Although he is a punch line for how to screw up a career (and Whitney Houston’s for that matter) Bobby Brown was the master of the New Jack Swing movement and for a time he was easily the biggest R&B star on the planet. Bobby Brown’s slick produced sound was copycatted across radio station across America. He attracted the women without alienating the men and he could move from danceable R&B to crooning ballads to thuggish Rap with ease. Bobby Brown’s career unraveled in the mid 90’s with weaker music and constant problems with the law where he would become a reality show joke (on a good day) in the decade that followed.
Teppo Numminen did not receive a lot of press during his NHL career, as he spent the majority of his time with the Winnipeg Jets, who would later become the Phoenix Coyotes. Having said that, Numminen is one of the few players to have played twenty seasons in the National Hockey League and at the time of his retirement his 1,327 was the most played (since broken) by a European player, though sadly for Numminen, he still holds the record for the most games played without wining a Stanley Cup.
This is an interesting one for sure.
During World War II, there was certainly a level of what could be considered elite in professional hockey. Still, in the 1943-44 season, Herb Cain shocked the statisticians by becoming an NHL league leader with 82 Points.
He may not be on this list for his career statistics, which, although good (465 career points over 17 years), do not indicate a Hall of Famer. However, Eddie Shack was one of the true characters of the game and, at times, the most popular. Shack could always be counted on to deliver a unique interview and perspective that was different from his contemporaries. Shack was even the subject of a novelty song (Clear the Track, Here Comes Eddie Shack) that went to number one on the Canadian charts. Shack was to many a “novelty” player himself, but anyone who can last as long as he did is certainly no gimmick.