It got better.
Coffey would be named a First Team All-Star the next two seasons and was also the Norris Trophy winner. In 1984-85, he scored 121 Points, and in the following season, he achieved a career-high of 48 Goals, 90 Assists, and 138 Points. Coffey added two more Stanley Cups, and he was now regarded unilaterally as the top blueliner in the NHL.
Coffey would be the first major player of the Oilers’ dynasty to leave the team. A financial dispute saw Coffey traded to Pittsburgh, and he would go on to win another Stanley Cup and Norris Trophy. After Bobby Orr, Paul Coffey is the greatest offensive Defenseman in the history of the game, and in 2004, he would be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility. The Oilers retired his number the year after. He was also inducted into the Oilers Hall of Fame as part of the first class in 2022.
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