Chris Pronger Trade Tree: Hartford to St. Louis
May 21, 2025
by Conor Power
When we look at the Carolina Hurricanes, new fans see a thriving southern hockey market. However, older fans remember them as the transplants of the iconic Hartford Whalers. Starting from 1993, we can follow a single trade tree and figure out why the Whalers failed to succeed in Connecticut and why the Hurricanes won the Cup in 2006. It all starts with a young kid from Dryden, Ontario. It all starts with Chris Pronger.
Many don’t remember the Whalers drafting Pronger, but his career began in the Hartford Civic Center. Well, his NHL career began in Hartford, but his promising career in the junior leagues earned him the second overall pick in 1993. His career started in the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) with the Peterborough Petes, and his success in junior hockey made him such an attractive choice with the second-overall pick. If his time was less successful, who knows what would have happened?
https://thehockeywriters.com/chris-pron ... e_vignette
Chris Pronger Trade Tree: Hartford to St. Louis
Moderators: STLtoday Forum Moderators, Blues Talk Moderators
Re: Chris Pronger Trade Tree: Hartford to St. Louis
This was a thing right before the 2019 finals. The six degrees of Scott Stevens.
Blues sign Stevens 1990
Blues lose Stevens for Shanahan 1991
Shan for Pronger 1995
Pronger for Brewer 2004
Brewer for a bag of pucks and a 3rd 2011
2011 3rd round pick - Jordan Binnington
Blues sign Stevens 1990
Blues lose Stevens for Shanahan 1991
Shan for Pronger 1995
Pronger for Brewer 2004
Brewer for a bag of pucks and a 3rd 2011
2011 3rd round pick - Jordan Binnington
-
- Forum User
- Posts: 904
- Joined: 20 Aug 2024 15:51 pm
Re: Chris Pronger Trade Tree: Hartford to St. Louis
Cool readTAFKAP wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:55 am This was a thing right before the 2019 finals. The six degrees of Scott Stevens.
Blues sign Stevens 1990
Blues lose Stevens for Shanahan 1991
Shan for Pronger 1995
Pronger for Brewer 2004
Brewer for a bag of pucks and a 3rd 2011
2011 3rd round pick - Jordan Binnington