Bernie Nicholls

Last updated
Bernie Nicholls
Bernie Nicholls 2016.jpg
Nicholls in 2016
Born (1961-06-24) June 24, 1961 (age 64)
Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 185 lb (84 kg; 13 st 3 lb)
Position Centre
Shot Right
Played for Los Angeles Kings
New York Rangers
Edmonton Oilers
New Jersey Devils
Chicago Blackhawks
San Jose Sharks
National teamFlag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
NHL draft 73rd overall, 1980
Los Angeles Kings
Playing career 19811999

Bernard Irvine Nicholls (born June 24, 1961) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey centre. After being drafted in the fourth round of the 1980 NHL entry draft, he played over 1000 games in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the Los Angeles Kings, New York Rangers, Edmonton Oilers, New Jersey Devils, Chicago Blackhawks and San Jose Sharks. Nicholls is one of only eight players in NHL history to score 70 goals in one season, and one of six to score 150 points. However, he is one of 18 eligible players with 1,000 points not to be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Contents

Early life

Nicholls was born on June 24, 1961, in West Guilford, a municipality within Haliburton, Ontario. [1] He was one of five children born to parents George and Marjorie Nicholls. [2] While growing up in the small town, Nicholls was taught to hunt and skate by his father. [3] Since he was born pigeon toed, Nicholls wore corrective braces when he was a toddler. [4] He began playing ice hockey at four years old alongside older boys from the area, including future NHL-er Ron Stackhouse. [5] Beyond hockey, Nicholls also played quarterback, golf, and shortstop in fastball. [4]

Playing career

Amateur

Nicholls played with the Junior D Haliburton Huskies from 1975 to 1977, before joining the Junior B Navy Vets in Woodstock, Ontario. During his sole season with the Vets, Nicholls set a franchise rookie record with 41 goals and 79 points through 40 games. [4] In 1978, Nicholls was drafted by the Kingston Canadians of the Ontario Major Junior Hockey League (OMJHL). [6] As a rookie with the Canadians, Nicholls led all rookies in scoring with 36 goals and 79 points. [7] Following his rookie season, Nicholls was drafted in the fourth round of the 1980 NHL entry draft by the Los Angeles Kings. [8] Although numerous scouts were concerned about his skating, Wren Blair advised the Kings to draft him. [3]

Nicholls returned to the Canadians for the 1980–81 season and set numerous new single-season franchise scoring records. [9] He started the season with 14 points over five games while playing alongside Justin Hanley and Scotty Howson. [10] He was then named the league's Player of the Week on November 17 after scoring four goals and 10 assists through four games. [11] Nicholls maintained his scoring streak throughout February and moved into fourth place in the league's scoring race. [12] He scored his 50th goal of the season and 200th career point later that month against the London Knights. [13] On February 26, Nicholls broke Tony McKegney's franchise record for most points in a single season. [14] He finished the regular season with a franchise-record 63 goals, 89 assists, and 152 total points. [9] During the regular-season, Nicholls signed a two-year contract with the Los Angeles Kings. [15]

Los Angeles Kings

Nicholls arrived at the Kings' 1981 training camp overweight and out of shape. As such, he was assigned to their American Hockey League (AHL), the New Haven Nighthawks, to start the 1981–82 season. [16] After a slow start to the season, [3] Nicholls led the league in scoring with 41 goals through 55 games. [17] The Kings, however, were struggling to win games and eventually replaced their head coach on January 11. As their new head coach, Don Perry made significant changes to their lineup and worked to allow younger players more chances. [18] Nicholls was called up to the NHL on February 18, 1982, as the Kings were experiencing a five-game losing streak. [19] He scored his first two career NHL goals in his ninth NHL game on March 9, against the Colorado Rockies. [20] He continued to score at a rapid pace throughout the month and recorded three hat-tricks through three consecutive home games. [21] He scored his first career NHL hat-trick on March 17 against the Calgary Flames [22] and his second hat-trick on March 21 against the Pittsburgh Penguins. [23] Nicholls' final hat-trick of the month occurred on March 28 against the Colorado Rockies. [24] He finished the regular-season with 14 goals and 18 assists through 22 games and helped the Kings qualify for the 1982 Stanley Cup playoffs. [19]

As he had only played in 22 games the previous year, Nicholls still maintained his rookie status upon returning for the 1982–83 season. [18] After opening the season without a point, Nicholls experienced a seven-game point streak between October 9 and October 23. [25] By November 8, Nicholls led all rookies in scoring with 21 points and was an early favourite to win the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL's Rookie of the Year. [18] [26] However, he suffered a knee injury in mid-November and was expected to miss four weeks to recover. At the time, he led the team in scoring and all rookies in points. [27] Nicholls missed only eight games due to the injury and returned a week early on December 9. However, head coach Don Perry was critical of Nicholls in his first game back and theorised that he came back before he was ready. [28] Both Nicholls and the Kings struggled the remainder of the season, and USA Today sportswriter Rod Beaton attributed the team’s failure to qualify for the 1983 Stanley Cup playoffs to Nicholls’s performance. After returning from his knee injury, Nicholls recorded only 12 goals and 14 assists for 26 points in 52 games. [29]

The Los Angeles Kings started the 1983–84 season with a six-game losing streak. [30] Nicholls helped break the streak while also tying a franchise record by scoring four goals and six points on October 21 against the Edmonton Oilers. [31] Head coach Don Perry praised Nicholls' attitude, saying "Bernie (Nicholls) has done a complete turnaround, both on and off the ice this year. He's become a team leader now." [32] Nicholls led the team in scoring through November while consistently playing alongside Jimmy Fox and Brian MacLellan. [33] By the end of December, he had surpassed his previous season's points total. [34] Nicholls fractured his jaw during a game against the Calgary Flames at the end of January, but played two more games before getting his jaw wired shut. [35] Despite this, he played the entirety of February with his jaw wired shut before cutting the wires in an airport before the Kings' March 11 game against the Chicago Black Hawks. He scored two goals that night to help the Kings end their franchise record losing streak. [36] The following game, Nicholls became the fourth player in franchise history to score 40 goals in a single season. [37] He became the first player besides Marcel Dionne to lead the team in scoring in over a decade. [38]

Nicholls broke numerous league and franchise records throughout the 1984–85 season. Although he went pointless through the team's first three games, [39] he finished the regular season with 100 points. [40] On November 13, 1984, Nicholls became the first player in NHL history to score a goal in all four periods of a game (including overtime). [41] It also marked his fifth NHL hat-trick and the second time in his career that he scored four goals. [42] The following month, Nicholls set a new franchise record by maintaining a 25-game scoring streak. It was also the fourth-longest scoring streak in NHL history at the time. [39] [43]

Injuries that limited Nicholls to just 65 games in 1987–88, and the rise of young centre Jimmy Carson, saw Nicholls slip to third in team scoring. On August 9, 1988, the Kings completed a blockbuster trade that brought Wayne Gretzky to Los Angeles. Slotting into the second-line centre job behind Gretzky set the stage for Nicholls' most productive season. He scored a team-record 70 goals and added 80 assists for a total of 150 points. The totals put Nicholls in rare company, and with 70 goals, he joined a group of just eight players to hit that plateau and his 150 points put him a group of just five players in league history to achieve that level of scoring. [44] Despite this, he did not receive any votes for the Hart Memorial Trophy (he finished 2nd in goals, 5th in assists, and 4th in points).

The following season, Nicholls continued producing points for Los Angeles, highlighted by an eight-point effort on December 1, 1988, against the Toronto Maple Leafs, which put Nicholls into another small group, becoming one of only 13 players in NHL history to record an eight-point game. [45] By the All-Star break, Nicholls had 75 points in 47 games and was selected, along with teammates Gretzky, Luc Robitaille and Steve Duchesne to play in the All-Star Game. The night before the All-Star Game, the Kings traded Nicholls to the New York Rangers in exchange for wingers Tomas Sandström and Tony Granato. [46] Despite now playing for an Eastern Conference team, Nicholls played in the All-Star Game the next day representing the Western Conference (and playing against his new teammate Brian Leetch.) Despite his solid offensive production, the Kings were having a mediocre season with a 21-21-5 record at the time of the deal. Kings owner Bruce McNall felt "something was missing" and that the Kings were "soft" and needed some grit. [44] Nicholls left the Kings as the franchise's fifth all-time leading scorer. [47]

New York Rangers

Nicholls at an Alumni Game in 2008. Bernie Nicholls.jpg
Nicholls at an Alumni Game in 2008.

Nicholls joined the New York Rangers following the All-Star Game and while he did not keep up his torrid scoring pace, he did produce at over a point-a-game pace for New York. The following season he again was over a point-a-game but his goal production dipped to just 25, and the Rangers were eliminated in the first round of the Playoffs. Just one game into the 1991–92 season Nicholls was again involved in a blockbuster transaction when Rangers general manager Neil Smith packaged him up with prospects Steven Rice and Louie DeBrusk and shipped him to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for Mark Messier. Nicholls, however, did not report to the Oilers for two full months because his wife was pregnant with twins and on bed rest. A week after the babies were born, he finally left New York to join the Oilers after surrendering over a quarter of a million dollars in salary for not reporting. [48]

Edmonton Oilers

When Nicholls did finally join the Oilers, he posted 49 points in 49 games with the Oilers. He saved his best production for the post season where he helped lead the Oilers to the Conference Final. He was particularly effective in the first round where he posted five goals and 13 points in a six-game defeat of his former team, the Los Angeles Kings. However, the following year, his production slowed down and the Oilers finally accommodated his wish to move back East when they dealt him to the New Jersey Devils for young forwards Kevin Todd and Zdeno Ciger.

Later career

Nicholls adapted his game to become more of a defensive forward in the tight-checking system of then-Devils coach Jacques Lemaire. [49] When his contract expired, Nicholls signed a two-year deal with the Chicago Blackhawks.

Nicholls began the 1998–99 season on the San Jose Sharks' fourth line. In November, Sharks General Manager Dean Lombardi suggested that Nicholls retire and join the Sharks' front office. At the time of his retirement, he ranked 26th in NHL history in points and 32nd in goals. [50]

Post-retirement

Following the Kings' firing of Terry Murray, Nicholls asked their new head coach Darryl Sutter to join the team as a coaching consultant. He was unpaid for the first two months, with the Kings only covering his hotel room and meals, before being added to their payroll. As a consultant, he helped the Kings win the 2012 Stanley Cup Finals. [51]

Nicholls' autobiography Bernie Nicholls: From Flood Lights to Bright Lights was released in November 2022.

International play

Medal record
Representing Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
Men's ice hockey
Silver medal icon (S initial).svg 1985 Czechoslovakia

Nicholls won a silver medal in the 1985 World Ice Hockey Championships while playing for Canada. [52]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season TeamLeagueGP G A Pts PIM GPGAPtsPIM
1978–79 North York Rangers OPJHL 50406210260
1978–79 Kingston Canadians OMJHL 20110
1979–80 Kingston CanadiansOMJHL6836437985310110
1980–81 Kingston CanadiansOHL656389152109148101817
1981–82 New Haven Nighthawks AHL 5541307131
1981–82 Los Angeles Kings NHL 22141832271040423
1982–83 Los Angeles KingsNHL71282250124
1983–84 Los Angeles KingsNHL7841549583
1984–85 Los Angeles KingsNHL8046541007631129
1985–86 Los Angeles KingsNHL8036619778
1986–87 Los Angeles KingsNHL8033488110152576
1987–88 Los Angeles KingsNHL65324678114526811
1988–89 Los Angeles KingsNHL7970801509611791612
1989–90 Los Angeles KingsNHL4727487566
1989–90 New York Rangers NHL321225372010751216
1990–91 New York RangersNHL712548739654378
1991–92 New York RangersNHL10000
1991–92 Edmonton Oilers NHL4920294960168111925
1992–93 Edmonton OilersNHL468324040
1992–93 New Jersey Devils NHL23515204050006
1993–94 New Jersey DevilsNHL611927468616491328
1994–95 Chicago Blackhawks NHL482229513216111128
1995–96 Chicago BlackhawksNHL5919416060102794
1996–97 San Jose Sharks NHL6512334563
1997–98 San Jose SharksNHL60622282660558
1998–99 San Jose SharksNHL100224
NHL totals1,1274757341,2091,2921184272114164

International

YearTeamEvent GPGAPtsPIM
1985 Canada WC 1002212

See also

References

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  2. Turchansky, Ray (January 7, 1989). "Bernie sees a brand-new attitude among the Kings". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved October 18, 2025 via newspapers.com.
  3. 1 2 3 McManis, Sam (November 8, 1982). "Nicholls". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 18, 2025.
  4. 1 2 3 Smith, Cory (December 27, 2023). "'I knew he would go places': Former NHL star Bernie Nicholls set multiple records in his only season with the Woodstock Navy Vets". Woodstock Sentinel-Review. Archived from the original on December 27, 2023. Retrieved October 18, 2025.
  5. Lum, Darren (November 18, 2021). "West Guilford son takes place among Hall of Famers". Haliburton Echo. Archived from the original on October 19, 2025. Retrieved October 18, 2025.
  6. Wright, Art (June 5, 1978). "First-round pick another Crombeen". The Kingston Whig-Standard. Retrieved October 18, 2025 via newspapers.com.
  7. "Postmortem". The Kingston Whig-Standard. March 29, 1980. Retrieved October 21, 2025 via newspapers.com.
  8. "Stothers couldn't believe he was a first-round pick". The Kingston Whig-Standard. June 12, 1980. Retrieved October 21, 2025 via newspapers.com.
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  10. Scilley, Claude (October 24, 1980). "Nicholls does his sharpshooting in rink...not in wilds". The Kingston Whig-Standard. Retrieved October 21, 2025 via newspapers.com.
  11. "Nicholls named player-of-week". The Windsor Star. November 18, 1980. Retrieved October 21, 2025 via newspapers.com.
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  13. Gordanier, Tim (February 14, 1981). "Canadiens ignore the calendar and Emms hex". The Kingston Whig-Standard. Retrieved October 21, 2025 via newspapers.com.
  14. "Canadians 3 Petes 2". The Windsor Star. February 27, 1981. Retrieved October 21, 2025 via newspapers.com.
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  27. "No joy for L.A. Kings despite their 4-1 in". Santa Barbara News-Press. November 19, 1982. Retrieved October 22, 2025 via newspapers.com.
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  39. 1 2 Matheson, Jim (December 13, 1984). "Nicholls aims at 30-game mark". Edmonton Journal via newspapers.com.
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  44. 1 2 "Remembering the Bernie Nicholls Trade". Big Mouth Larry. 28 January 2012.
  45. "Bernie Nicholls Breaks Three Team Scoring Records, Becomes League's Leading Scorer". The Alliance Times-Herald. December 2, 1988. Retrieved October 22, 2025 via newspapers.com.
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