Neal Broten Explained

Neal Broten
Birth Date:29 November 1959
Birth Place:Roseau, Minnesota, U.S.
Height Ft:5
Height In:9
Weight Lb:185
Position:Center
Shoots:Left
Played For:Minnesota North Stars
BSC Preussen
Dallas Stars
New Jersey Devils
Los Angeles Kings
Ntl Team:USA
Draft:42nd overall
Draft Year:1979
Draft Team:Minnesota North Stars
Career Start:1980
Career End:1997

Neal LaMoy Broten (born November 29, 1959) is an American former professional ice hockey player. A member of the 1980 US Olympic hockey team that won the gold medal at Lake Placid in 1980, Broten was inducted into the US Hockey Hall of Fame in 2000 having appeared in 1,099 National Hockey League (NHL) regular season games from 1981 to 1997 with the Minnesota North Stars, Dallas Stars, New Jersey Devils and Los Angeles Kings.[1] He is the older brother of Aaron and Paul Broten.

Early career

Broten, like his two brothers, attended Roseau High School, a perennial hockey contender in the state of Minnesota, where he appeared with the Rams in the state tournament in three consecutive years (1977–79).[2] His 1978 achievement of four assists in a single period still stands as a Roseau Rams' record today.[3]

As a college freshman playing for Herb Brooks and the Minnesota Golden Gophers, Broten scored 21 goals, had 50 assists, and was named WCHA Rookie of the Year[1] His final goal of that season was the game winner that clinched the 1979 NCAA Championship in which the Gophers defeated the University of North Dakota by a score of 4–3.[1] Broten would later win the inaugural Hobey Baker award in 1981, which honors the US collegiate hockey's best player.

Broten is one of two players, along with Ed Belfour, to have played on teams that won the NCAA hockey championship (University of Minnesota in 1979), the Olympic Gold Medal (Team USA, 1980), and the Stanley Cup (New Jersey Devils, 1995). He is the only player to have won the Hobey Baker, the Olympic Gold Medal and the Stanley Cup. He is one of only two American players, along with Ken Morrow, to have won both the Olympic gold and the Stanley Cup.

NHL/International career

Broten was a member of the United States Olympic team that won a gold medal at the 1980 Winter Olympics in an event known as the Miracle on Ice. He was also a member of Team USA at the 1981 Canada Cup and 1984 Canada Cup tournaments as well as the 1990 Ice Hockey World Championship.

Broten played 17 seasons in the National Hockey League. Highlights of his long NHL career include the first American to score more than 100 points in a single season (1985–86) as well as two NHL All-Star Game appearances in 1983 and 1986.

He won a Stanley Cup with the New Jersey Devils in 1995, scoring the game-winning goal in Game Four against the Detroit Red Wings to clinch the title. Coincidentally, his 1980 Soviet counterpart Viacheslav Fetisov was on the ice for the heavily favored Red Wings when Broten scored the clincher.[4] Broten became the first American to score a Cup-winning goal. Fellow Americans Brett Hull, Mike Rupp, Patrick Kane, and Alec Martinez have done it since.

Broten served as the captain of the Dallas Stars for two months during the lockout-shortened 1994–95 NHL season after the trade of previous captain Mark Tinordi. He was traded to New Jersey before the end of the season. He had previously served as an alternate captain on a number of occasions.

During the 1982–83 NHL season, Broten participated in a rare fight against Wayne Gretzky. It was one of only a handful of fights during both his and Gretzky's careers. Broten later recalled how he and his teammates would later have to deal with Gretzky's enforcers, Marty McSorley and Dave Semenko.[5]

Broten initially refused to play for the North Stars in 1991–92 due to a contract dispute, instead playing in Germany for BSC Preussen Berlin where he filled in for his former U.S. Olympic teammate Dave Silk who was on temporary leave in the U.S. with his pregnant wife.

Post career

Broten briefly came out of retirement in 1999 to once again play for the US national team in the 1999 Ice Hockey World Championship qualifying tournament (the U.S. team featuring several NHL players had surprisingly finished among the bottom four in the previous 1998 world championship tournament) when no active NHL players were available. He scored six points in three games as the U.S. won the tournament, before retiring from hockey for good. He lives in River Falls, WI. In 2014, Broten's nephew, Shane Gersich, was drafted by the Washington Capitals.

In popular culture

Broten is not featured in the 1981 TV movie about the 1980 U.S. hockey team called Miracle on Ice except in archival footage of the gold medal ceremony.

In the 2004 Disney movie Miracle, he is portrayed by Trevor Alto. Alto played college hockey for the University of British Columbia Thunderbirds.[6]

In the 2008 documentary, Pond Hockey, he reflects on his youth growing up playing hockey in his hometown of Roseau, MN.

Awards and honors

AwardYear
All-WCHA First Team1980–81[7]
AHCA West All-American1980–81[8]

Transactions

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGP PIMGP G A Pts PIM
1977–78Roseau High SchoolHS-MN26 43 77 120
1978–79University of MinnesotaWCHA40 21 50 71 18
1979–80United States National TeamIntl55 25 30 55 20
1980–81University of MinnesotaWCHA36 17 54 71 56
1980–81Minnesota North StarsNHL3 2 0 2 1219 1 7 8 9
1981–82Minnesota North StarsNHL73 38 60 98 424 0 2 2 0
1982–83Minnesota North StarsNHL79 32 45 77 439 1 6 7 10
1983–84Minnesota North StarsNHL76 28 61 89 4316 5 5 10 4
1984–85Minnesota North StarsNHL80 19 37 56 399 2 5 7 10
1985–86Minnesota North StarsNHL80 29 76 105 475 3 2 5 2
1986–87Minnesota North StarsNHL46 18 35 53 33
1987–88Minnesota North StarsNHL54 9 30 39 32
1988–89Minnesota North StarsNHL68 18 38 56 575 2 2 4 4
1989–90Minnesota North StarsNHL80 23 62 85 457 2 2 4 18
1990–91Minnesota North StarsNHL79 13 56 69 2623 9 13 22 6
1991–92BSC PreussenGER8 3 5 8 2
1991–92Minnesota North StarsNHL76 8 26 34 167 1 5 6 2
1992–93Minnesota North StarsNHL82 12 21 33 22
1993–94Dallas StarsNHL79 17 35 52 629 2 1 3 6
1994–95Dallas StarsNHL17 0 4 4 4
1994–95New Jersey DevilsNHL30 8 20 28 2020 7 12 19 6
1995–96New Jersey DevilsNHL55 7 16 23 14
1996–97New Jersey DevilsNHL3 0 1 1 0
1996–97Los Angeles KingsNHL19 0 4 4 0
1996–97Phoenix RoadrunnersIHL11 3 3 6 4
1996–97Dallas StarsNHL20 8 7 15 122 0 1 1 0
NHL totals1,099 289 634 923 569135 35 63 98 77

International

YearTeamEventGPGAPtsPIM
1979United StatesWJC524610
1980United StatesOG72132
1981United StatesCC63250
1984United StatesCC63144
1990United StatesWC81564
Junior totals524610
Senior totals27991810

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: USA Hockey . USA Hockey . October 2, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121117084705/http://www.usahockey.com/ushhof/default.aspx?NAV=AF_01&id=228914&DetailedNews=yes . November 17, 2012.
  2. Web site: 2010-2011 Roseau Rams Hockey - History . Roseauramshockey.com . October 2, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120915113330/http://www.roseauramshockey.com/history.htm . September 15, 2012.
  3. Web site: Neal Broten . Vintageminnesotahockey.com . October 2, 2012.
  4. Web site: Michael Farber . The surprising Devils crushed the favored Red Wings four - 07.03.95 - SI Vault . Sportsillustrated.cnn.com . July 3, 1995 . October 2, 2012.
  5. Web site: Wayne Gretzky vs. Neal Broten | Off Wing Opinion . Ericmcerlain.com . January 17, 2007 . October 2, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090514033450/http://www.ericmcerlain.com/offwingopinion/archives/007035.php . May 14, 2009 . dead.
  6. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1537783/ Trevor Alto biography at the Internet Movie Database
  7. News: WCHA All-Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 19, 2013.
  8. News: Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners. NCAA.org. June 11, 2013.
  9. Web site: Wild hockey fans pick greatest high school team, player | Minnesota Public Radio News . Minnesota.priprod.publicradio.org . April 10, 2009 . October 2, 2012 . dead . https://archive.today/20130415192412/http://minnesota.priprod.publicradio.org/display/web/2009/04/10/greatest_hshockey/ . April 15, 2013.