Connor's great-great uncle James Bedard played 22 NHL games for Chicago between 1949 and 1951.
1995
His 143 points also led the CHL in scoring for the year, and he was the first WHL player to have a 140-point season since 1995–96.
2005
Connor Bedard (born July 17, 2005) is a Canadian professional ice hockey centre for the Chicago Blackhawks of the National Hockey League (NHL).
Considered one of the greatest ice hockey prospects of his generation, he was selected first overall by the Blackhawks in the 2023 NHL Entry Draft and made his NHL debut that year.
Bedard was born on July 17, 2005, and grew up in North Vancouver, British Columbia, with his parents, Tom and Melanie, and sister Madi.
2016
He was only the third 16-year-old to manage a 100-point season in the WHL, and the first to do so in the 21st century.
Despite Bedard's scoring, the Pats narrowly missed qualifying for the playoffs.
As he attended the 2022 NHL Entry Draft as an observer, Bedard was profiled in The New York Times as "the most exciting future NHL player attending this week’s draft."
After not recording a point in his opening game of the 2022–23 season, Bedard embarked on a lengthy points streak that made him the league's top scorer.
On November 17, he became the first WHL player in a decade to record twenty-game point streaks in consecutive seasons.
Bedard was noted for attracting large crowds for the Pats' road games; his first-ever return to the Greater Vancouver area for a game against the Vancouver Giants drew over 5,000 fans, which was nearly double the Giants' season average.
Despite missing eleven games in December and early January while attending the World Junior Championships, Bedard still led the WHL in scoring upon his return to the lineup on January 8, where he had four goals and two assists in a 6–2 home victory over the Calgary Hitmen.
With the Pats not considered a title contender, there was media discussion in advance of the WHL's 2023 trade deadline whether the Pats should seek to trade him to a contending team in exchange for future assets.
Pats general manager John Paddock asserted that he would not trade Bedard, noting in addition that per WHL rules Bedard would have to consent to be traded, and that "Connor has the final say. He wants to be a Regina Pat and finish his career in Regina, clear?"
Ultimately, the trade deadline passed without any transaction.
While Bedard's status as an audience draw was already apparent earlier in the season, this effect ramped up noticeably following his return from the 2023 World Junior Championships, which had significantly elevated his national profile.
A January road trip through the province of Alberta saw team record attendance (7,287) at the Red Deer Rebels' Peavey Mart Centrium, while Medicine Hat Tigers' sellout of their arena saw more than double their average attendance.
The Lethbridge Hurricanes offered standing-room only at the Enmax Centre.
The Pats played a nationally televised game against the Hitmen in the Saddledome, the home of the NHL's Calgary Flames.
The Saddledome's upper seating was made available for the occasion, resulting in a near-record WHL attendance of 17,223 when the Hitmen's seasonal average was only 3500.
Bedard finished the regular season with 71 goals and 72 assists in 57 games, winning the Bob Clarke Trophy as the WHL's leading scoring.
2018
In 2018, Bedard emerged as a young hockey prospect, being named "The Future of Hockey" in an article by The Hockey News.
Bedard played minor hockey with West Vancouver Academy Prep of the Canadian Sport School Hockey League.
While playing with this school's U15 and U18 teams, Bedard led the league in goals and points and was named Most Valuable Player both years.
He considered Sidney Crosby his childhood idol.
2020
Bedard was selected by the Regina Pats of the Western Hockey League (WHL) first overall in the WHL Bantam Draft in 2020 as the first WHL player of exceptional player status, and won the Jim Piggott Memorial Trophy as the league's top rookie player in his debut season.
In his third year in the WHL, he won the Bob Clarke Trophy as the league's leading scorer and was given the Four Broncos Memorial Trophy as its most valuable player, before also earning the Canadian Hockey League's Top Scorer and Player of the Year honours.
Competing internationally for Canada, Bedard won championships with the Canadian national under-18 team in 2021 and with the Canadian national junior team in 2022 and 2023.
His 2023 tournament performance set several national and international points records, and led to his being named the event's MVP.
Bedard was the inaugural recipient of the IIHF Male Player of the Year award.
In March 2020, Bedard was granted exceptional player status by Hockey Canada, allowing him to enter the major junior-level Canadian Hockey League component leagues a year early.
He was the first player granted such status to play in the Western Hockey League (WHL).
In the 2020 WHL Bantam Draft, Bedard was selected first overall by the Regina Pats.
In September 2020, Bedard was loaned to the HV71 junior hockey system in Sweden, where he could play while the WHL season was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
He played with HV71 until the WHL returned to play for its 2020–21 season beginning in March 2021.
Due to the pandemic, his rookie season was a shortened one with all of the Pats games played at Regina's Brandt Centre.
As a rookie, Bedard scored 12 goals and 16 assists for 28 points in 15 games before leaving for the 2021 IIHF World U18 Championships.
He was awarded the Jim Piggott Memorial Trophy as the WHL's rookie of the year.
During the 2021–22 WHL season, Bedard became the youngest player to score 50 or more goals in a season, scoring his 50th and 51st goals in the last game of the regular season.
He finished the year with 51 goals and 49 assists for 100 points, ranking second in the WHL in goals and fourth in points.