeek (Hockey Reference [Player] — Right Wing (RW) 
522 goals, 540 assists, 1,062 total points, 2,905 penalty minutes in 1,424 games
 
2x NHL All-Star Game selection (1991, 1996)
Stanley Cup champion (1999)

The point of an Unsung Hall of Fame, to me, anyways, is to recognize those players that don't always get brought up for their accomplishments, whether because they weren't thought of as a "star" or fell through the cracks of the usual scorers. As of the end of the 2025-26 season, the 108th year of the NHL*, there are just 50 players who have scored the big number of 500 goals (of those, 48 ended up with 500+ assists as well to achieve 1,000 career points*). Pat Verbeek, who played for five teams with varying levels of impact for 20 seasons, is one of those guys. Of the non-active guys with 500 goals that are not members of the Hockey Hall of Fame in Peter Bondra, Keith Tkachuk, Patrick Marleau, and Verbeek, I figured Verbeek merited his own entry for his curiosities as a player. Hope you enjoy.

Born in Sarnia, Ontario to a family of farmers (specifically pigs, which earned him a momentary nickname of "Pig Farmer"), Verbeek played hard from the get-go as a youth in the junior hockey leagues for the Petrolia Jets and Sudbury Wolves of the Ontario Hockey League (for the former, he started playing for them at the age of 15). In the 1982 NHL draft, Verbeek was drafted in the second round by the newly relocated New Jersey Devils*. Verbeek spent most of the 1982-83 season with the Wolves but made the NHL in March 1983. He ultimately played six games that year, scoring his first goal and recording his first assist on the same night of March 21 against Washington. He played center for his first two seasons before being switched to right wing in 1984-85 and was kept there on a long-term basis after 1986 (okay, actually Hockey Reference states he played left wing from 1989 to 1991, but work with me on this). In his first full season in 1983, the nineteen-year-old (weighing in at 190 pounds with a 5'9 frame, as seen here and also here) had 20 goals and 27 assists with 158 penalty minutes (the first of five 100+ penalty minute seasons with New Jersey). No story about Verbeek would be served without mentioning that his career almost was cut short near its prime: in May 1985, a farming accident cut off his thumb before his dad and brothers helped to get him to the hospital and save the thumb. Verbeek had 98 goals in his first five years but came across a scoring touch soon enough. In the 1987-88 season, playing 73 games, Verbeek had 46 goals and recorded 31 assists (what likely helped was a career-high 12-game streak of recording a point, as he had 9 goals and 11 assists from December 26 to January 19). Likely his highlight of that season was his first and only four-goal game on February 28, 1988 against the Minnesota North Stars in New Jersey. That year, the Devils reached the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time ever. Admittedly, the most noted playoff moment for Verbeek for that year was an accident in which his skate cut the leg of Rod Langway that saw the future Hall of Famer knocked out for the rest of the playoffs. In the three rounds of postseason play, he had two points in the first round, six in the semifinals, and four in the Conference Finals as the Devils lost to Boston in seven games.

Verbeek had 26 goals and 47 total points (his last sub-50 point season until 1994-95) in what became his last season in New Jersey. He was traded for Sylvain Turgeon in June 1989 to the Hartford Whalers. In five full seasons with the Whalers, Verbeek ran through the gamut for the team, playing the full schedule four times (including the 1992-93 and 1993-94 years, when the season was 84 games long).  He led the team in goals (both scoring 40+ goals each) and penalty minutes in his first two seasons. A brief holdout (he wanted to be paid at least $1 million a year, imagine that) and a cold stretch plagued him in 1991-92, but he was named team captain in 1992 and contributed 82 points on 39 goals and 43 assists, and he had 75 points in his last full year with the Whalers. With an impending free agency decision, the Whalers traded him midway through the strike-shortened 48-game 1994-95 season to the New York Rangers for a first round pick, a 4th round pick and two other players (the most noted player came from the first-round pick, which the Whalers used on Jean-Sebastien Giguere in 1995). After seven goals in 29 games for Hartford, Verbeek had 10 goals in 19 games to close the year out. After three first-round exits with Hartford, Verbeek made the second round for the next six years in a row. He was named to the All-Star Game in the 1995-96 season with a 41 goal/41 assist season in 69 games.

After New York did not want to sign him for the salary he would be tabbed for, he signed with Dallas in the 1996 offseason. He reached 1,000 games in his first year with Dallas and had another 50-point season. By this point in his career, he had 430 goals and 873 total points in 1,065 games. Being 115th in points scored in their first 15 seasons implies, that, well, they were around long enough to contribute*. Verbeek was hurt to start the 1999 playoffs but played 18 games as Verbeek reached his only Stanley Cup Final versus Buffalo. One of his three goals that year was in Game 5 to help seal a 2-0 win (the next game, he played nearly 30 minutes in the triple-OT classic that Dallas won for Verbeek's one Stanley Cup victory). Verbeek (now with 478 goals in 17 seasons) was not re-signed by Dallas and in fact was not signed until November by Detroit. In 68 games, he achieved two milestones: February 27, 2000 had him get an assist on a Steve Yzerman goal to garner his 1,000th point before March 22, 2000 saw him record a two-goal night for history, with the second goal being the one where Verbeek collected his 500th goal, which you can see with this video. He finished with 22 goals that year, making it the thirteenth time that Verbeek had 20 goals in a season. Not for nothing, but when he did so at the end of the 1999-2000 season, only 29 other players had at least thirteen 20-goal seasons (for reference, Verbeek was tied with Brett Hull, Luc Robitaille, Brian Bellows, Glenn Anderson, Jari Kurri, Bryan Trottier, Guy Lafleur, Bobby Hull [doesn't account for his WHA seasons], Alex Delvecchio, and Jean Beliveau (for reference, 62 players now have had thirteen or more 20-goal seasons). Verbeek had 15 goals in his penultimate year as a hockey player and re-signed with Dallas in 2001. He had 20 points in 64 games before suffering a torn groin muscle on April 1, 2002, that ended his season and ultimately served as his final game. Of the eight players to have recorded a 40-goal season with 200 penalty minutes (as seen here), Verbeek is the only one to have done it three times.

Sure, he wasn't a world-beating goalscorer, but Pat Verbeek reaches the very definition of an unsung Hall of Famer in grinding out a respectable and dependable career for as long as he did. Verbeek didn't spend time wondering about what to do after his hockey career ended, as he soon became a broadcaster and got a job with the Red Wings as Director of Professional Scouting in 2010, slowing rising to assistant GM (in both Detroit and Tampa Bay) before becoming the general manager of the Anaheim Ducks in 2022. To close, I'll let a quote of his stick out, one from the early days (read: 1993) that sounds fitting for all that came to pass for him as a player: 
On behalf of the Unsung Hall of Fame, it is my privilege to welcome Pat Verbeek to the Hall.
N O T E S
*If the NHL that had actual balls, they would take the lead of the NFL and acknowledge the alternative league that ran beside them in and their stats with the WHA, which would benefit the good name of Marc Tardif. 

*For those curious about players with less than 500 goals that ended up with 1,000 points, 55 players are a member of that club as demonstrated in this link.

*Technically the team wasn't officially named the Devils until after the draft (June 9 for the draft, June 30 for the name), but you get the idea. Unlike certain teams in Utah, the Devils actually knew how to brand themselves from the jump. Did you know that the names considered for New Jersey were the following: Americans, Blades, Colonials, Lightning, Meadowlarks, Meadowlanders, Coastals, Generals, Gulls, Jaguars, and Patriots?. Jeez.

*If you want to go with "but what about comparing his first ten years to his last ten? I have that covered for you: 548 points in his first ten years doesn't even crack the top 200, but his 514 combined from his 11th to 20th seasons is 48th, right in the zone above and below a few HOFers.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The Unsung – Dick Motta.

John Richard Motta (born September 3, 1931)
Coached for: Chicago Bulls (1968–1976), Washington Bullets (1976–1980), Dallas Mavericks (1980–1987, 1994–1996), Sacramento Kings (1990–1991), Denver Nuggets (1996–1997)
Dick Motta Basketball Reference ([coach]) statistics 
Regular season record: 935–1017 (.479), Postseason record: 56–70 (.444), Career: 9911077

NBA Finals champion (1975), NBA Coach of the Year (1971), 14 playoff appearances in 25 seasons

Dick Motta was the son of a vegetable farmer that grew up during the Great Depression in Midvale, Utah. He attended Utah State University and subsequently served two years in the U.S. Air Force, reaching Lieutenant rank. In the time before his service, he had taught in Grace, Idaho for its junior high school. In 1957, at the age of 26, he was hired to be the head coach of the high school. He almost immediately had himself tested by the mood of the town when he kicked out four players off the team for drinking (apparently, for the next three years, he got his groceries in a different town). In three years, his teams won 20 games twice and in 1959, they won the Class AA championship. To this day, Motta calls it his biggest thrill as a coach. In 1960, he was hired by Weber College (at the time transitioning from a junior college to a four-year program before it eventually became known as Weber State University) in Ogden, Utah. Weber State, a founding member of the Big Sky Conference in 1963, ended up winning the regular season championship in 1965, 1966, and 1968. The Wildcats were invited to the 1968 NCAA tournament (then composed of 23 teams) after winning the Big Sky, with the First Round loss being Motta's last game as a coach. He was soon hired by the Chicago Bulls*, who had let Johnny Kerr depart for the Phoenix Suns (Kerr had led to back-to-back 4th place finishes, which actually was good enough for the playoffs). 

Sure, the Bulls finished 5th in 1968, but the Bulls soon went through tremendous improvement, with the 1969-70 season (the first with future Hall of Famer Chet Walker to add to a team with Bob Love and Jerry Sloan) being the first of six straight playoff appearances (the last one in 1975 was the first with the playoff format going from 8 to 10 total teams), with their first 50-win season coming in 1970 that saw Motta win Coach of the Year. They won their first playoff series and reached their first Conference Finals in 1974 and the following year saw them win the Midwest Division for the first time ever. The Bulls lost in the Conference Finals to the Milwaukee Bucks in 1974 and the Golden State Warriors in 1975 (each of whom ended up winning the Finals). In eight seasons, the Bulls were top five in least points allowed per game (with three times being 1st), which made up for an offense that made the top seven in points scored per game once. The 1975-76 team struggled to just 24 wins and in May 1976, Motta was given permission to inquire about the coaching job for the Washington Bullets (recently departed by K.C. Jones*), which he accepted. 

Motta had inherited a team that had legends such as Elvin Hayes (a solid presence of 50,000 NBA minutes) and Wes Unseld (the ultimate team player with sore knees) and had made the playoffs every year since 1969 (as started with Unsung HOF candidate Gene Shue) and reached the Finals in 1971 and 1975. The 1976-77 Bullets won the same amount of games as the previous team did with 48 and lost in the same round in the Conference semifinals. In the first 20 games, the Bullets went 13-7 but the team struggled in the middle part, even getting to one game over .500 at 27-26. However, with acquisitions such as backup guard Charles Johnson (who Hayes gave credit as the last key piece), the team stabilized enough to finish 44-38, which actually was the third best in the 11-team Eastern Conference. They defeated the #1 seed Philadelphia 76ers in six games to reach the NBA Finals for the third time in the decade. They met the 47-35 (#4 seed) Seattle SuperSonics in the Finals in (currently) the last Finals where both teams had less than 50 wins. In a 1-2-2-1-1 format that went from May 21 to June 7, the Sonics won two of the first three games, Washington won the only OT game in Game 4 and the Sonics won Game 5 to put the Bullets on the wall. The Bullets routed the Sonics 117-82 to force Game 7. Even with a Hayes foul-out, Unseld and company held firm and managed to win 105-99. No road team won a Finals Game 7 again until 2016. The Bullets were the third team in the 1970s ('75 Warriors, '77 Trail Blazers) to win the championship with less than 50 regular season wins and the last until the 1994-95 Rockets. The .537 winning percentage is the lowest for an NBA champion, perhaps saying more about how good the team really was when it came to the playoffs. The 1978-79 Bullets ended up winning 54 games and were the best of the whole Eastern Conference. They narrowly overcame a 3-1 series deficit to the Spurs to reach the Finals once again. Washington faced Seattle in the Finals once again. They narrowly won Game 1 at home but the Sonics worked their magic this time, winning the next four games in various ways (12 and 10 in Game 2 and 3, an OT win in Game 4, and a four-point win in Game 5) to get their revenge. With an aging roster for 1979-80, the Bullets went 39-43 to finish 6th in the conference. They lost in the First Round in two games to Philadelphia. Motta departed after the season.

In July 1980, Motta was hired as the first ever head coach of the Dallas Mavericks. The team (with Norm Sonju as GM) had a bad first year (as one does when people such as Kiki Vandeweghe refuse to play for them), going 15-67, but at least Brad Davis (a free agent found in December) shined enough to be a regular on the team for years to come. Mark Aguirre and Rolando Blackman got drafted the following year and the team gradually rose in wins, managing to go from 15 to 28 (1981-82) to 38 (1982-83) to 43 wins in 1983-84 and reach the playoffs. They reached the playoffs four straight times from 1984 to 1987 and in Motta's last neat season, the 1986-87 team won the Midwest Division title with 55 wins, but playoff success eluded the team, which never made it to the Conference Finals. He resigned unexpectedly in May in 1987 and was out of the NBA until January 1990, when he was lured out of "retirement" to coach the Sacramento Kings, who were 7-21 at the time. With players such as a busted Ralph Sampson and Danny Ainge, the (historically terrible*) Kings finished 23-59. The 1990-91 team, aided with having four first-round picks, proceeded to go 25-57 and went 1-40 on the road. The 1991-92 saw the team at 7-18 when he told a radio station he planned to resign at the end of the year...the Kings fired him that same day, which happened to be Christmas Eve. The Mavs brought him as an unpaid consultant in the middle of the disasterous 1993-94 season (13 wins) and hired him as coach for 1994. He went 36-46 and 26-56 before being re-assigned as a consultant. He coached one more season as a coach with Denver after being hired in November 1996 to replace Bernie Bickerstaff's 4-9 team. They went 21-61 in what was Motta's last ride. For a number of years, Motta ran a bed and breakfast with his wife. The only recognition Motta has received is the Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015, where the National Basketball Coaches Association gives an award for a coach's longtime life in basketball.

With practices that Motta described once as "PRE-CIS-ION" that relied on instincts and sets he called "automatics" to give players the convenience to pass and the freedom to execute the plays, Motta's teams won 900 games. Fourteen coaches have 900 wins, and all but Rick Carlisle and Motta are in the Hall of Fame with the induction of Doc Rivers in 2026. Now, there might be a rib about inducting a coach with a sub .500 record. I present Exhibit A as the perfect counterpoint, where I compare Motta to one Hall of Fame member with 900 wins and one title. Dick Motta did not believe he would make the Basketball Hall of Fame in his lifetime because of the "very political" election process, one that you have to remember is so "transparent" that you don't even get to know the voting totals. The weird expansiveness of the Hall in trying to be a comprehensive Hall has achieved the dubious goal of ignoring a 90-year-old coach with over 900 wins for people such as Mike D'Antoni. In the past 15 years, Dick Motta was a finalist in 2011, 2012...and 2026But even though people like Jerry Colangelo wouldn't know a Hall of Famer when they see one, this Unsung Hall can. Enjoy this one picture of clear and obvious proof of how good Dick Motta was compared to a Hall of Fame member. 
CoachTenureSeasonsGamesWLPct.Games over .500Playoff recordNBA titlesConference titlesPlayoff appearances
Bill Fitch*1971-199825205094411060.46-8155-541213
Dick Motta1969-199725195293510170.479-4156-701214
For those curious, Fitch (who like Motta had a winning record with two of the five teams he coached) has just one edge: he appeared in the Conference Finals five times while Motta appeared four times. Other than that, I rest my case.

On behalf of the Unsung Hall of Fame, it is my privilege to welcome Dick Motta to the Hall.
N O T E S

*Phil Johnson, who was a player on the Grace team, was an assistant coach to Motta at Weber before succeeding Motta as head coach. In 1975, as coach of the Kansas City Kings, he won the NBA Coach of the Year award.

*Speaking of the lackadaisical consistency of the Hall of Fame: K. C. Jones won two NBA championships and 552 games as a head coach, which is more than the 341 games won by Bill Russell, the only other African American coach to have won multiple NBA championships...but Jones isn't in the Hall as a coach, only as a player while Russell is for both. 
*The Kings are the only franchise you could say has failed in four straight places: Cincinnati, Kansas City, Omaha (yes, they played games in both places), and Sacramento. Four Hall of Fame coaches coached there in the past 48 years with Cotton Fitzsimmons, Bill Russell, Rick Adelman, and George Karl and not even they could make the team anything. They may very well be cursed for daring to win a title in Rochester of all places.

Friday, April 3, 2026

The Unsung – André Lacroix.

André Joseph Lacroix (born June 5, 1945)
Played for: Philadelphia Flyers (1967-1971), Chicago Black Hawks (1971-1972), Philadelphia Blazers (1972-1973), New York Golden Blades/Jersey Knights (1973-1974), San Diego Mariners (1974-1977), Houston Aeros (1977-1978), New England/Hartford Whalers (1978-1980)
Andre Lacroix (Hockey Reference [Player] — Center (C) 
NHL stats:  79 goals, 119 assists, 198 points in 325 games (16 playoff games [2 G, 5A, 7 P]
WHA stats: 251 goals, 547 assists, 798 points in 551 games (48 playoff games [27 G, 32 A, 59 P])

Professional hockey total: 330 goals, 666 assists for 996 points in 876 games 
(74 playoff games - 29 goals, 37 assists, 66 points)

2x Bill Hunter Trophy (1972-73, 1974-75)
3x WHA First-Team All-Star Team (1972-1975)

Admittedly, the Hockey Hall of Fame doesn't really honor its goal: honoring the best players of hockey, not just the NHL. But this blog is a haven for the World Hockey Association and all of the great things that it did for the sport of hockey. Not every player gets their due. Born in Lauzon, Quebec to a Catholic family, Andre Lacroix first excelled in junior hockey for the Quebec Citadelles and the Peteborough Petes in the early 1960s, with Lacroix winning back-to-back awards for his outstanding play in the OHL (1965, 1966). He rose up to the American Hockey League with the Quebec Aces before getting to play in the National Hockey League in February 1968 for the expansion team Philadelphia Flyers; in 18 games, he had six goals and eight assists and made the playoff roster. He had two goals and three assists in the Quarterfinals, but the West Division champion* Flyers were beaten in seven games by the St. Louis Blues. Lacroix made the roster for the Flyers in the 1968-69 season. The 23-year-old led the team in goals (24) and points (56) and even received votes for the Calder Trophy (rookie of the year award) but the Flyers were beaten in the playoffs by the Blues once again, with Lacroix having no statistics in four games. The 1969-70 team (which happened to be the first with Bobby Clarke) finished 5th, but Lacroix led the team in points with 58 on 22 goals and 36 assists. In what ended up as his final season with the Flyers, Lacroix had 42 points (4th best to players such as Clarke and Serge Bernier) while recording two assists in the Stanley Cup playoffs as the Flyers were swept by Chicago. Lacroix had fond memories of owner Ed Snider, calling him the best owner he played for once. Prior to the 1971-72 season, Lacroix was traded to the Chicago Black Hawks. He played in 51 games but had just 11 points in a frustrating year. But his career had a new phase ahead.

Sure, maybe there is an argument against the World Hockey Association not being the coolest thing ever for players (but I don't care). Teams badly needed talent to play for them to try and garner attention, and the upstart Philadelphia Blazers (who actually were originally intended to play in Miami as the "Screaming Eagles" before it went under) needed it badly for the 1972-73 season, and Lacroix (alongside others such as Derek Sanderson, John McKenzie, and Bernie Parent) fit the bill. Of course, the Blazers did not exactly do very well at first (due to injuries), with the team losing their first seven games and being 5–16 before December 1. But Lacroix, alongside right-winger Danny Lawson, persevered, with each contributing 50 goals and 100 points each as the Blazers battled all the way back to a record of 38–40–0 (yes, that means the Blazers went 33–24 from December 1, with no games ending in a tie). Lacroix scored a total of 124 points (50 goals, 74 assists) to win the points title (the WHA named their trophy after Bill Hunter, co-founder of the Alberta/Edmonton Oilers). The third-place Blazers met the second-place Cleveland Crusaders in the Quarterfinals of the eight-team WHA playoffs. He had two assists, but the series was overshadowed by Parent leaving the team after Game 1 due to a contract dispute as the Crusaders swept the Blazers. The Blazers, who played in the Philadelphia Civic Center to middling crowds while the Flyers were a season away from Stanley Cup domination, decided to move to Vancouver.

Lacroix did not want to play in Vancouver and was soon traded to the New York Golden Blades. The WHA experiment failed easily in one place: the New York area, as the Golden Blades was a rebrand away from "New York Raiders", even though they played in the same place as before: tenants to the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden (this came about because the Nassau County officials did not want the Raiders to play at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum and spearheaded a push to get a team there, which led to the Islanders). The team moved midway through the season to become the Jersey Knights and won 32 games (actually one less than the year before) while Lacroix recorded 80 assists and 31 goals for 111 points, narrowly losing the points title to Mike Walton. The team moved to San Diego to become the Mariners in the offseason (effectively making them the original pro team named the Mariners, albeit without nearly 50 years of failure). The Mariners never drew great with the fans, but Lacroix and company made the playoffs in all three seasons played there, even winning a playoff series in the first two years. He won the points title in 1974-75 with a historic year, scoring 41 goals and a whopping 106 points. It was the record for assists by a professional hockey player (Bobby Orr had 102 in 1970-71) until it was surpassed in 1980 by Wayne Gretzky (for reference, only Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, Connor McDavid and Nikita Kucherov have had 100-assist seasons since Lacroix).

The dissolution of the Mariners in 1977 saw him move over to the Houston Aeros, in what ended up as the last season of the team (their owner had tried to get the Aeros into the NHL but found little interest). On a team with guys such as Morris Lukowich and John Gray, Lacroix had 77 assists and 36 goals for 113 total points as the third-place Aeros met the Quebec Nordiques in the 1978 playoffs. Lacroix had two goals and assists each but the Aeros were hammered in six games. When the team folded, Lacroix went over to the New England Whalers (after being traded by the Winnipeg Jets, who briefly had his rights when the Aeros traded him) for what proved to be his swansong. In the final year of the WHA, the 33-year old Lacroix, playing 78 games on a team with Mark Howe (future Hall of Famer, by the way) and his father Gordie, Lacroix had his first non-100 point season in years but contributed 32 goals and 56 assists for 88 total points as the Whalers narrowly made it to the six-team playoffs. They beat Cincinnati to reach the Semifinals, the closest Lacroix made it to the championship. Lacroix had four assists and goals each in his postseason, but the Edmonton Oilers beat the Whalers in seven games. The 34-year old played 29 games (with his final game coming on December 15, 1979), recording 3 goals and 14 assists for 17 total points.

Nicknamed "The Magician"" Lacroix (who negotiated his own contracts) wrote his autobiography in 2020. If the goal of the Hockey Hall of Fame was to honor players who had consistent power for the sport, Lacroix would've been in years ago, because I doubt many players with nearly 1,000 points before they turned 35 miss out on the great honor (in fact the only not-active players around 1000 career points in their age-34 season not in the Hall are Bernie Nicholls, Vicent Damphousse, Theo Fleury, Bobby Smith, Brian Bellows, Steve Larmer, and Brian Propp). Lacroix had 868 NHL/WHA points from 1970 to 1980 - for comparison, that would be sixth behind five Hall of Famers (Esposito, Lafleur, Dionne, Clarke, Perreault) if the NHL actually recognized the WHA as the trendsetter that it was. The WHA Hall of Fame, a place created to honor the league, did honor Lacroix with induction in 2010 to recognize his clear place as one of the best players of its league. 

On behalf of the Unsung Hall of Fame, it is my privilege to welcome André Lacroix to the Hall.
N O T E S

*When the NHL expanded in 1967, they put all six expansion teams in the West Division, guaranteeing a new Stanley Cup matchup from the past 25 years of the same six teams playing each other. After three years of the St. Louis Blues reaching the Stanley Cup Final only to get beaten each time, they changed the playoff format.