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Most assists by a player, first NHL season, one game: Wayne Gretzky (February 15, 1980), 7 Longest goal-scoring streak, first NHL season: Joe Malone (1917–18), 14 games Most assists by a player, first NHL Season Wayne Gretzky (1979–80), 86
Ray Bourque and Paul Coffey are the only defensemen to reach 1,000 assists while Jaromir Jagr is the only non-Canadian player with 1,000 career assists. This alone would place these players on the list of NHL players with 1,000 points, which also earns the NHL Milestone Award. [2] Legend Rank – Ranking on all-time assists list
Jason Kidd has the third-most assists and the second-most steals in NBA history, having led the NBA in assists during five separate seasons. In addition to having the fourth-most assists in NBA history, LeBron James is also the all-time leading scorer in NBA history. Steve Nash has the fifth-most assists in NBA history, and he is the only ...
Chris Paul has a new place in the NBA record book. With a pass to Harrison Barnes Sunday night, the San Antonio Spurs point guard tied Jason Kidd for second-place all-time on the NBA's assist list.
The assists title was originally determined by assist total through the 1968–69 season, after which assists per game was used to determine the leader instead. John Stockton holds the all-time records for total assists (1,164) and assists per game (14.54) in a season, achieved in the 1990–91 and 1989–90 seasons respectively. [2]
Most playoff goals, career: 122 [16] Most playoff assists, career: 260 [17] Most assists, one playoff year: 31 in 1988 (19 games) [18] (Since broken by Connor McDavid) Most assists in one series: 14 (at the time tied with Rick Middleton and since broken by Leon Draisaitl) in 1985 Conference Finals (six games vs. Chicago)
Washington Capitals winger Alex Ovechkin reached 700 career assists on Tuesday, recording two in a 4-2 win over the Vegas Golden Knights at Capital One Arena.. The Russian is the 60th player in ...
The player who scores during this extra time is given the overtime goal. All overtime in the NHL is sudden death—meaning the first team to score is the winner—so the player who scores in overtime also has the game-winning goal.