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Top 100 Oilers: Jari Kurri (3)
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Photo credit: NHL.com
Robin Brownlee
Sep 14, 2017, 09:05 EDTUpdated: Jul 23, 2025, 22:38 EDT
Peanut butter and jelly. Bacon and eggs. Scotch and a fine cigar. Wayne Gretzky and Jari Kurri. Sure, either one is still damn good without the other, but put them together and now you’ve got something going on. Such was the case with the tandem of Gretzky and Kurri, his right winger, back when the Edmonton Oilers were getting that Boys on the Bus juggernaut rolling in the 1980s on the way to winning all those Stanley Cups.
From being something of an afterthought in the 1980 Entry Draft when he was selected in the fourth round, 69th overall – during the days when many NHL scouts were still casting doubting glances at players from across the Atlantic – to a career that saw him inducted into the HHOF in 2001 as one of the best European players ever to cross the pond, Kurri was both magnificent and understated as Gretzky’s triggerman. They were so damn good together it almost wasn’t fair.

Jari Kurri

Right Wing — shoots R
Born May 18th, 1960 — Helsinki, Finland
Height 6.00 — Weight 190 [183 cm/86 kg]
Drafted by Edmonton Oilers
Round 4 #69 overall 1980 NHL Entry Draft

BY THE NUMBERS

Season
Age
Tm
GP
G
A
PTS
+/-
PIM
S
S%
1980-81
20
75
32
43
75
26
40
202
15.8
1981-82
21
71
32
54
86
38
32
211
15.2
1982-83
22
80
45
59
104
47
22
218
20.6
1983-84
23
64
52
61
113
38
14
194
26.8
1984-85
24
73
71
64
135
76
30
261
27.2
1985-86
25
78
68
63
131
45
22
236
28.8
1986-87
26
79
54
54
108
35
41
211
25.6
1987-88
27
80
43
53
96
25
30
207
20.8
1988-89
28
76
44
58
102
19
69
214
20.6
1989-90
29
78
33
60
93
18
48
201
16.4
1991-92
31
73
23
37
60
-24
24
167
13.8
1992-93
32
82
27
60
87
19
38
210
12.9
1993-94
33
81
31
46
77
-24
48
198
15.7
1994-95
34
38
10
19
29
-17
24
84
11.9
1995-96
35
TOT
71
18
27
45
-16
39
158
11.4
1995-96
35
57
17
23
40
-12
37
131
13.0
1995-96
35
14
1
4
5
-4
2
27
3.7
1996-97
36
82
13
22
35
-13
12
109
11.9
1997-98
37
70
5
17
22
6
12
61
8.2
10 yrs
EDM
754
474
569
1043
367
348
2155
22.0
5 yrs
LAK
331
108
185
293
-58
171
790
13.7
1 yr
MDA
82
13
22
35
-13
12
109
11.9
1 yr
COL
70
5
17
22
6
12
61
8.2
1 yr
NYR
14
1
4
5
-4
2
27
3.7
Career
1251
601
797
1398
298
545
3142
19.1
PLAYOFFS
Season
Age
Tm
GP
G
A
PTS
+/-
PIM
S
S%
1980-81
20
9
5
7
12
12
4
14
35.7
1981-82
21
5
2
5
7
2
10
10
20.0
1982-83
22
16
8
15
23
16
8
31
25.8
1983-84
23
19
14
14
28
9
13
60
23.3
1984-85
24
18
19
12
31
24
6
89
21.3
1985-86
25
10
2
10
12
1
4
25
8.0
1986-87
26
21
15
10
25
11
20
52
28.8
1987-88
27
19
14
17
31
15
12
57
24.6
1988-89
28
7
3
5
8
-2
6
17
17.6
1989-90
29
22
10
15
25
13
18
58
17.2
1991-92
31
4
1
2
3
1
4
10
10.0
1992-93
32
24
9
8
17
2
12
50
18.0
1995-96
35
11
3
5
8
-2
2
31
9.7
1996-97
36
11
1
2
3
2
4
18
5.6
1997-98
37
4
0
0
0
-1
0
2
0.0
Career
200
106
127
233
103
123
524
20.2

AWARDS

1984-85 Lady Byng Memorial Trophy

NOTABLE

“Gretzky to Kurri . . . he scores!” How many times did Oilers’ fans hear Rod Phillips and others make that call during the glory years? On well over half of Kurri’s 601 career goals, it turned out. Gretzky assisted on 364 of Kurri’s red-light specials (with Edmonton and Los Angeles). There’s about 11 minutes of that right here. If there’s been a more lethal combination than No. 99 and No. 17 in the history of the NHL, I can’t think of it.
Kurri was a master at reading Gretzky, finding open ice and getting square to the puck so he could tee-up that trademark one-timer of his when the Great One drew defenders and eventually delivered the rubber. “Wayne and I were no secret, really,” said Kurri with his usual modesty. “He was a great passer and I liked to hit the holes and shoot the puck.” Sure. Everybody knew what Gretzky and Kurri were up to when they rushed up ice together. Doing anything about it was another matter completely. Good luck with that.
“What people tended to overlook was that to play with Gretz, a guy needed a lot of natural ability just to be able to read what he was going to do,” said teammate Kevin Lowe. “People just thought ‘Well, no wonder he scores. He’s out there with Gretzky all the time!’ Sorry, but it wasn’t that simple. Nobody could see a game, think a game, like Wayne. A lot of guys would get out there with him and just be totally lost. He was so far ahead of them. He wasn’t ahead of Jari. There were on the same wave-length.”

THE STORY

Kurri’s bread and butter, obviously, was putting the puck in the back of the net. He had four consecutive 50-plus goal seasons with the Oilers, with highs of 71 and 68 in that stretch. Then, there was the 1985 playoffs as Kurri ran amok – he scored 19 goals in 18 games to tie the NHL playoff mark set by Philadelphia’s Reggie Leach. That postseason, which culminated in Edmonton’s second Stanley Cup, included four Kurri hat-tricks.
What was sometimes overlooked because of all those goal celebrations was that Kurri was a terrific defensive player. His ability and willingness to take care of business at both ends of the ice and play a two-way game allowed Gretzky to roam as he pleased. Kurri finished in the top-five in voting for the Frank Selke Trophy four times (he was runner-up to Bobby Clarke in 1982-83 but he never won it). Big oversight there from where I sit.
While Kurri was at his very best in tandem with Gretzky, it’s worth noting that he didn’t exactly struggle to score in the two seasons he spent with the Oilers after Gretzky was sold to Los Angeles. In those 154 games, Kurri had 195 points, including 77 goals. Kurri had 25 points in 22 games in the 1990 playoffs as the Oilers won their fifth Cup before he rejoined Gretzky in Los Angeles. Kurri’s 1,043 regular season points as an Oiler is second only to Gretzky in franchise record books. What a player.
This series will look at the top 100 Edmonton Oilers from the NHL era 1979-80 to 2014-15, starting with 100 and working up.

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