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Alright, this may seem to be a disturbing trend, but rest assured, this is another legit hockey question. I asked a similar question in terms of the Canadian juniors, so I thought my focus would be directed towards American colleges. To that end, which college has been a breeding ground for future NHL all-stars?

2007-09-02 09:59:26 · 4 answers · asked by Snoop 5 in Sports Hockey

4 answers

Just to add to 'Like I'm Telling You's list...the answer is still Wisconsin but 5 additional Badgers played in an NHL All-Star game.

Wisconsin: Mark Johnson, Brian Mullen, Tony Granato, Mike Richter, Brian Rafalski.

Boston College: Brian Leetch, Kevin Stevens, Jeremy Roenick (technicality, spent 1/2 a semester there).

Boston University: Tony Amonte, Tom Poti.

LSSU: Doug Weight, Brian Rolston.

MSU: Rod Brind'Amour, Mike York, Ryan Miller.

University of Minnesota: Neal Broten, Mike Ramsey.

UND: Dave Christian.
RPI: Joey Juneau.
St. Cloud St: Mark Parrish.

2007-09-02 13:35:31 · answer #1 · answered by zapcity29 7 · 1 0

The University of Wisconsin (5) - Dany Heatley, James Carey, Brian Engblom, Gary Suter and Chris Chelios
Boston College (2) - Joseph Mullen, Bill Guerin
University of Vermont (2) - Martin St. Louis, John LeClair
Bowling Green State University (2) - Michael Liut, Robert Blake
Renselaaer Polytech - Adam Oates, Daren Puppa
University of Maine (1) - Paul Kariya
University of North Dakota (1) - Edward Belfour
Cornell University (1) - Kenneth Dryden
Michigan Technological University (1) - Tony Esposito
University of Minnesota-Duluth (2) - Brett Hull, Glenn Resch
Boston University (1) - Keith Tkachuk
Clarkson College (1) - David Taylor
University of New Hampshire (1) - Rodney Langway
University of Michigan (1) - Martin Turco



ZapCity, I think the idea was the end of season all-star as opposed to playing in an all-star game. Brian leetch was left off my list because he was drafted out of high school.

Also, I don;t count Roenick because he was never eligible to play hockey at BC because he had signed a letter of commitment to play in Hull before his final year of high school started

2007-09-02 10:05:21 · answer #2 · answered by Like I'm Telling You Who I A 7 · 3 0

Even if he does pass Roy, Roy will still be the greatest ever. Undisputed. There's no question, don't listen to people who say "look at the stats, Brodeur's better". Stats don't say jack sh!t. It's glory and delivering in clutch situations that counts. So he ended his career bad. Name a great goalie who ended his career great. The same will happen with Brodeur. It doesn't matter whether he breaks the record or not. It's just a number. Numbers can't tell the whole story.

2007-09-02 10:35:59 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

"Like I'm telling you"... I am impressed. Just a thought, you didn't come up with that info on your own. Where did you find that info. I thought I had a great answer thought up, seen yours, put mine back to bed. Cudos.

2007-09-02 20:32:24 · answer #4 · answered by cme 6 · 0 0

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