Ted Lindsay Award

The Ted Lindsay Award is presented annually to the “Most Outstanding Player” in the NHL as voted by fellow members of the NHLPA. It remains the only award voted on by the players themselves, carrying on the tradition established by the Lester B. Pearson Award dating back to the 1970-71 season. The Ted Lindsay Award (TLA) recipient is chosen by his peers as the “most outstanding player” for the regular season, representing the highest level of respect and the ultimate peer review. The Award honours Ted Lindsay, an All-Star forward known for his skill, tenacity, leadership, and for his role in establishing the original Players' Association.

AWARD HISTORY

The Ted Lindsay Award is named in honour of former Detroit Red Wings great Ted Lindsay, a member of the Hall of Fame and four-time Stanley Cup Champion. Lindsay’s competitive nature, focus on players’ rights, and pioneering work as president of the original Players’ Association laid the groundwork for the current NHLPA.

THE PEARSON YEARS

The “most outstanding player” award was first introduced as the Lester B. Pearson Award following the 1970-71 National Hockey League (NHL) season. The award was named after the 14th Prime Minister of Canada and Nobel Peace Prize winner.

The Lester B. Pearson Award was presented to 22 different players over 38 seasons. Some of the most decorated names in hockey history have been voted “most outstanding player,” including Phil Esposito, Bobby Orr, Guy Lafleur and Alex Ovechkin.

Wayne Gretzky was the most decorated Award recipient during the Pearson era, taking home the honour on five occasions, including four consecutive years. Mario Lemieux captured the Award four times but never in back-to-back seasons. In 1993-94, Sergei Fedorov became the first non-Canadian born player to receive the Award, opening the door for other European players to receive the coveted prize, representing the international flavor of modern hockey.

RECONNECTING WITH HISTORY

2008-09 marked the final presentation of the Lester B. Pearson Award, as the Players would choose to honour one of the legends of the game and the Association by re-naming the award after Ted Lindsay. While the name has changed, the history of the Award and its significance for NHLPA members remains as strong as ever.

The inaugural recipient of the Ted Lindsay Award was Washington Capitals forward Alexander Ovechkin in 2009-10. After receiving the final two Awards of the Lester B. Pearson Award era, the Russian superstar became the first player since Wayne Gretzky in the 1980s to be named “most outstanding player” in three consecutive seasons.

2022-23 Ted Lindsay Award Recipient

Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers

McDavid becomes only the third four-time recipient in the award’s history, after also receiving the TLA in 2016-17, 2017-18 and 2020-21  joining Wayne Gretzky (five-time recipient) and Mario Lemieux (four-time recipient). He also previously finished as a finalist twice (2018-19 and 2021-22).

McDavid won his fifth Art Ross Trophy by leading the league with 153 points  30 points more than his career high set last season. The Oilers captain from Newmarket, Ontario, became the first skater in 27 years (Lemieux, 1995-96) to score 150 points, and only the sixth different skater (also Gretzky, Lemieux, Phil Esposito, Bernie Nicholls and Steve Yzerman) to achieve the feat. McDavid scored 64 goals to win his first Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy and paced all skaters with 89 assists  setting new career highs. The 26-year-old forward paced all scorers in power-play points (71), while leading the Oilers to the most efficient power-play in league history (32.4%). McDavid also finished first in time on ice per game played among forwards (22:23), tied for first in primary assists (60), and he placed third in shots (352), even-strength goals (39) and even-strength points (75).