The Los Angeles Kings have shared that former top NHL prospect Gene Carr has passed away at the age of 72. Carr was drafted fourth overall in the 1971 NHL Draft and went on to appear in 465 career NHL games. He appeared with five different franchises throughout his eight-year career, including five seasons with the Kings and three years with the New York Rangers.
Carr was drafted by the St. Louis Blues in 1971, the same draft that saw Guy Lafleur and Marcel Dionne go first and second overall; also boasting Hall of Fame talent with 20th-overall choice Larry Robinson. Carr appeared in the 15th-most NHL games of the draft class, making his debut with the Blues in the 1971-72 season. He was traded to the Rangers after only 14 games and five points with the Blues, though, as part of a seven-player swap between the two teams. Carr finished his rookie season with 60 games and 16 points in New York and would appear in one more modest season with the Rangers before being traded to the Kings for a first-round draft pick.
The move to L.A. kicked off the strongest years of Carr’s career. He scored 17 points in his first 21 games with the franchise in 1974 and would go on to become iconic for his long, blonde hair and charming personality, making him a recognizable face of the early Kings franchise. But despite spending the heat of his career in Los Angeles, Carr’s career year came in 1977-78, when he appeared in five games and scored two goals with L.A. before being moved to the Pittsburgh Penguins, where he recorded 17 goals and 54 points in 70 games, bringing his total on the season to 19 goals and 56 points, both career-highs. It would be Carr’s only season in Pittsburgh and he would go on to retire at the age of 27 after one season with the Atlanta Flames.
Nha Trang
Ooof, Gene Carr: something of a poster boy for “Oh, he looks awesome on the ice, he must be great!” over actual production. The guy skated like a missile, and that was about all he did.
Weasel 3
I had season tickets one season where it seemed Craig Johnson would get a breakaway every game, but never score.
1998-1999 maybe???
Mad Hatter
He did help the Rangers when he was traded to LA for a first-round pick who turned into Ron Duguay.
MacJablonski--NotVegasLegend
I was glad to see Bob Miller’s comment about Gene rebuilding a relationship with a daughter. Rest in peace, Gene. Deepest sympathies to Gene’s family, friends, and fans.
Gbear
Sad to hear about this. RIP.