1981
ENTRY DRAFT
Draft Quick Facts
Traded Picks

Round 1
Round 2
Round 3
Round 4
Round 5
Round 6
Round 7
Round 8
Round 9
Round 10
Round 11

Picks by Team
BOS | BUF | CGY  
CHI | COL | DET  
EDM | HAR | LOS  
MIN | MON | NYI  
NYR | PHI | PIT
QUE | STL | TOR
VAN | WAS | WIN


 
OTHER YEARS
1963 | 1974 | 1986 | 1997
1964 | 1975 | 1987 | 1998
1965 | 1976 | 1988 | 1999
1966 | 1977 | 1989 | 2000
1967 | 1978 | 1990 | 2001
1968 | 1979 | 1991 | 2002
1969 | 1980 | 1992 | 2003
1970 | 1982 | 1993 | 2004
1971 | 1983 | 1994 | 2005
1972 | 1984 | 1995 |
1973 | 1985 | 1996 |

 

1981 DRAFT QUICK FACTS
DATE: JUNE 10, 1981

LOCATION: MONTREAL FORUM
DRAFT HISTORY
The third NHL Entry Draft was the first public draft to include a clear franchise player for the No. 1 overall pick and a first-round controversy, albeit a mild one. On the positive side, there was Dale Hawerchuk, a clear, no-brainer choice for Winnipeg with the No. 1 pick. On the negative side, there was a very angry Bob Carpenter Sr., whose son Bobby was drafted by Washington rather than Hartford, the "local" team that was expected to land the best player in New England high school hockey history, if not the best U.S. high school player ever.

Hartford had the No. 4 overall pick, and it was generally thought that the Whalers would be taking Carpenter. But just before the draft, Washington traded up to No. 3, enabling the Capitals to get Carpenter ahead of the Whalers. Although Carpenter himself did not attend the draft due to strict NCAA regulations that would have prevented him from playing college hockey had he done so, his father, a policeman, was there on his behalf. When Washington announced its pick, the older Carpenter stormed out of the draft area in protest. Although he made quite a scene, Bob Carpenter Sr. later collected himself and came back to the draft. In the end, he had realized that Washington wasn't so far away, and it was always better to go No. 3 than No. 4. Ironically, the deal worked out even better for Hartford, which used its fourth overall pick on Ron Francis, the best player in franchise history.

Carpenter's selection highlighted a big year for high school players. In 1980, as the draft age first came down to 18, only eight high school kids were drafted. By 1981 that number reached a remarkable 18. The 1981 draft was also a breakthrough year for Canadian Tier II players, as a record 10 were selected. In addition to Tier II, U.S. junior leagues and Ontario Junior B made notable contributions to the talent pool. All of this influx came at the expense of college hockey, which saw a 50 percent drop in the number of players drafted as compared to 1980.

Goaltenders and Europeans were also big winners in 1981. A total of 25 netminders were taken, up dramatically from 17 the previous year and only one short of the record set in 1975 and 1976. Leading the way was Grant Fuhr. The future Hall of Famer, and first black player drafted in the first round, was taken eighth overall by Edmonton. On the European front, NHL scouts found a total of 32 overseas players worthy of the draft, breaking the previous record of 17 set in 1978.

A noteworthy European pick was Buffalo's decision to gamble at No. 17 and take Czechoslovakia's Jiri Dudacek. Unfortunately for Scotty Bowman and the Sabres, the formerly Communist Czech hockey federation never released Dudacek to play in North America. Still, Dudacek made history as the first Czech player picked in a first round.

There was one very comic moment. Barry Tabobondung, drafted by Philadelphia in the third round, was so excited to hear his name called that he tried to hurdle a Montreal Forum chair in order to get out onto the draft floor. Unfortunately, his foot slipped through the chair and got caught. Arena workers had to take the chair apart to free him in what was arguably the most embarrassing event in draft history. On a tragic note, Tabobondung, who never played in the NHL, died 19 years later at age 39 while saving his son from being run over by a road grader.

THE BASICS
Eligible For Draft: All amateur players born between January 1, 1961, and September 15, 1963.
Draft Order: Teams drafted in reverse order of their 1980-81 finish.
Irregularities: Due to earlier trades, Hartford's second-round pick, No. 25 overall, was to be used by either Chicago or Philadelphia with Chicago having right of first refusal. If Chicago used pick, Philadelphia would receive Hartford's 1982 second-round pick. Chicago exercised its option to use the pick. Winnipeg was given a bonus selection following Round 10 as compensation from the NHL for accepting move from the Smythe Division to the Norris Division for the 1981-82 season.
Rotation: Winnipeg, Detroit, Colorado, Hartford, Washington, Toronto, Pittsburgh, Edmonton, N.Y. Rangers, Vancouver, Quebec, Chicago, Minnesota, Boston, Calgary, Philadelphia, Buffalo, Los Angeles, Montreal, St. Louis, N.Y. Islanders
Total Rounds: Eleven (Ten set rounds plus Winnipeg's bonus pick)
Cost to Draft: The NHL paid a lump sum to the CMJHL to support major junior hockey as a whole.
Draft Rights: Team could offer player contract at any time after draft, however, underage players would be required to begin the 1981-82 season with their major-junior teams if they did not make their NHL teams out of camp, and would only be available for emergency recall.
DRAFT RECAP
No. 1 pick: Dale Hawerchuk (by Winnipeg)
Reached NHL: 114 players (54.0 percent)
Won Stanley Cup: 17 players (8.1 percent)
Most NHL Games: Ron Francis (1,731 games)
Most Playoff Games: Chris Chelios (223 games)
Highest Pick to Miss: No. 17 (Jiri Dudacek)
Lowest Pick to Reach: No. 209 (Richard Zemlak)
Players Drafted: 211 (119 forwards, 67 defense, 25 goalies)

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SNAPSHOT '81
Total Selected: 211
Forwards: 119
Defense: 67
Goaltenders: 25
Major Junior: 122
Tier II/Jr. B: 10/4
College Players: 21
High School: 18
Canadian: 139
Euro-Canadian: 3
USA Citizens: 37
U.S.-Born: 36
European: 32
Reached NHL: 114
Stanley Cup: 17
Hall of Fame: 2
All-Star Game: 14
Year-end All-Star: 7
Olympians: 30
Picks Traded: 38
 
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