Sidney Crosby 2005 Draft

THIS DATE IN HISTORY: July 30
2005: Sidney Crosby officially becomes a member of the Pittsburgh Penguins when he's taken with the No. 1 pick at the 2005 NHL Draft in Ottawa.

The Penguins select Crosby, a center from Rimouski of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League billed as a once-in-a-generation player, eight days after winning a special draft lottery. With the 2004-05 season canceled, the NHL puts all 30 teams into a weighted lottery; the Penguins, last in the standings in 2003-04, are one of four teams to have three balls in the lottery and get the No. 1 pick.
Four years later, at 21, Crosby becomes the youngest captain in NHL history to win the Stanley Cup. He wins the
Conn Smythe Trophy
as playoff MVP in 2016 and again in 2017 after helping the Penguins become the first team since the Detroit Red Wings in 1997 and 1998 to win back-to-back championships.
The 2005 draft also produces such future stars as goalie Carey Price (No. 5, Montreal Canadiens) and center Anze Kopitar (No. 11, Los Angeles Kings). The last pick in the draft, No. 230, is used by the Nashville Predators to take Patric Hornqvist, a forward from Sweden who scores 30 goals as a rookie in 2009-10 and later helps Crosby and the Penguins win the Cup in 2016 and 2017.
MORE MOMENTS
1973:
Markus Naslund
, a three-time NHL First Team All-Star, is born in Ornskoldsvik, Sweden. The Penguins take Naslund No. 16 in the 1991 NHL Draft, but his career doesn't take off until after he's traded to the Vancouver Canucks on March 20, 1996. He scores 41 goals for the first of three consecutive 40-goal seasons in 2000-01 and is named an NHL First-Team All-Star in 2001-02, 2002-03 and 2003-04. Naslund retires in 2009 after one season with the New York Rangers. Of his 395 goals in 1,117 NHL games, 346 come with the Canucks, who retire his No. 19 on Dec. 11, 2010.

072317Naslund1

1998:
Kevin Lowe
, a six-time Stanley Cup winner, retires after 19 seasons as a player and is named an assistant on the coaching staff of the Edmonton Oilers. Lowe, the first player drafted by the Oilers after they join the NHL from the World Hockey Association in 1979, plays on all five of Edmonton's championship teams from 1984-90. The Rangers acquire him in 1992, and he's a regular on New York's Cup-winning team in 1994. Lowe becomes Edmonton's coach in 1999, is promoted to general manager in 2000 and to president of hockey operations in 2008. In 2015, he is named vice chair and alternate governor of Oilers Entertainment Group.
2018:
Jarome Iginla
ends his NHL career by
announcing his retirement
in Calgary, the city where he becomes the face of a franchise. Iginla spends
16 of his 20 seasons
with the Calgary Flames after being acquired from the Dallas Stars in a trade on Dec. 19, 1995, and goes on to become the Calgary/Atlanta Flames all-time leader in goals (525) and points (1,095). He spends a decade as captain. Iginla helps the Flames reach Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final in 2004, though they
lose 2-1 to the Tampa Bay Lightning
. He finishes his career with 1,300 points (625 goals, 675 assists) in in 1,554 NHL games.