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Top all-time Flames draft picks: Rounds 7-9 buried gems
Lou Capozzola-USA TODAY Sports

Whenever I comb lists of any year’s NHL entry draft, I often start at the end. Most of the players chosen late don’t go on to play in the league, but when they do, it’s something to note.

Like the previous story I wrote on players the Calgary Flames have taken over history in Rounds 10-12, teams think enough of prospects to take a flier on them in later rounds  in case they beat the odds and rise above everyone else who stands ahead of them in the pecking order.

1. Theoren Fleury

1987: Round 8, 166th overall

Among the players the Calgary/Atlanta franchise has selected in rounds seven through nine, Theoren Fleury stands above all. After Jarome Iginla, I’d argue, he’s the most legendary player to have donned the Flaming C.

I’d argue that partly because he was taken late in the 1987 draft.

Fleury was undersized, standing 5-foot-5 and weighing 152 lb. when he reported to his first Calgary training camp that September.

“I came in with a mission,” Fleury told the Calgary Herald then. “I was a late draft pick. I anted to show I was better than some of the players picked ahead of me.”

The Manitoban born in Saskatchewan showed them, all right. Fleury was all heart, sweat, hard work and a goal-scoring threat on the ice, resulting in a sterling 11-season run with the Flames.

He won the Stanley Cup in his rookie pro season, which started in the AHL with Salt Lake (where he scored 37 goals and 74 points in 40 games) and saw him record 34 points in 36 games after being promoted to the Flames roster on Jan. 1, 1989.

Fleury averaged slightly more than a point per game in Calgary — 830 of them over 791 games played — scoring 100 points in a season twice and 50-plus goals once, averaging about 35 goals per season.

Fleury was team captain when the Flames dealt him to the Colorado Avalanche at the 1999 trade deadline. He wound up playing 1,084 games over 15 seasons in the NHL, scoring 455 goals and 1,088 points.

Fleury battled alcoholism over his career and entered the league’s substance abuse program twice near the end of his NHL days while playing for the New York Rangers and the Chicago Blackhawks. He was suspended indefinitely in 2003 while with Chicago.

Fleury played for Belfast in the British Elite League two years later then tried his hand at winning an Allan Cup senior Canadian men’s title twice with the Horse Lake Thunder. At age 41 in 2009, he attempted a comeback with the Flames but failed to make the team out of training camp. He officially retired shortly after.

The seven-time NHL all-star also won an Olympic gold medal with Team Canada in 2002.

Season Age Tm GP G A PTS +/- PIM SOG S%
1988-89 20 Cgy 36 14 20 34 5 46 89 15.7
1989-90 21 Cgy 80 31 35 66 22 157 200 15.5
1990-91 22 Cgy 79 51 53 104 48 136 249 20.5
1991-92 23 Cgy 80 33 40 73 0 133 225 14.7
1992-93 24 Cgy 83 34 66 100 14 88 250 13.6
1993-94 25 Cgy 83 40 45 85 30 186 278 14.4
1994-95 26 Cgy 47 29 29 58 6 112 173 16.8
1995-96 27 Cgy 80 46 50 96 17 112 353 13
1996-97 28 Cgy 81 29 38 67 -12 104 336 8.6
1997-98 29 Cgy 82 27 51 78 0 197 282 9.6
1998-99 30 TOT 75 40 53 93 26 86 301 13.3
1998-99 30 Cgy 60 30 39 69 18 68 250 12
1998-99 30 Col 15 10 14 24 8 18 51 19.6
1999-00 31 NYR 80 15 49 64 -4 68 246 6.1
2000-01 32 NYR 62 30 44 74 0 122 238 12.6
2001-02 33 NYR 82 24 39 63 0 216 267 9
2002-03 34 Chi 54 12 21 33 -7 77 124 9.7
Career 1084 455 633 1088 145 1840 3611 12.6

2. Gary Suter

1984: Round 9, 180th overall

Suter was a Flames blueline mainstay starting his rookie season in 1985-86, when he scored 18 goals and 68 points, and won the Calder Trophy as the NHL’s top freshman.

He and Al MacInnis formed a fearsome top pairing for many of the nine seasons Suter played in Calgary. Suter scored 564 points in 617 games played for the Flames. The Madison, Wis., native set career highs in assists (70) and points (91) in 1987-88 and was a key member of the club when they won the Stanley Cup a year later.

On March 10, 1994, the Flames traded him, Ted Drury and Paul Ranheim to the Hartford Whalers for Michael Nylander, James Patrick and Zarley Zalapski. Hartford flipped him to the Chicago Blackhawks the next day. After four seasons in the Windy City, he was dealt to the San Jose Sharks, with whom he played the rest of his NHL career, finishing it in 2002 with 844 points (203 goals and 641 assists) in 1,145 games played.

Season Age Tm GP G A PTS +/- PIM SOG S%
1985-86 21 CGY 80 18 50 68 11 141 195 9.2
1986-87 22 CGY 68 9 39 48 -10 70 152 5.9
1987-88 23 CGY 75 21 70 91 39 124 204 10.3
1988-89 24 CGY 63 13 49 62 26 78 216 6
1989-90 25 CGY 76 16 60 76 4 97 211 7.6
1990-91 26 CGY 79 12 58 70 26 102 258 4.7
1991-92 27 CGY 70 12 43 55 1 128 189 6.3
1992-93 28 CGY 81 23 58 81 -1 112 263 8.7
1993-94 29 TOT 41 6 12 18 -12 38 86 7
1993-94 29 CGY 25 4 9 13 -3 20 51 7.8
1993-94 29 CHI 16 2 3 5 -9 18 35 5.7
1994-95 30 CHI 48 10 27 37 14 42 144 6.9
1995-96 31 CHI 82 20 47 67 3 80 242 8.3
1996-97 32 CHI 82 7 21 28 -4 70 225 3.1
1997-98 33 CHI 73 14 28 42 1 74 199 7
1998-99 34 SJS 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
1999-00 35 SJS 76 6 28 34 7 52 175 3.4
2000-01 36 SJS 68 10 24 34 8 84 157 6.4
2001-02 37 SJS 82 6 27 33 13 57 174 3.4
Career 1145 203 641 844 126 1349 3091 6.6

3. Hakan Loob

1980: Round 9, 181st overall

Before there was THAT No. 12, he was THE No. 12.

Hakan Loob was the player best known for wearing those digits as a Flame until a certain Iginla showed up and claimed them in the late 1990s.

The top-line winger is one of the greatest Swedish players in hockey history, having forged a star career both internationally and as a pro in his home country primarily playing for Färjestad.

The Flames took a flier on the then 20-year-old Loob in the 1980 draft. GM Cliff Fletcher was unable to convince Loob to cross the Atlantic and join Calgary until 1983-84, the season after he set Swedish elite league records for goals and points that still stand today.

He scored 30-plus goals his first three seasons as a Flame, hit the 50-goal mark in 1987-88 and won the Stanley Cup with Calgary in 1989.

While celebrating the Cup victory, he revealed he was forgoing his final year of his contract to return home to Sweden the next year. He played seven more pro seasons with Färjestad, retiring as a player in 1996 to become the team’s general manager.

Season Age Tm GP G A PTS +/- PIM SOG S%
1983-84 23 Cgy 77 30 25 55 9 22 178 16.9
1984-85 24 Cgy 78 37 35 72 14 14 224 16.5
1985-86 25 Cgy 68 31 36 67 24 36 174 17.8
1986-87 26 Cgy 68 18 26 44 -13 26 129 14
1987-88 27 Cgy 80 50 56 106 41 47 198 25.3
1988-89 28 Cgy 79 27 58 85 28 44 223 12.1
Career 450 193 236 429 103 189 1126 17.1

4. David Moss

2001: Round 7, 220th overall

Moss was on his way to the University of Michigan when the Flames took him in the 2001 draft. The Livonia, Mich., native played four years of NCAA hockey with the Wolverines before turning pro with the Flames organization in 2005. He spent a season and a half with the Flames’ AHL affiliate in Omaha before being promoted to the NHL in December 2006. He scored goals in his first three NHL games, becoming the first Flame to pull the feat.

Injuries, however, plagued much of Moss’s NHL career. In 2007-08, various ailments kept him out of the lineup, and he scored just four goals in 41 games. The next season was his most productive in Calgary, when he scored 20 goals and 39 points in 81 games.

Injuries, though, played a factor his remaining three seasons with the team and his output was limited. Moss did, however, flourish in a top-line role in 2010-11, when coach Brent Sutter moved him to centre between Iginla and Alex Tanguay. He was limited to just 58 games that season thanks to a high-ankle sprain, however, but he put up 17 goals and 30 points regardless.

Moss, who is a cousin to Phil, Blake and Amanda Kessel, left the Flames as a free agent in 2012 when he signed with the Phoenix Coyotes.

Season Age Tm GP G A PTS +/- PIM SOG S%
2006-07 25 Cgy 41 10 8 18 5 12 70 14.3
2007-08 26 Cgy 41 4 7 11 -4 10 60 6.7
2008-09 27 Cgy 81 20 19 39 -5 22 194 10.3
2009-10 28 Cgy 64 8 9 17 -9 20 133 6
2010-11 29 Cgy 58 17 13 30 9 18 127 13.4
2011-12 30 Cgy 32 2 7 9 -3 12 82 2.4
2012-13 31 Phx 45 5 15 20 3 21 82 6.1
2013-14 32 Phx 79 8 14 22 -1 18 151 5.3
2014-15 33 Ari 60 4 8 12 -18 24 96 4.2
Career 501 78 100 178 -23 157 995 7.8

5. Jiri Hrdina

1984: Round 8, 159th overall

The Flames took a flier on Hrdina, who by the time they drafted the forward from then Czechoslovakia had starred on the international stage in world championships and the Olympics.

In January 1987, with relations between European communist countries and the West warming up, and with the Czech hockey federation allowing players age 30 and over to ply their trade in North America, the national team captain indicated he intended to join the Flames following the 1988 Games in Calgary. He did just that.

He finished the ’87-88 campaign with the Flames then played two full seasons donning red and yellow in a checking role, winning the Stanley Cup in 1989. He was dealt to the Pittsburgh Penguins in December 1990, a move Hrdina wasn’t thrilled with initially. In Pittsburgh, he joined another contending team, which included 18-year-old rookie and fellow countryman Jaromir Jagr, in time to win two more Cups. Hrdina retired following the second championship by the Penguins in 1992.

Season Age Tm GP G A PTS +/- PIM SOG S%
1987-88 30 Cgy 9 2 5 7 7 2 13 15.4
1988-89 31 Cgy 70 22 32 54 19 26 147 15
1989-90 32 Cgy 64 12 18 30 10 31 96 12.5
1990-91 33 TOT 51 6 17 23 -6 17 66 9.1
1990-91 33 Cgy 14 0 3 3 -4 4 8 0
1990-91 33 Pit 37 6 14 20 -2 13 58 10.3
1991-92 34 Pit 56 3 13 16 4 16 51 5.9
Career 250 45 85 130 34 92 373 12.1

This article first appeared on Calgary Hockey Now and was syndicated with permission.

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