Wednesday Night Hockey on ESPN wants to know what you think is the best of the "10 Best" throughout the NHL season. Each week, WNH will assemble its 10 best selections of a particular theme and post them on ESPN.com for users to vote on their favorite.
Tune in to the March 13 broadcast of the St. Louis Blues at Dallas Stars (8 p.m. ET, ESPN) to watch highlights of the 10 best players who have never won a Stanley Cup.
During the game, ESPN's hockey experts will pick their favorite and compare their choices with how ESPN.com users voted.
Marcel Dionne
At 5-foot-9, Marcel Dionne may not have been big in stature, but few put up bigger numbers. He scored 50 or more goals in a season six times. In 1979-80, he won the Art Ross Trophy as the league's leading scorer (edging Wayne Gretzky on a tiebreaker, having scored more goals). He stands among the top 10 all time in goals (731), assists (1,040), and points (1,771). But over his 18-year career, spent mostly with struggling Red Wings and Kings squads, Dionne played in a mere 49 playoff games. He was elected to the Hockey Hall Of Fame in 1992.
Mike Gartner
After a 27-goal campaign for the WHA's Cincinnati Stingers in 1978-79, Mike Gartner entered the NHL in 1979-80 with the Washington Capitals. In each of his first 15 NHL seasons, Gartner scored at least 30 goals, an NHL record for consecutive 30-goal campaigns. He finished his career with 706 goals, good for fifth on the NHL's all-time list. But for all his individual success, Gartner never made it to a Stanley Cup final. His 1,432 game NHL career is the longest of any player not to play for a Cup champion. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2001.
Dominik Hasek
After playing in just 25 games over two seasons with the Chicago Blackhawks, Dominik Hasek was dealt to Buffalo in August of 1992. He won the Vezina Trophy as the league's top goalie six times and twice he won the Hart Trophy as league MVP, the first goalie in over three decades to be named the league's top player. But only once as a Sabre did Hasek vie for Lord Stanley's Cup, falling to Dallas in the 1999 finals. Now a Detroit Red Wing, Hasek looks to add the greatest of all hockey accolades -- Stanley Cup Champion -- to his resume.
Pat LaFontaine
In 1984, at age 19, Pat LaFontaine stepped from the Sarajevo Olympics into the lineup of the New York Islanders, becoming a key scoring cog in the team's quest for a fifth straight Stanley Cup. However, the Isles' five-game loss in the 1984 final to Edmonton would be his only shot at Cup glory. While a championship would elude him, LaFontaine would go on to post outstanding career numbers. Twice he scored 50 goals in a season. With Buffalo in 1992-93, he racked up 148 points, the highest single-season total for an American-born player in league history. When he retired due to concussions following the 1997-98 season, he had 468 goals to his credit, second-most all-time among U.S.-born players.
Adam Oates
Undrafted coming out of RPI, Adam Oates signed as a free agent with the Detroit Red Wings in June of 1985. Quickly, he display the great passing skills that have become his trademark. As a St. Louis Blue in 1990-91, he racked up 90 assists. Two years later in Boston, he dished out 97 helpers to lead the league. Earlier this season, he joined the 1000-assist club. However, Oates' one chance at a Stanley Cup to date was all too brief as his Washington Capitals were swept by Detroit in 1998.
Brad Park
Brad Park made his NHL debut with the New York Rangers in 1968 and would soon develop into one of the league's top defensemen. Six times he finished as runner-up for the Norris Trophy. He played in the All-Star Game nine times and scored 20 goals or more three times. He recorded 896 points over his 17-year career. But in three trips to the Cup finals (1972 with
the Rangers, 1977 and 1978 with Boston), a championship would elude the grasp of Park and his teammates. Park was elected to the Hockey Hall Of Fame in 1988.
Gilbert Perreault
The first overall choice in the 1970 draft, Gilbert Perreault made an immediate impact, scoring 38 goals for the expansion Buffalo Sabres en route to the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year. In his fifth season, 1974-75, he had 96 points in 68 games, helping to lead Buffalo to its first Stanley Cup finals appearance. But a six-game loss to the Flyers that year would be a close as Perreault would come to a championship. He went on to score 512 goals and 1,326 points in a 17-year career spent entirely with the Sabres, and was elected to the Hockey Hall Of Fame in 1990.
Luc Robitaille
When the Los Angeles Kings drafted Luc Robitaille in 1984, he was selected 171st overall, 102 picks after the Kings chose current Atlanta Braves pitcher Tom Glavine in that same draft. While Glavine went on to baseball stardom, Robitaille became a scoring sensation for the Kings, notching eight straight 40-goal seasons from 1986-94, including 63 in 1992-93, when the Kings made their only Cup finals appearance to date, losing to Montreal in five games. Now a Detroit Red Wing, Robitaille made history this season by becoming the NHL's all-time leader in goals by a left wing. With the Red Wings currently first overall by a wide margin, Robitaille could get another chance at Lord Stanley's mug this season.
Darryl Sittler
Darryl Sittler was one of the NHL's top scorers during the 1970s. From 1973-83, he recorded 10 straight 30-goal seasons. As a Maple Leaf in February of 1976, he set the single-game record for points with 10 (6 goals, 4 assists) in a game against Boston. He went on to score 484 goals for the Leafs, Flyers, and Red Wings over 15 NHL seasons. But while his high-scoring exploits earned Sittler election to the Hockey Hall Of Fame in 1989, none of the teams he played on qualified for a Stanley Cup final.
Peter Stastny
After arriving from Czechoslovakia in 1980, Peter Stastny became one of the NHL's most dangerous offensive players with the Quebec Nordiques. He won the Calder Trophy in 1981, notched over 100 points in each of his first five seasons and was part of one of the league's better known brother acts with siblings Anton and Marian. He would go on to make stops in New Jersey and St. Louis before his NHL days were done, scoring 450 goals and 1239 points in 15 seasons, but none of the teams he toiled for ever reached a Cup Final. Stastny was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1998.