Draisaitl becomes first German player to reach 1,000 NHL points
Selected by Edmonton with the No. 3 pick in the 2014 NHL Draft, it didn’t take long for Draisaitl to become the highest-scoring German-born player in League history, surpassing Marco Sturm (487 points), who is now the coach of the Boston Bruins, in just his seventh season.
“He’s the best German player to ever play the game, that’s for sure,” Sturm said. “He’s a guy that’s going to hit a lot of milestones coming up. I don’t know anyone else even in the future who is going to be that good.”
Truth be told, he’s one of the best players overall in the game today, as his resume shows.
Last season, Draisaitl won the Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy after scoring a League-leading 52 goals. In 2019-20, he won the Hart Trophy as the NHL’s most valuable player, the Ted Lindsay Award, which is given to the most outstanding player in the League as voted on by members of the NHL Players’ Association, and the Art Ross Trophy as the League’s leading scorer after putting up 110 points (43 goals, 67 assists) in 71 games.
In his first 11 NHL seasons, Draisaitl has scored at least 50 goals four times and finished with at least 100 points six times, including a career-high 128 points (52 goals, 76 assists) in 80 games in 2022-23. Since 2018-19, Draisaitl ranks second in the NHL with 796 points (341 goals, 455 assists) in 555 games, trailing only McDavid, who has 882 points in 537 games.
“First and foremost, as a player, just a special player. Can’t say enough good things,” McDavid said. “I mean, he does it each and every year, both sides of the rink. Really, really special. A special accomplishment. For him to get there so fast, as I said, can’t say enough good things. And obviously, as a person, he works his tail off. I see it firsthand every day. It’s not surprising for him to reach this accomplishment and reach it so quickly with so many great years ahead of him still. That’s a great thing.”
Draisaitl, who has 47 points (17 goals, 30 assists) in 34 games this season, ranks fifth in Oilers history in points, and he has a chance to catch Mark Messier (1,034) and Kurri (1,043) later this season. McDavid is second with 1,138 points (381 goals, 757 assists) and Wayne Gretzky is first with 1,669 (583 goals, 1,086 assists). Draisaitl is also one goal away from tying Glenn Anderson (417) for third in Oilers history.
“What he’s done, and I’ve only been here a short period of time, but regular-season success, playoff success, just such a big-time player and scoring big-time goals,” Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch said when asked what Draisaitl means to Edmonton. “He gets a lot of attention for, I guess, a lot of things, whether it’s the goal-scoring, the playmaking. I don’t think he gets enough credit for his defensive play, but really remarkable player.”
NHL.com independent correspondent Wes Crosby contributed to this report.
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