List of oldest National Hockey League players
Below is the List of oldest National Hockey League (NHL) players, with their last season in parentheses. Only hockey players who played at least one game when they were 40 or older are included on the list. Active are players in bold type.
Oldest players in a regular season or playoff game
Goaltenders
- 45 years, 345 days - Maurice Roberts (1951)[8]
- 45 years, 32 days - Johnny Bower (1969)
- 44 years, 323 days - Gump Worsley (1974)
- 44 years, 100 days - Lester Patrick (1928)[9]
- 44 years, 78 days - Jacques Plante (1973)[3]
- 43 years, 78 days - Dominik Hasek (2008)
- 42 years, ?? days - Hughie Lehman (1928)
- 42 years, 241 days - Martin Brodeur (2015)
- 42 years, 178 days - Dwayne Roloson (2012)
- 42 years, 136 days - Eddie Johnston (1978)
- 41 years, 350 days - Ed Belfour (2007)
- 41 years, 344 days - Curtis Joseph (2009)
- 41 years, 177 days - George Hainsworth (1937)
- 40 years, 307 days - Nikolai Khabibulin (2013)
- 40 years, 288 days - Tony Esposito (1984)
- 40 years, 107 days - Terry Sawchuk (1970)[4]
- 40 years, 66 days - Sean Burke (2007)
- 40 years, 10 days - Tim Thomas (2014)
Position players
- 52 years, 11 days - Gordie Howe (1980)[1]
- 48 years, 71 days - Chris Chelios (2010)
- 44 years, 296 days - Jaromir Jagr (Present)
- 44 years, 100 days - Doug Harvey (1969)[1]
- 44 years, 39 days - Tim Horton (1974)[5]
- 43 years, 317 days - Teemu Selanne (2014)
- 43 years, 277 days - Claude Lemieux (2009)
- 43 years, 134 days - Mark Recchi (2011)
- 43 years, 129 days - Igor Larionov (2004)
- 43 years, 73 days - Mark Messier (2004)
- 43 years, 35 days - Allan Stanley (1969)
- 42 years, ?? days - Johnny Bucyk (1978)
- 42 years, ?? days - Frank Boucher (1944)
- 42 years, 282 days - Gary Roberts (2009)
- 42 years, 100 days - Dave Andreychuk (2006)
- 42 years, 13 days - Dave Keon (1982)
- 41 years, 358 days - Tommy Albelin (2006)
- 41 years, 357 days - Nicklas Lidstrom (2012)
- 41 years, 352 days - Ray Whitney (2014)
- 41 years, 335 days - Alex Delvecchio (1973)
- 41 years, ?? days - Bill Cook (1937)
- 41 years, ?? days - Dean Prentice (1974)
- 41 years, ?? days - Carl Brewer (1980)
- 41 years, ?? days - Terry Harper (1981)[6]
- 41 years, 220 days - Adam Oates (2004)
- 41 years, 136 days - Daniel Alfredsson (2014)
- 41 years, 114 days - Doug Mohns (1975)
- 41 years, 98 days - Bobby Hull (1980)
- 41 years, 66 days - Brett Hull (2005)
- 41 years, 62 days - Ron Francis (2004)
- 40 years, ?? days - Larry Zeidel (1969)
- 40 years, ?? days - Don Marshall (1972)
- 40 years, ?? days - Ron Stewart (1973)
- 40 years, ?? days - Noel Price (1976)
- 40 years, 357 days - Steve Yzerman (2006)
- 40 years, 355 days - Sergei Gonchar (2015)
- 40 years, 337 days - Mike Modano (2011)
- 40 years, 323 days - Larry Robinson (1992)
- 40 years, 319 days - Mathieu Schneider (2010)
- 40 years, 311 days - Scott Mellanby (2007)
- 40 years, 297 days - Mike Knuble (2013)
- 40 years, 294 days - James Patrick (2004)
- 40 years, 293 days - Steve Thomas (2004)
- 40 years, 283 days - George Armstrong (1971)
- 40 years, 282 days - Teppo Numminen (2009)
- 40 years, 190 days - Jean Ratelle (1981)
- 40 years, 189 days - Sean O'Donnell (2012)
- 40 years, 180 days - Kjell Samuelsson (1999)
- 40 years, 164 days - Rob Blake (2010)
- 40 years, 163 days - Ray Bourque (2001)
- 40 years, 142 days - Grant Ledyard (2002)
- 40 years, 97 days - Al MacInnis (2003)
- 40 years, 95 days - Brendan Shanahan (2009)
- 40 years, 92 days - Harry Howell (1973) [2]
- 40 years, 90 days - Kimmo Timonen (2015)
- 40 years, 79 days - Joe Nieuwendyk (2006)
- 40 years, 72 days - Mario Lemieux (2005)
- 40 years, 68 days - Guy Carbonneau (2000)
- 40 years, 57 days - Viacheslav Fetisov (1998)
- 40 years, 56 days - Joe Mullen (1997)
- 40 years, 58 days - Shane Doan (Present)
- 40 years, 46 days - Larry Murphy (2001)
- 40 years, 45 days - Ken Schinkel (1973)[7]
- 40 years, 35 days - Matt Cullen (Present)
- 40 years, 23 days - Mark Howe (1995)
- 40 years, 3 days - Dit Clapper (1947)
Notes
- 1.^ Gordie Howe first retired at 43 years old in 1971. He took a two year hiatus and returned to hockey in the World Hockey Association with the Houston Aeros. In 1997 Howe returned at 69 years old playing one game in the IHL with the Detroit Vipers.
- 2.^ Harry Howell finished his career in World Hockey Association in 1976 at 43 years old.
- 3.^ Jacques Plante finished his career in the World Hockey Association during the 1974-1975 campaign with Edmonton Oilers retiring at 46 years old. Plante became the oldest goaltender in the WHA.
- 4.^ Terry Sawchuk died of head injuries after having a scuff with teammate Ron Stewart after both men were drunk.
- 5.^ Tim Horton died in a car accident during a heavy snow on his way back to his home in Toronto after playing in Buffalo against the Maple Leafs.
- 6.^ Terry Harper retired when he became the assistant coach of the Colorado Rockies.
- 7.^ Ken Schinkel retired when he became head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins after Red Kelly was fired.
- 8.^ Maurice "Moe " Roberts became the oldest goaltender in the NHL. At that time he was the assistant trainer with the Chicago Black Hawks and replaced an injured Harry Lumley at the third period.
- 9.^ Lester Patrick replaced an injured Lorne Chabot in the second period. Patrick was the general manager and coach of the New York Rangers at that time. This is a record for the oldest goalie to play in the Stanley Cup Finals that still stands today.
References
- ↑ "Flyers on Move to Meet Blues". The Gazette (Montreal). Montreal, Quebec. April 2, 1969.
See also
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