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Garry Unger

Canadian ice hockey player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Garry Douglas Unger (born December 7, 1947) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey centre who played 16 seasons in the National Hockey League from 1967 until 1983.

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Early life

Unger was born on December 7, 1947, Calgary, Alberta, Canada,[1] to parents Olive and Jack.[2] His younger sister, Carol Ann, contracted polio as a baby and became permanently disabled.[3][4]

Playing career

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Unger set an NHL record by playing 914 consecutive games in the regular season between February 24, 1968, and December 21, 1979, doing so with four teams: the Toronto Maple Leafs, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues and Atlanta Flames.[5] Unger passed Andy Hebenton, who had the record of 630 consecutive games played that had stood since the 1963-64 NHL season. Unger's streak came to an end after Flames' coach Al MacNeil benched him on December 21, 1979.[2][a]

He was part of a six-player blockbuster transaction in which he was traded along with Frank Mahovlich and Pete Stemkowski to the Detroit Red Wings in exchange for Norm Ullman, Paul Henderson and Floyd Smith on March 4, 1968.[7]

Unger finished his career with 1105 career NHL games, scoring 413 goals and 391 assists for 804 points, and he also registered 1075 career penalty minutes.[5] Unger was the MVP of the 1974 NHL All-Star Game, played in Chicago. He had an assist and scored a shorthanded goal in the West Division's 6–4 victory over the East Division.

After retiring from the NHL he played for three seasons in the British professional league. During one season for the Peterborough Pirates, playing in only 30 games, he racked up 95 goals and well over 200 points.

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Personal life

Unger became a devout Christian following the death of teammate Bob Gassoff. He also credited his Flames teammates for helping him "on the right path spiritually."[8] Unger and his wife have three children together.[2]

Career statistics

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International

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See also

Notes

  1. His record was surpassed by Phil Kessel in 2022.[6]

References

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