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248. Robbie Ftorek

From Massachusetts, Robbie Ftorek went undrafted in the NHL but played a handful of games for the Detroit Red Wings after being part of a surprise Silver Medal-winning United States Olympic Team in 1972.  Ftorek would join the Phoenix Roadrunners of the World Hockey Association, where he shocked fans with his production.  In his second season in the WHA, he scored 113 Points and was named the league MVP, and he had 117 Points the year after.  Ftroek signed with the Cincinnati Stingers after the Roadrunners folded, and he had two years of 100 or more points again.  The entire league folded, and he joined the Quebec Nordiques (now the NHL's Colorado Avalanche) and would finish his career with the New York Rangers.  Ftorek is fifth all-time in Points per Game in the WHA.

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.

289. Thomas Steen

Thomas Steen played his entire National Hockey League career with the Winnipeg Jets, where he may not have been known outside small-market Winnipeg and his home country of Sweden, but he was a player who was vastly underrated, selfless, and thus invaluable to the Jets, who never let him go.  Beyond his work with the Jets, Steen played internationally for Sweden at three Canada Cups and was a two-time Silver Medalist at the World Championship.  Steen’s #25 would be retired by the Jets in 1995.

288. Sergei Samsonov

This one might be a little difficult to justify putting him on this list at all, as many considered the career of Sergei Samsonov a disappointment, but while he may not have lived up to lofty expectations, there is no doubt that the Russian had a promising career.