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Kelly Buchberger—True Grit
While
the Oilers have had many superstars since they
joined the National Hockey League in 1979, the team
has shown commitment to hard work and perseverance.
This is evident in Kelly Buchberger.
Born on December 2, 1966, in
Langenburg, Saskatchewan, Buchberger was never known as
a goal-scorer or set-up man. Instead, he is a solid
winger, ready to take the body and drop the gloves if
need be. In his final season of junior hockey in
1985-86, Buchberger earned just 36 points in a full
season with the Moose Jaw Warriors of the Western Hockey
League.
The Oilers selected Buchberger in the
eighth round of the 1985 draft and believed that he
could develop within their system and would become a
gritty role player for the team.
He spent the 1986-87 season with the
Oilers’ farm team in Nova Scotia.
His
work ethic and hard-nosed play led coach and general
manager
Glen Sather to call Buchberger up to the Oilers in
time for the Stanley Cup finals. Buchberger played
in three of the seven games the Oilers needed to defeat
the Philadelphia Flyers. He earned his first Stanley Cup
ring by playing just three games the entire season.
Buchberger played 19 regular-season
games for the Oilers the next season. In the playoffs,
he never saw any ice-time and is not on the 1988 roster
that was engraved into the Stanley Cup.
In 1989, the team’s first NHL season
without Gretzky,
Buchberger became a full-time Oiler. As Buchnberger got
more ice-time fan and teammates appreciated his
appreciation, and soon he became a favourite in the
stands and locker room. In 1990, he won his second Cup
with the team
Buchberger never earned an NHL job
with his awe-inspiring talent; instead, through his work
ethic, he became a leader through example.
Buchberger would play a key role in the Oilers’
rebuilding process of the 1990s, as he would show the
kids coming into the lineup the dedication needed to
play in the league. He also represented a link to the
Oilers glory years, as one of the few remaining Cup
winners on the team.
In 1995, the Oilers named him the
captain of the team. Leadership came naturally to
Buchberger. When he broke his arm during the 1998-99
season, he was out of the lineup for 30 consecutive
games, but continued to come to the rink for each
and every practice when the team was not on the road.
"I came to the skates and worked out
with the team, to make sure that they were working hard
every day," he said at the time. "I tried to show them
that even when things get tough, you’ve got to show up
and be ready to play."
At the end of the 1998-99 season, the
Atlanta Thrashers plucked Buchberger from the Oilers
roster in the expansion draft, hoping he would bring
leadership qualities in the team's young locker room.
Since that time, Buchberger has also skated with the Los
Angeles Kings and Phoenix Coyotes. Before the start of
the 2003-04 season, he signed as a free agent with the
Pittsburgh Penguins.
He started his career playing
alongside Wayne Gretzky and will end it by playing
beside Mario Lemieux.
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