gold star for USAHOF
 

233. Joel Otto

Joel Otto came from Elk River, Minnesota where he went starred for Bemidji State University.  Otto would go undrafted but after what must have seen like an eternity, he was signed with the Calgary Flames.  Otto would become a permanent fixture in the pro ranks in the 1985/86 season and found a niche excelling at the less than sexy aspects of the game.  He had size that he could use was an excellent faceoff man and he would become an excellent defensive Centre.  Otto never won the Frank J. Selke Award as the NHL’s best defensive Award but he finished 3rd on two occasions, was in the top ten another two times and received votes another four seasons.

262. Paul Reinhart

Paul Reinhart played nearly his entire professional career with the Flames (Atlanta/Calgary), and, as such, he did not achieve much notoriety because of the team he played for at the time.  Still, the native of Kitchener, Ontario had a career Points per Game near .90 (0.86), which, regardless of the era and circumstances, is pretty good.

292. Jamie Macoun

While Jamie Macoun could be accurately described as a stay-at-home Defenseman, it just does not seem enough, as he was so much more.

141. Miikka Kiprusoff

Seeing limited action with the San Jose Sharks, Miikka Kiprusoff was traded to the Calgary Flames where he would be a sensation for the team leading the NHL in Save Percentage in Goals Against Average finishing second in the Vezina in the 2003/04.  The NHL Lockout prevented him from repeating that great season but in 2005/06 he would exceed his previous NHL season with a First Team All-Star, William M. Jennings Award and Vezina Trophy.  He was also third in Hart Trophy balloting that year.  Kiprusoff would finish in the top ten in Vezina Trophy voting five of the next seven years he was in the National Hockey League all of which were with the Calgary Flames.  Kiprusoff retired with 319 Wins.

46. Gary Suter

Gary Suter started off with a bang, winning the Calder Trophy with the Calgary Flames. Suter continued to rack up points for the Flames, and the star was able to hoist the Stanley Cup in 1989. Year after year, Gary Suter was among the league leaders in points by a defenseman. With a career garnering 844 points, he is among the elite and is in the conversation when discussing the best American-born defenseman ever. Had he ever won a Norris trophy, he would have likely seen his chances increase by a wide margin.

77. Gary Roberts

910 career points are nothing to sneeze at, but it is not the first thing that people think about with Gary Roberts.  He was the type of player that every General Manager wanted to have, and every player wished to have as a teammate.   He made everyone on his team want to play better.

33. Kent Nilsson

Should someone compile a list of the best all-time hockey players from Sweden, Kent Nilsson often gets left out. Nilsson was a largely forgotten international star whose professional path may have made him the forgotten man. After a few years lighting up the Swedish league, Nilsson joined the WHA and the Winnipeg Jets, where he was instantly among that organization’s elite. Following the merger of the WHA and NHL, Nilsson joined the Flames, where, in the 1980-81 season, he had a career-high 131 points. This remains the record of both a Swedish-born player and a member of the Calgary Flames.

2. Theoren Fleury

Is it possible to be one of the more inspirational players in hockey history yet have a career that is a somewhat cautionary tale to young players? With Theoren Fleury, the answer appears to be yes.