The Captain believes the New York Rangers needs a ‘singular leader’

New York Rangers Stanely Cup champion and former captain Mark Messier thinks the team should have one leader as opposed to six alternate captains.

If there is anyone person who can speak of the importance of having a captain on a hockey team that person should be former New York Rangers‘ Mark Messier.

Messier was a guest on the New York Post’s “Up in the Blue Seats” podcast. The inevitable discussion concerning the Rangers and their vacant captaincy was discussed with Messier telling the hosts why he felt it was important to have one leader instead of no captain and six alternates.

“I don’t know the last time a team won a Cup without a captain, I was fortunate enough when I was a captain to have amazing leaders around me, both in Edmonton and in New York. Not only in assistant captains, but players that didn’t have a letter on their jersey who were amazing leaders in their own right, and did an incredible amount of work behind the scenes and got credit for it, by keeping the team galvanized, motivated, in line, singing the same message up and down throughout the team’s leadership from the training staff to the doctors to the management to the coaching staff, it has to be one unified message.

But the big link between all of that is the one leader of the team that everybody can look to in trying times, or under adversity or when things are going great.”

Head coach Gerard Gallant mentioned that he would name a captain early in training camp, but right before the start of the season, he decided to go with six alternate captains announcing Artemi Panarin, Chris Kreider, Mika Zibanejad, Jacob Trouba, Ryan Strome and Barclay Goodrow would all wear the “A” in different games for this season.

Messier has made it known that he wanted to be a part of the Rangers organization before the team named Gallant as their head coach.

ESPN hired Messier to be a game-day analyst along with Chris Chelios beginning this NHL season.

MSGN to celebrate New York Rangers 1994 Championship on Sunday

“And this one will last a lifetime” – The famous words echoed by New York Rangers broadcaster Same Rosen are etched in every Blueshirt fans memory.

 

This Sunday, June 14, Madison Square Garden Network will spend the day celebrating that unforgettable win when the Rangers defeated the Vancouver Canucks in seven games to bring the Stanley Cup back to New York City for the first time in 54 years in 1994.

MSGN has an incredible lineup of on-air programming that will relive that incredible journey.

  • In-depth player features that look back at the storied careers of Rangers legends Adam Graves, Brian Leetch, Mark Messier, and Mike Richter
  • An episode of “Connections,” featuring a candid, sit-down conversation between Graves, Leetch, and Richter on everything from the mutual respect and admiration for each other, the passion of the fans and the surreal feeling after they won the Cup
  • Re-airings of the championship-clinching Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals at 5:00 P.M. and 8:30 P.M. – Messier, Graves, and Leetch, who was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy for playoff MVP, all scored to lead the Blueshirts to a 3-2 victory over the Canucks and the Stanley Cup title
  • A look back at play-by-play announcer Sam Rosen’s career covering the Rangers and his iconic on-air call after they won Game 7 – “This one will last a lifetime!”
  • A replay of the team’s ticker-tape parade celebration down the Canyon of Heroes in New York City.

Grab an ice-cold beer, get the family together as watch Adam Graves, Mark Messier, Brian Leetch, and Mike Richter beat the curse of 1940!