Frank J. Selke Trophy

The Frank J. Selke Trophy, or simply the Selke Trophy, is awarded annually to the National Hockey League forward who demonstrates the most skill in the defensive component of the game. The winner is selected by a poll of the Professional Hockey Writers' Association following the regular season.[1] Named after Frank J. Selke, former general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens, the trophy has been awarded 45 times to 27 different players since the 1977–78 NHL season.

Frank J. Selke Trophy
SportIce hockey
Awarded forNational Hockey League forward who demonstrates the most skill in the defensive component of the game
History
First award1977–78 NHL season
Most winsPatrice Bergeron (6)
Most recentPatrice Bergeron
Boston Bruins

History

The trophy was first awarded at the end of the 1977–78 NHL season. It was named after Frank J. Selke, former general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens.[1] The Selke Trophy was the fifth and last of the major NHL awards to be introduced that have been named after General Managers and owners of the Original Six teams, the other awards being the Art Ross Trophy, James Norris Memorial Trophy, Conn Smythe Trophy, and Jack Adams Award.

The first recipient was Bob Gainey of the Canadiens, who won the trophy the first four years it was given. Patrice Bergeron of the Boston Bruins has won it more times than any other player, with six wins.[2] Guy Carbonneau, Jere Lehtinen and Pavel Datsyuk are tied for the third-most wins, with three apiece.

The Montreal Canadiens, Detroit Red Wings, and Boston Bruins have won the trophy the most times, with 7 awards apiece. The team with the greatest number of unique winners are the Red Wings with 4—Sergei Fedorov (twice), Steve Yzerman, Kris Draper, and Datsyuk (three times)—all coming since 1994.[1]

There has been only one instance in which a Selke Trophy winner was also awarded the Hart Memorial Trophy for Most Valuable Player when Sergei Fedorov captured both trophies during the 1993–94 NHL season.[3] There has not been an instance in which the Art Ross Trophy winner has been awarded the Selke Trophy, though Fedorov finished second in regular season scoring in 1994,[3] while Hart Trophy winner and Art Ross Trophy runner-up Joe Sakic finished second in Selke voting in 2001.[4] The most points scored in a Selke-winning season is 127 by Doug Gilmour in the 1992–93 NHL season.[5]

Winners

Jere Lehtinen, three-time winner
Pavel Datsyuk, three-time winner
Patrice Bergeron, record six-time winner
Positions key
CCentreRWRight wingLWLeft wing
  Player is still active
  Player elected to Hockey Hall of Fame
  Player not yet eligible for the Hockey Hall of Fame
SeasonWinnerTeamPositionWin #
1977–78Bob GaineyMontreal CanadiensLW1
1978–79Bob GaineyMontreal CanadiensLW2
1979–80Bob GaineyMontreal CanadiensLW3
1980–81Bob GaineyMontreal CanadiensLW4
1981–82Steve KasperBoston BruinsC1
1982–83Bobby ClarkePhiladelphia FlyersC1
1983–84Doug JarvisWashington CapitalsC1
1984–85Craig RamsayBuffalo SabresLW1
1985–86Troy MurrayChicago BlackhawksC1
1986–87Dave PoulinPhiladelphia FlyersC1
1987–88Guy CarbonneauMontreal CanadiensC1
1988–89Guy CarbonneauMontreal CanadiensC2
1989–90Rick MeagherSt. Louis BluesC1
1990–91Dirk GrahamChicago BlackhawksRW1
1991–92Guy CarbonneauMontreal CanadiensC3
1992–93Doug GilmourToronto Maple LeafsC1
1993–94Sergei FedorovDetroit Red WingsC1
1994–95Ron FrancisPittsburgh PenguinsC1
1995–96Sergei FedorovDetroit Red WingsC2
1996–97Michael PecaBuffalo SabresC1
1997–98Jere LehtinenDallas StarsRW1
1998–99Jere LehtinenDallas StarsRW2
1999–2000Steve YzermanDetroit Red WingsC1
2000–01John MaddenNew Jersey DevilsC1
2001–02Michael PecaNew York IslandersC2
2002–03Jere LehtinenDallas StarsRW3
2003–04Kris DraperDetroit Red WingsC1
2004–05Season cancelled due to the 2004–05 NHL lockout
2005–06Rod Brind'AmourCarolina HurricanesC1
2006–07Rod Brind'AmourCarolina HurricanesC2
2007–08Pavel DatsyukDetroit Red WingsC1
2008–09Pavel DatsyukDetroit Red WingsC2
2009–10Pavel DatsyukDetroit Red WingsC3
2010–11Ryan KeslerVancouver CanucksC1
2011–12Patrice BergeronBoston BruinsC1
2012–13Jonathan ToewsChicago BlackhawksC1
2013–14Patrice BergeronBoston BruinsC2
2014–15Patrice BergeronBoston BruinsC3
2015–16Anze KopitarLos Angeles KingsC1
2016–17Patrice BergeronBoston BruinsC4
2017–18Anze KopitarLos Angeles KingsC2
2018–19Ryan O'ReillySt. Louis BluesC1
2019–20Sean CouturierPhiladelphia FlyersC1
2020–21Aleksander BarkovFlorida PanthersC1
2021–22Patrice BergeronBoston BruinsC5
2022–23Patrice BergeronBoston BruinsC6

See also

References

General
Specific