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Top 10 Who Got Away: Jason Arnott (3)
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Robin Brownlee
Jun 30, 2018, 14:00 EDTUpdated: Jun 29, 2018, 23:53 EDT
I always thought that had Jason Arnott come to the Edmonton Oilers a decade earlier than he did — as a member of the Boys on the Bus who won five Stanley Cups instead of the outfit that was on the decline in the mid-1990s — he’d have survived the off-ice issues that contributed to his premature departure. He might have thrived in the hockey fishbowl that is Edmonton.
Fact is, Arnott, a big, good-looking centre who’d have fit right in on those Oilers’ championship teams that beat opponents for fun, who were famous for having a good time off the ice, never got the same breaks. When you’re winning, people look the other way. If you’re not, they don’t. Simply put, “boys will boys” wasn’t going to cut it for Arnott when he fell out of favor with fans as quickly as he’d become a favourite with a 33-goal season as a rookie.

Jason Arnott

Center — shoots R
Born Oct 11th, 1974 — Collingwood, ONT
Height 6.05 — Weight 220 [196 cm/100 kg]
Drafted by Edmonton Oilers
Round 1 #7 overall 1993 NHL Entry Draft

BY THE NUMBERS

Season
Age
Tm
GP
G
A
PTS
+/-
PIM
S%
ATOI
1993-94
19
78
33
35
68
1
104
17.0
1994-95
20
42
15
22
37
-14
128
9.6
1995-96
21
64
28
31
59
-6
87
11.5
1996-97
22
67
19
38
57
-21
92
7.7
1997-98
23
TOT
70
10
23
33
-24
99
5.0
1997-98
23
35
5
13
18
-16
78
5.0
1997-98
23
35
5
10
15
-8
21
5.1
1998-99
24
74
27
27
54
10
79
13.5
15:24
1999-00
25
76
22
34
56
22
51
9.0
17:05
2000-01
26
54
21
34
55
23
75
15.2
16:12
2001-02
27
TOT
73
25
20
45
2
65
12.7
17:21
2001-02
27
63
22
19
41
3
59
13.0
17:13
2001-02
27
10
3
1
4
-1
6
10.7
18:13
2002-03
28
72
23
24
47
9
51
13.6
16:12
2003-04
29
73
21
36
57
23
66
14.7
17:00
2005-06
31
81
32
44
76
13
102
19.2
17:12
2006-07
32
68
27
27
54
15
48
14.2
17:59
2007-08
33
79
28
44
72
19
54
11.3
18:59
2008-09
34
65
33
24
57
2
49
16.8
18:55
2009-10
35
63
19
27
46
0
26
8.8
18:42
2010-11
36
TOT
73
17
14
31
-6
40
10.1
15:31
2010-11
36
62
13
11
24
-9
32
9.4
15:27
2010-11
36
11
4
3
7
3
8
13.3
15:53
2011-12
37
72
17
17
34
13
26
12.0
14:05
6 yrs
NJD
364
110
135
245
41
317
11.1
16:17
5 yrs
EDM
286
100
139
239
-56
489
10.6
4 yrs
DAL
236
79
105
184
44
225
15.6
16:52
4 yrs
NSH
275
107
122
229
36
177
12.6
18:39
1 yr
STL
72
17
17
34
13
26
12.0
14:05
1 yr
WSH
11
4
3
7
3
8
13.3
15:53
Career
1244
417
521
938
81
1242
12.1
16:58

PLAYOFFS

Season
Age
Tm
GP
G
A
PTS
+/-
PIM
S%
ATOI
1996-97
22
12
3
6
9
-3
18
11.1
1997-98
23
5
0
2
2
1
0
0.0
1998-99
24
7
2
2
4
-3
4
16.7
16:48
1999-00
25
23
8
12
20
7
18
14.3
16:29
2000-01
26
23
8
7
15
8
16
19.0
15:49
2002-03
28
11
3
2
5
-2
6
16.7
15:35
2003-04
29
5
1
1
2
-1
2
9.1
17:23
2005-06
31
5
0
3
3
-1
4
0.0
20:04
2006-07
32
5
2
1
3
0
2
18.2
19:17
2007-08
33
4
1
0
1
-1
4
16.7
18:29
2009-10
35
6
2
0
2
-3
0
7.7
17:51
2010-11
36
9
1
5
6
4
2
7.7
16:03
2011-12
37
7
1
0
1
-1
0
9.1
10:53
Career
122
32
41
73
5
76
12.5
16:21

WITH THE OILERS

Arnott set a franchise record with 33 goals as a rookie. It seemed he might become the next great Oiler at a time when almost all the names engraved on the five Stanley Cups had been moved along in the name of cost-cutting. Arnie, who tooled around town in a bright red Viper when the weather allowed, looked like a star in the making. Instead, things went sideways. His production dipped. Off the ice, Arnott was slapped with a paternity suit. Then, there was the quote that sunk him with fans, uttered after a bad performance: “I just wasn’t into it.” Remember? Of course you do.
GM Glen Sather has always maintained he didn’t want to trade Arnott, but that he had to because of the pressure brought on by the relentless negative attention. To hear Slats tell it, Arnott was essentially chased out of town by fans and the media. I’m not sure it was as cut-and-dried as that, but after 286 games over parts of five seasons in Edmonton, Arnott and Bryan Muir were sent to New Jersey for forwards Valeri Zelepukin and Bill Guerin. Arnott was just 23 at the time and, as fans found out soon enough, had the best hockey of his career ahead of him.

DOWN THE ROAD

Arnott won a Stanley Cup with the Devils in 2000, his third season in New Jersey. He scored 20-or-more goals in each of his four full seasons in the swamp. He spent parts of four seasons with the Dallas Stars and had a career-high 76 points in 2005-06. Arnott moved on to Nashville for four seasons and he stayed productive — 72 points in 2007-08 and 33 goals in 2008-09. His career wound down with a second stop in New Jersey and stints in Washington and St. Louis.
All told, Arnott tallied 417-521-936 in 1,244 regular season games and added another 73 points in 122 playoff games. Big, tough and skilled was Arnott — exactly the kind of centre the Oilers lacked and wanted for many seasons after he left. While I’m still not convinced Sather had to trade him, that was the call that was made and there’s not much argument the Oilers lost a helluva player.
This series of various Top 10 lists will focus on the post-1990 Oilers – the players who haven’t played on a Stanley Cup winner in Edmonton.

Previously in this Series: