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Regardless of the era, scoring 50 goals in three consecutive seasons is a remarkable achievement. Even though it was the wide-open early 1980s that saw Rick Vaive accomplish that feat, remember he did so for a brutal Harold Ballard organization that was at its worst during the Toronto Maple Leafs' tenure. Vaive had a killer slapshot and used that skill to net 441 career goals. Because Vaive played for so many bad teams, his career is often overlooked, but he was often the lone bright spot on many teams in the 1980s.
During the heyday of Pierre Larouche, few hockey players had a more gifted scoring touch. Larouche was (at the time) the youngest player to net 50 goals per season and was the first to score 50 goals a season for two different teams. Scoring was never a problem for him, and he was able to help the Habs win two Stanley Cups. Larouche, however, was criticized for his lack of defensive play, and although he finished his career with an over a point per game average, his lack of two-way skills will hurt him with the Hall.
Possibly one of the most versatile players in NHL history, Doug Mohns spent the first half of his career as a defenseman with the Boston Bruins. In Beantown, Mohns had a flair for offense and was able to help his team at that side of the ice. Later, Mohns was traded to Chicago where he was converted forward and placed on a line with the legendary Stan Mikita. Naturally, his scoring totals increased and with his knowledge of the defensive game, Doug Mohns was one of the more complete players in NHL history. Hopefully is known more for his skills than the bad toupee he wore at the end of his career.
Marc Tardif is the all-time leading goal scorer in league history. Sadly, that league is the World Hockey Association. Tardif was really starting to come into his own with the Montreal Canadians, and fans were beginning to think they had an absolute emerging superstar on their hands. He joined the upstart WHA (for a very substantial pay increase) and eventually landed with the cross-provincial Quebec Nordiques. It was there that Marc Tardif, in his prime, lit up the WHA tallying goals at a blistering pace. With the merger of the NHL and WHA, he found himself back in the NHL, still with the Nordiques, where he was still an effective contributor. One of the knocks on the Hall is its lack of recognition from the WHA. Inducting their two-time MVP would silence those critics.