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220. Craig Janney

Nearly a Point per Game player over his NHL career (751 Points in 760 Games), Craig Janney might very well claim one of the best players never to make an All-Star Game.  Janney was a brilliant playmaker who at times was one with the puck, and he would finish in the top ten in Assists four times, with a career high of 82 in the 1992-93 season.  Janney, who was with the St. Louis Blues at the time, would tally 106 Points that year. 

212. Steve Vickers

Winning the Calder Trophy in 1973, Steve Vickers would play his entire career with the New York Rangers.  Vickers would have three 30 Goal Seasons, his best being a 41 Goal campaign where he finished ninth overall and was named a Second Team All-Star.  The Right Wing would play in two All-Star Games (1975 & 1976), and he would also be known for the effectiveness of his shot selection.  Vickers would lead the NHL in Shooting Percentage in 1979/80, and he would finish in the top six three other times.

211. Martin Straka

Martin Straka, from the Czech Republic, had a long career in the NHL.  Straka had a pair of 80 Point Seasons for the Pittsburgh Penguins and two 70 Point Seasons for the New York Rangers over his career, and he would tabulate 717 Points overall in his career.  Straka was named an All-Star in 1999, and while he never won a Stanley Cup, he did win an Olympic Gold Medal with the Czech Republic in 1998.

222. Marc Savard

A two-time All-Star in consecutive seasons (2008 & 2009), Marc Savard quietly put forth a career where he accumulated 706 Points with 499 of them coming by way of Assists.  Savard began his career with the New York Rangers, the Calgary Flames, and the Atlanta Thrashers, and in those nine years, he never played in the postseason. However, in his last season in Atlanta, he set a career high with 97 points, finishing ninth in Points and third in Assists.