Pit Martin is remembered by many for being at the wrong end of a lopsided trade that sent Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge, and Fred Stanfield to the Boston Bruins and created a Stanley Cup Championship team, but Martin was a very highly regarded player in his own right. Martin would represent the Chicago Blackhawks in the All-Star Game four times, and he secured six 60 Point seasons. Overall, he would score 809 Points in the National Hockey League.
It could be argued that Pat Stapleton is one of the better players who seem to have been forgotten in the National Hockey League. He shouldn’t be just a footnote, as he would develop into an excellent point man on the blue line and the owner of an accurate and rapid slap shot.
One of two players that won the Hart Trophy without being elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame, Al Rollins would win the Hart in 1954, a season in which he actually led the NHL in Losses. Rollins then played for the Chicago Blackhawks, which were then the worst team in the NHL, and many considered that the only reason they were competitive in games was because of Rollins. He had won the Vezina and the Stanley Cup with the Toronto Maple Leafs previously.
With over 600 NHL Points from the blueline in the NHL, James Patrick eclipsed the 50 Point mark four times. Patrick was best known for his time with the New York Rangers, where he finished twice in the top ten in Norris Trophy voting and represented Canada at the Olympics and the Canada Cup. Frankly, if you played for Canada in any Canada Cup, you must have been pretty good!