Grant Fuhr

Player

Birthday September 28, 1962

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Spruce Grove, Alberta, Canada

Age 61 years old

Nationality Canada

Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)

Weight 184 lb (83 kg; 13 st 2 lb)

#16453 Most Popular

1962

Grant Scott Fuhr (born September 28, 1962) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey goaltender in the National Hockey League (NHL) and former goaltending coach for the Arizona Coyotes, who played for the Edmonton Oilers in the 1980s during which he won the Stanley Cup five times.

1970

In the mid-1970s, Fuhr played for the Enoch Tomahawks hockey team.

Fuhr's mother came from Enoch Cree Nation.

1979

In 1979, at the age of 17, Fuhr joined the Victoria Cougars of the Western Hockey League (WHL).

1981

After two outstanding seasons in Victoria, which included the league championship and a trip to the Memorial Cup in 1981, Fuhr was drafted eighth overall by the Edmonton Oilers in the 1981 NHL Entry Draft, on June 10, 1981.

1983

Fuhr played ten seasons for the Oilers, where he teamed up first with Andy Moog, then Bill Ranford to form one of the most formidable goaltending tandems in history, winning the Stanley Cup four times in five seasons (1983–84 through 1987–8).

Moog was given the starting job in the 1983 playoffs and helped lead the Oilers to their first Stanley Cup Finals, though they were swept by the New York Islanders, who captured their fourth straight Stanley Cup.

1984

The next year general manager and head coach Glen Sather chose to go with Fuhr in the 1984 playoffs.

However, Fuhr was injured in the third game of the Stanley Cup Finals in a rematch against the Islanders when he collided with Pat LaFontaine, so Moog stepped in and led the Oilers to a series win.

After that, Fuhr remained the number one goaltender.

Fuhr was also involved with the infamous goal where Steve Smith scored on his net to cost the Oilers the '86 playoffs against the Calgary Flames.

He also played in the National Hockey League All-Star Game in 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, and 1989.

1987

In 1987, Fuhr played in goal for the NHL All-Stars in both games of the Rendez-Vous '87 series against the Soviet National Team.

In 1987-88, Fuhr backstopped Canada to a victory at the Canada Cup, playing in all nine games, then played in 75 regular season and 19 playoff games.

He won his only Vezina Trophy as the NHL's top goaltender that year.

He finished second in voting for the Hart Memorial Trophy as league MVP, behind Mario Lemieux and ahead of teammate Wayne Gretzky.

Fuhr's playoff success fed into his reputation as the supreme clutch goaltender of his era, and there was a period from 1987 through at least 1989 where Fuhr was often called "the best goaltender in the world".

1990

Fuhr was the team's starting goaltender on the first four teams but was injured and did not play in the 1990 playoffs, when the Oilers won for the fifth time.

Fuhr was suspended by the NHL for 59 games of the 1990–91 season.

Fuhr had come forward about his drug use after spending two weeks in a counseling centre in Florida.

He admitted that he used "a substance" (not specifying whether or not it was cocaine) for some seven years, or most of the period that the Oilers rested at the top of the NHL.

Details of Fuhr's drug use were supplied by his ex-wife, Corrine, who told the press in Edmonton that she often found cocaine hidden in his clothing and that she fielded numerous threatening telephone calls from drug dealers who had not been paid.

These embarrassing details no doubt contributed to the one-year suspension handed down in September 1990 by NHL president John Ziegler, who called Fuhr's conduct "dishonorable and against the welfare of the league."

1991

After missing 59 games and entering a two-week rehab program, the suspension was lifted by the league on February 18, 1991.

Once Fuhr was re-instated, fans of opposing teams taunted him at games with bags of sugar.

On September 19, 1991, Fuhr was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs in a seven-player deal.

1993

After a season and a half in Toronto, he was again traded, this time to the Buffalo Sabres, on February 2, 1993.

In Buffalo, he played a role in the Sabres' dramatic first-round playoff victory over the Boston Bruins, helped instill a winning attitude in the organization, and mentored a still relatively inexperienced Dominik Hašek.

Fuhr then had a successful 1993–94 season with the Sabres, initially sharing goaltending duties with Hašek.

Hašek became the Sabres' full time starting goaltender after Fuhr suffered multiple injuries.

Fuhr and Hašek were awarded the William M. Jennings Trophy for the fewest goals allowed.

In May 1993, while a member of the Sabres, Fuhr was denied membership in the neighbouring Transit Valley Country Club.

At the time, rumours floated that the denial was based on race, as several of Fuhr's white teammates had been granted membership.

Club officials denied they rejected Fuhr based on his race; rather, his application contained "incorrect and incomplete" information.

Various acts of vandalism at the club occurred after news of Fuhr's rejection surfaced, including an incident where vandals burned a swastika onto one of the greens.

In light of the negative publicity, the club reversed its position and offered Fuhr not only a membership, but an apology as well.

2003

He was a six-time NHL All-Star and, in 2003, was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

2017

In 2017, Fuhr was named one of the 100 Greatest NHL Players in history.

He set a number of firsts for black ice hockey players in the NHL, including being the first to win the Stanley Cup and being the first inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Fuhr was born to one Afro-Canadian parent and one First Nation-Canadian parent from the Enoch Cree Nation; he was adopted by parents Betty Wheeler and Robert Fuhr and raised in Spruce Grove, Alberta.