

In 1990, Hull won the Lady Byng Trophy for the most sportsmanlike player in the league, and in 1991, he won both the Hart Memorial Trophy as most valuable player, and the Lester Pearson Award as most outstanding player. He was a three-time first-team NHL All-Star, in 1989-90, 1990-91, and 1991-92, and played in eight NHL All-Star Games. In international competition, Hull played in two Olympics and the 19 World Cups. Hull played Junior A hockey with the Penticton Knights of the British Columbia Junior Hockey League, and then played two seasons of college hockey at the University of Minnesota at Duluth. With the Stars and Red Wings, he won Stanley Cups in 19, respectively. Louis Blues, finishing his career with a few years with the Dallas Stars and Detroit Red Wings, and a few brief games in his final season with the Phoenix Coyotes. In a 19-year NHL career, 1986-2006, Brett Hull, a right winger, broke in with the Calgary Flames but played 11 years with the St. Although Bobby Hull was Canadian, Brett’s mother was American and he has always played for the US in international competition. Brett Hull was to the hockey manor born, as the son of Bobby Hull, “The Golden Jet,” a Chicago Black Hawk who is considered one of the greatest NHL players ever, but he would shine on his own.
