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The wait is finally over. After sixteen seasons on the ballot, Alex Mogilny will officially be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame on November 10, 2025, as a member of the Class of 2025.
Entering the league in 1989-90 as the first Soviet defect to the United States, the Khabarovsk native joined the Buffalo Sabres after being drafted in the 5th round of the 1988 Entry Draft. As a rookie, Mogilny would put up a solid 43 points in 65 games; he would only continue to improve, recording over a point per game in the next two seasons and becoming an All-Star in the 1991-92 season.
Mogilny’s fourth season in the league would be his best, as he tied for the league lead with 76 goals, while also recording 51 assists for a total of 127 points in 77 games. Mogilny had elevated his game to the level of the elites in the NHL; as he had cemented himself as a star in the league. The Sabres would name Mogilny the first Russian captain in NHL history, and Mogilny would follow this up by recording 79 points in 66 games to earn himself his third straight All-Star appearance. The shortened 1994-95 season would be Mogilny’s last season with the Sabres before being traded to the Vancouver Canucks before the following season.
In his first year in Vancouver, Mogilny would once again have another fantastic season putting up a 50-50 season, with 55 goals and 52 assists totaling 107 points. This would be the first season that Mogilny would receive Hart trophy votes and make his fourth All-Star game appearance of his career. The 1995-96 season would be Mogilny’s best season in Vancouver and he would eventually be moved to the New Jersey Devils at the 2000 trade deadline.
Mogilny would join the Devils amid a playoff push, playing 12 games to end the regular season. Mogilny would then proceed to play 23 games in the postseason, winning his first Stanley Cup as New Jersey defeated the Dallas Stars in six games. With the win, Mogilny entered the prestigious IIHF Gold Club as a winner of the Stanley Cup, Olympics, and IIHF World Championship.
The 2000-2001 season would be Mogilny’s best season as Devil recording 43 goals and 40 assists totaling 83 points in 75 games. Mogilny showed that he still had that same scoring flair during his age-31 season. He would follow the regular season up with his best postseason performance recording 16 points in 25 games as the Devils reached the Stanley Cup before ultimately falling to the Colorado Avalanche.
Mogilny would leave the Devils in the offseason joining the Toronto Maple Leafs where his tenure would be highlighted by his Lady Byng Award win in 2002-03. The 2005-06 season would be Mogilny’s last season in the NHL as he retired in the place where he won his only Stanley Cup, New Jersey.
Mogilny would retire after sixteen seasons recording 473 goals and 559 assists for a total of 1032 points in 990 career games. A consistent player, playing at an All-Star level for the better part of sixteen seasons, never getting the recognition he deserved until June 24th, 2025, being named to the Hockey Hall of Fame Class of 2025.


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