Wayne Gretzky was too small, too slow, and not physical enough to play professional hockey — according to every scout who watched him as a teenager. He responded by accumulating more points than any player in NHL history, holding over sixty records, and proving that hockey could be played with the brain instead of the body. He did not skate to where the puck was; he skated to where it was going to be.
This episode traces Gretzky from his Brantford backyard rink through the Edmonton dynasty, the trade to Los Angeles that shocked Canada, and the records that will almost certainly never be broken.
- The Brantford backyard rink and the father who created hockey’s greatest prodigy
- The Edmonton Oilers dynasty and the four Stanley Cups that made Gretzky a Canadian national treasure
- The trade to Los Angeles that felt like a national betrayal and grew hockey in America
- The sixty-plus records, the jersey retirement across the entire league, and the legacy of intelligence over force
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