2000 National Hockey League All-Star Game

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2000 NHL All-Star Game
123 Total
World 324 9
North America 220 4
DateFebruary 6, 2000
ArenaAir Canada Centre
CityToronto
MVPPavel Bure (Florida)
Attendance19,300
← 1999 2001 →

The 2000 NHL All-Star Game was the 50th All-Star Game in the National Hockey League. It took place on February 6, 2000, at Air Canada Centre in Toronto, home to the Toronto Maple Leafs. The last time Toronto hosted prior was the 1968 NHL All-Star Game. The 1st NHL All-Star Game took place in 1947 and was also hosted by Toronto.

The All-Star week festivities saw the Canadian Hockey League Top Prospects Game played on February 2, and an exhibition game between the Canadian and American women's national teams on February 3. The Heroes of Hockey game and the Skills Competition were held on February 5. It is to note that the opening face-off for the Heroes of Hockey game were Ted Lindsay and Fleming Mackell, two players who played in the 1st All-Star Game.

Wayne Gretzky had retired the previous year, and the NHL announced they would retire his jersey number, 99, for every team in the league, a promise fulfilled in a pre-game ceremony at the 2000 All-Star Game. A banner with his name and number in the colors of his Edmonton Oilers team, blue and orange, was raised to the rafters, after which he performed a ceremonial puck drop between Paul Kariya of Team North America and Jaromir Jagr of Team World. The NHL was inspired to honor Gretzky in this way by Major League Baseball retiring Jackie Robinson's number 42.[1]

Gretzky also made it clear that he would not partake in any oldtimer or Heroes of Hockey game unless it was held in Edmonton, a statement that was realized with the 2003 Heritage Classic three years later.[citation needed]

Super Skills Competition[edit]

In the Skills Competition, the World All-Stars would win their third-straight skills competition. In the individual events, the Boston Bruins' Ray Bourque and Florida Panthers' Viktor Kozlov shared the Accuracy Shot event, which was Bourque's seventh victory in the event. In addition, the St. Louis Blues' Al MacInnis won his fourth-straight Hardest Shot event, which was also his sixth all-time victory in the event, and the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim's Paul Kariya would win his second-straight Puck Control Relay event.

Individual event winners[edit]

Uniforms[edit]

Since 1951, the NHL had mandated that one team in each game must wear a white jersey to contrast with the other team's dark jersey. The only exceptions to this point had been when a team opted to wear gold in lieu of white. However, for the 2000 All-Star Game, the NHL opted to experiment with a color-vs.-color format with uniforms by CCM. The North American All-Stars were clad in a navy blue uniform with white shoulders and sleeves, and the wishbone collar design previously introduced by Nike, while the World All-Stars wore red with white shoulders and sleeves, and a faux polo-style collar. The goaltenders, however, wore white jerseys with their teams' primary colors on the shoulders and sleeves. Both teams featured a white stripe across the chest (team color in the case of the goalies), with the NHL shield appearing on the player's left side, and the uniform number placed below it. The World team also featured names below the numbers on the back instead of above the numbers, which would normally be considered a violation of the NHL's uniform code (which requires the player's name to be above the back number). The names and numbers were rendered in the Handel Gothic typeface.

The uniform design would be reused for the next All-Star Game, with the Toronto All-Star Game and NHL 2000 patches replaced with the Colorado All-Star patch.

Referees Kerry Fraser and Don Koharski were also clad in special sweaters for the game. A vertical orange stripe was added to the left side of their jerseys in order to help further distinguish the referees and linesmen.[2] The jersey design was never used again.

The game[edit]

The Florida Panthers' Pavel Bure and his brother, the Calgary Flames' Valeri Bure, combined for six points (Pavel 3–1–4, Valeri 0–2–2) to lead the World All-Stars to their first All-Star Game victory over the North American All-Stars. Valeri would assist on two of Pavel's three goals to become the first brother combination to set up a goal, since the 1956 All-Star Game when Maurice and Henri Richard hooked up for an All-Star goal. Pavel Bure would become the first Russian-born player to win All-Star MVP honors.

Boxscore[edit]

North America World
Final score 4 9
Head coach Canada Pat Quinn (Toronto Maple Leafs) Canada Scotty Bowman (Detroit Red Wings)
Assistant coach Canada Roger Neilson (Philadelphia Flyers) Canada Joel Quenneville (St. Louis Blues)
Lineup Starting lineup:

Commissioner's selection:

Reserves:

Starting lineup:

Reserves:

Scoring summary
  • Sakic (Whitney, Recchi) 13:56 first
  • Roenick (Modano) 19:30 first
  • Amonte (Modano, Bourque) 12:14 second
  • Whitney (Desjardins, Messier) 17:08 second
  • Demitra (Yushkevich, Elias) 3:12 first
  • Jagr (Rucinsky) 10:50 first
  • Yushkevich (Kozlov, P. Bure) 14:35 first
  • P. Bure (V. Bure) 0:33 second
  • P. Bure 2 (V. Bure, Kozlov) 8:38 second (GWG)
  • Demitra (Hejduk, Elias) 8:52 third
  • P. Bure 3 (Lidstrom, Kozlov) 9:31 third
  • Satan (Czerkawski, Bonk) 10:51 third
  • Bonk (Jagr, Rucinsky) 19:28 third
Penalties

none

  • Ozolinsh, hooking 5:51 third
Shots on goal 13–11–8–32 20–13–15–48
Win/Loss L - Martin Brodeur W - Tommy Salo

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  • ^1 Dominik Hasek was voted as a starter, but was not able to play due to injury. Roman Turek was selected to replace Hasek as the starting goaltender.
  • ^2 Pierre Turgeon was selected, but was not able to play due to injury. Ray Whitney was named as his replacement.
  • ^3 Peter Forsberg was selected, but was not able to play due to injury. Patrik Elias was named as his replacement.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Perfect setting: Gretzky's number retired before All-Star Game". CNN Sports Illustrated. Associated Press. February 6, 2000. Archived from the original on November 12, 2013. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
  2. ^ "The History of NHL Referees Jerseys". December 29, 2014.