Canadian ice hockey right winger known for speed and goal-scoring consistency, recording 708 NHL goals and 30+ goals in 17 consecutive seasons.
Michael Alfred Gartner was born in Ottawa, Ontario in 1959. Washington Capitals selected him fourth overall in the 1979 NHL Draft. His 19-season career produced 708 goals and 627 assists for 1,335 career points. He scored 30 or more goals in 17 consecutive seasons — the most consistent sustained goal-scoring record in NHL history. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2001 and named one of the 100 Greatest NHL Players in 2017. He was considered the fastest skater in the NHL for most of his career — winning the breakaway competition at All-Star Weekend multiple times. He never won the Stanley Cup — traded from Washington to Minnesota and then New York, he was famously traded away from the Rangers just before his 1994 championship run. He was one of the first prominent Christian athletes in the NHL — his faith was public throughout his career. His 708 career goals, without ever winning a championship, make him one of hockey's great individual cases of excellence divorced from team success.
He became the fifth player in NHL history to score 700 career goals.
How They Played
Gartner was renowned for his blazing speed, often considered one of the fastest skaters in NHL history. He combined his exceptional skating ability with a quick, accurate shot and excellent hockey sense to become a consistent goal-scoring threat throughout his career.
Lasting Impact
Gartner's remarkable consistency and longevity helped establish the template for the modern power forward, proving that speed and skill could be maintained at an elite level well into one's thirties.
Career Honours
- Hall of Fame (2001)
- NHL 100 Greatest Players
- 708 career goals
- 30+ goals in 17 straight seasons
| Team | Period | GP | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Washington Capitals | 1979–1989 | 758 | 397 |
| Minnesota North Stars | 1989–1990 | 80 | 35 |
| New York Rangers | 1990–1994 | 308 | 174 |
| Toronto Maple Leafs | 1994–1996 | 118 | 64 |
| Phoenix Coyotes | 1996–1998 | 159 | 83 |
| — | 122 | 43 |