Joseph Eric Thornton (born July 2, 1979) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey centre.
He played for the Boston Bruins, San Jose Sharks, Toronto Maple Leafs and Florida Panthers of the National Hockey League (NHL).
1990
At the time of his retirement, Thornton was the last active player in any of the major North American professional sports leagues to have played in the 1990s and the last active NHL player to have played in an NHL game against Wayne Gretzky.
Thornton grew up playing minor hockey in his hometown of St. Thomas, Ontario, for the St. Thomas Travellers.
1992
He played "AA" hockey for the Travelers minors and in peewee won an Ontario Minor Hockey Association (OMHA) championship in 1992–93.
1993
His Bantam year was the first for the newly created "AAA" Elgin-Middlesex Chiefs organization, and Thornton joined the "AAA" Elgin-Middlesex Chiefs of the Minor Hockey Alliance of Ontario for the 1993–94 season.
The creation of this organization led to the St. Thomas Minor Hockey Association to compete at the "A" level.
During his bantam year, he appeared in six games for the Junior B St. Thomas Stars of the Ontario Hockey Association (OHA), scoring eight points in six games as a 14-year-old.
1995
The following season, Thornton joined the Stars full-time and reeled off 104 points over 50 games as a 15-year-old, and was subsequently drafted second overall in the 1995 OHL Draft to the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds behind Daniel Tkaczuk, who was selected by the Barrie Colts.
Beginning in 1995–96, Thornton began a two-year career in the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) with the Greyhounds.
He posted a 76-point season in his first year, earning both OHL and CHL Rookie of the Year honours.
The following season, Thornton improved to 41 goals and 122 points, second overall in League scoring behind Marc Savard of the Oshawa Generals, and was named to the OHL second All-Star team.
1997
He was selected first overall by the Bruins in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft and went on to play seven seasons with the club, three as its captain.
After his second OHL season, Thornton was selected first overall in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft by the Boston Bruins.
Thornton suffered a fractured arm in the Bruins' pre-season but made their roster for the 1997–98 campaign.
He scored his first career NHL goal on December 3, 1997, in a 3–0 win against the Philadelphia Flyers.
Bruins head coach Pat Burns was measured in his deployment of Thornton, using him almost exclusively on the fourth line and making him a regular healthy scratch.
Averaging eight minutes and five seconds of ice time per game over the course of the season, he registered three goals and seven points in 55 games as a rookie.
1998
In the 1998 Stanley Cup playoffs, Thornton went scoreless in six games.
In 1998–99, Thornton saw significantly more ice time, averaging 15 minutes and 20 seconds per game, and improved to 41 points in 81 games, as well as a 9-point effort in 11 playoff games.
Thornton continued to build into a key player in the Bruins' line-up, increasing his points total in each of the following two campaigns.
2002
Prior to the 2002–03 season, he was named team captain, succeeding Jason Allison, who was traded to the Los Angeles Kings in 2001; the captaincy position was vacant for a full season after Allison's departure.
In his first season as team captain, Thornton recorded 68 points over 66 games.
The following year, he notched his first career 100-point season with 36 goals, a career-high, and 65 assists.
He ranked third in NHL point-scoring, behind Peter Forsberg of the Colorado Avalanche and Markus Näslund from the Vancouver Canucks.
2003
Thornton's production declined to 73 points in 77 games in the 2003–04 campaign.
The 2003–04 campaign also saw a drop in Thornton's goal-scoring production that has never since rebounded; his last 30-goal season came during the 2002–03 season.
2004
He suffered a fractured right cheekbone in a fight with New York Rangers centre Eric Lindros during a game on January 19, 2004.
The two power forwards fought after Lindros cross-checked Thornton in the head.
The injury required surgery, keeping him out of the line-up for three games.
During the 2004–05 NHL lock-out, Thornton went abroad to play for HC Davos of the Swiss National League A (NLA).
He played on a line with fellow NHL players Rick Nash and Niklas Hagman, helping HC Davos to win the League championship and the Spengler Cup.
Nash and Thornton have subsequently kept in contact with HC Davos and their longtime coach Arno del Curto; Thornton returned to train with the club for up to a month each summer.
2005
During the 2005–06 season, he was traded to the Sharks.
Splitting the campaign between the two teams, he received the Art Ross and Hart Memorial Trophy as the league's leading point-scorer and most valuable player, respectively, becoming the only player in NHL history to win either award in a season played for multiple teams.
Ahead of the NHL resumption in 2005–06, Thornton became a restricted free agent in summer 2005.
2016
Thornton went on to play another 14 seasons with the Sharks, including four seasons as team captain and a run to the 2016 Stanley Cup Finals.
Thornton's on-ice vision, strength on the puck, deft passing ability and power forward style of play led to him becoming one of the league's premier centres.
He is widely regarded as one of the best passers of all time, and he is one of only seven players in history with 1,100 NHL assists.
His nickname "Jumbo Joe" is a nod to his large stature and to Jumbo the elephant, who died in St. Thomas, Ontario, where Thornton was raised.