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Steve Christoff

American ice hockey player (born 1958)


Summary

American ice hockey player (born 1958)

FieldValue
imageSteve Christoff.jpg
positionCenter
shootsRight
height_ft6
height_in1
weight_lb180
played_forNHL
Minnesota North Stars
Calgary Flames
Los Angeles Kings
ntl_teamUSA
birth_date
birth_placeSpringfield, Illinois, U.S.
draft24th overall
draft_year1978
draft_teamMinnesota North Stars
career_start1979
career_end1984

Minnesota North Stars Calgary Flames Los Angeles Kings

Steven Mark Christoff (born January 23, 1958) is an American former professional ice hockey forward who played 248 regular season games in the NHL with the Minnesota North Stars, Calgary Flames, and Los Angeles Kings in 1980–84.

Christoff is best known for being a member of the "Miracle on Ice" 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team that won the gold medal.

Biography

Amateur career

Steve Christoff grew up in Richfield, Minnesota and graduated from Richfield High School. As a member of the Richfield High School hockey team, he earned team MVP his junior and senior year, and was selected to the Minnesota High School All-State First Team and the U.S. High School All-American Team during his senior year in 1975-76. He led his school to a state runner-up his senior season and was one of the most highly recruited U.S. hockey players in 1976. Before turning professional, Christoff attended the University of Minnesota where he played for the Minnesota Gophers for three seasons, from 1976–79. He led the team in scoring during his second year with 66 points (32 goals and 34 assists) and was named to the WCHA All-Star Second Team. During his third year, he led the team in scoring again with 77 points (38 goals and 39 assists). In what turned out to be his last collegiate game on March 23, 1979, Christoff scored a goal and earned an assist to help Minnesota win its third NCAA title in school history with a 4-3 victory over North Dakota. He made his international debut for Team USA at the 1979 Ice Hockey World Championship tournament in Moscow.

Professional career

Christoff was selected 24th overall in the 1978 NHL Entry Draft by the Minnesota North Stars. He joined the North Stars for 20 games after the Olympics, scoring eight goals and 15 points. The next year, he suited up for 56 games, netting 26 goals and 39 points and was one of the Stars' best performers as Minnesota lost the 1981 Stanley Cup finals to the New York Islanders. He also participated in the 1981 Canada Cup tournament as a member of Team USA. In 1981–82, Christoff appeared in 69 games, scoring 26 goals and 55 points, a career high. Although he was an extremely popular figure in Minnesota, Christoff was traded to the Calgary Flames for the 1982–83 season, but he was used in just 45 games, scoring nine goals and 17 points. In 1983–84, Christoff played his final season in the NHL, with the Los Angeles Kings, starting 58 games.

Post hockey career

Christoff recently retired as an airline pilot for Minneapolis-based Mesaba Airlines (later Endeavor Air) since retiring from hockey. He was named one of the 50 greatest players in University of Minnesota hockey history as part of "Legends on Ice" tribute in 2001.

Awards and achievements

AwardYear
All-WCHA Second Team1977–78
All-WCHA Second Team1978–79
All-NCAA All-Tournament Team1979

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffsSeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIMNHL totals24877641411083516122825
1975–76Richfield High SchoolHigh-MN
1976–77University of MinnesotaWCHA38791620
1977–78University of MinnesotaWCHA3832346618
1978–79University of MinnesotaWCHA4338397750
1979–80United StatesIntl.5735266122
1979–80Minnesota North StarsNHL208715191484127
1980–81Minnesota North StarsNHL562613395818881616
1980–81Oklahoma City StarsCHL31010
1981–82Minnesota North StarsNHL692629551420002
1982–83Calgary FlamesNHL459817410000
1983–84Los Angeles KingsNHL58871513

International

YearTeamEventGPGAPtsPIMSenior totals21681414
1979United StatesWC83254
1980United StatesOG72136
1981United StatesCC61564

References

References

  1. "1978 NHL Amateur Draft -- Steve Christoff".
  2. "Miracle on ice - Airline Pilot Central Forums".
  3. Sheridan, Callan. (April 11, 2025). "Hobey Baker Award: History, winners, selection process".
  4. "WCHA All-Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives.
  5. "NCAA Frozen Four Records". NCAA.org.
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