Bobby Hull FILE PHOTO: Former player Bobby Hull of the Chicago Blackhawks waves to the crowd during the Blackhawks Victory Parade and Rally on June 28, 2013 in Chicago, Illinois. Hull died at the age of 84. (Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)
ByNatalie Dreier, Cox Media Group National Content Desk
Chicago Blackhawks Hall of Famer Bobby Hull has died.
Hull was known as the Golden Jet because of his blond hair and his speed on the ice, according to ESPN.
“The Chicago Blackhawks are saddened by the passing of Blackhawks legend Bobby Hull, a superstar for our franchise between 1957 and 1972,” the team said in a statement, according to the Chicago Tribune.
“Hull is part of an elite group of players who made a historic impact on our hockey club. The Golden Jet helped the Blackhawks win the 1961 Stanley Cup and delivered countless memories to our fans, whom he adored. Generations of Chicagoans were dazzled by Bobby’s shooting prowess, skating skill and overall team leadership that led to 604 career goals, a franchise record that remains to this day. We send our deepest sympathies to the Hull family.”
Hull joined the Blackhawks, making his debut on Oct. 8, 1957, against the Toronto Maple Leafs, where Chicago won 1-0, the newspaper reported. But it took a few days for him to score his first goal, which came on Oct. 22, 1957, against the Boston Bruins and started an eight-game point run.
Hull, following the lead of teammate Stan Mikita, was known to curve his hockey stick blade. Hull was said to have one of the most feared slap shots in the NHL supposedly registering 118 mph, ESPN reported.
The winger helped lead his team to become the Stanley Cup champions in 1961, bringing an end to more than two decades without a cup.
Hull played 15 seasons — eight of which were with his brother Dennis — with the Blackhawks and is the team’s all-time scorer with 604 goals.
He was the first NHL player to score more than 50 goals in a season, a feat he accomplished in 1966, the Tribune reported. He did it four times after.
Bobby Hull was also a back-to-back Hart Memorial Trophy winner —1964-65 and 1965-66 — as the league’s most valuable player. He also won an NHL scoring title three times.
Bobby Hull left the Blackhawks to join the Winnipeg Jets as a player and coach in the first $1 million contract in sports history in 1972. He played seven seasons with the Jets as part of the WHA, leading the team to win two Avco Cups. He also won two Gordie Howe Trophies as the WHA MVP in 1972-73 and 1974-75. In the latter season, he scored a career-high 77 goals.
“Anything I ever did was for the betterment of the game. Not money,” Hull said in 1988, according to the Tribune. “Money is crazy. You have to play hockey for more than that.
“I don’t regret anything I did. I regret that some jerks came along on my coattails and got paid for doing nothing. But when it comes to the game and the way I played it, I regret nothing. That was fun, and that’s the only reason to play.”
Bobby Hull had planned to retire during the 1978-79 season but came back when the WHA merged with the NHL, playing 18 games with the Jets before being traded to the Hartford Whalers. He played nine games there before retiring.
Bobby Hull was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1983.
The Blackhawks and Jets — which is now the Arizona Coyotes — retired Bobby Hull’s No. 9, but it was unretired in 2005 so his son Brett Hull could wear his father’s number.
While he was a star on the ice, he had several incidents in his private life. Two of his three wives accused him of domestic abuse. In 1998, he told The Moscow Times that the Black population was growing too fast in the U.S. and said Hitler “had some good ideas” but “just went too far.” He later denied making the comment, calling the Russian newspaper reporting “false and defamatory,” ESPN reported.
Bobby Hull was a team ambassador for the Blackhawks until last year when the team said it was redefining the role after Mikita died in 2018 and another player, Tony Esposito, died in 2021.
Bobby Hull is survived by his wife Deborah and his five children.
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Through the years CHICAGO - 1960's: Bobby Hull #9 and Stan Mikita #21 of the Chicago Black Hawks celebrate in the locker room after their game. (Photo by Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images Studios/Getty Images) (B Bennett/Getty Images)
Through the years A grinning Bobby Hull, forward for the Chicago Blackhawks, holds up a puck in the locker room following a game against the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden. The puck Hull is holding is the one he launched past Ranger goalie Lorne Worsley, making Hull only the third person in the history of the NHL to score 50 goals in a season. (Bettmann)
Through the years CHICAGO, IL - MARCH 3: Gordie Howe #9 of the Detroit Red Wings battles for the puck with Bobby Hull #9 of the Chicago Blackhawks on March 3, 1965 at the Chicago Stadium in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images Studios/Getty Images) (B Bennett/Getty Images)
Through the years BUFFALO, NEW YORK - CIRCA 1970: Bobby Hull of the Chicago Blackhawks skates against the Buffalo Sabres circa 1970 at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Robert Shaver/Bruce Bennett Collection/Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images ) (Robert Shaver/Bruce Bennett Coll/Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty )
Through the years MONTREAL 1970's: Bobby Hull #9 of the Winnipeg Jets skates against the Montreal Canadiens in the 1970's at the Montreal Forum in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. (Photo by Denis Brodeur/NHLI via Getty Images) (Denis Brodeur/NHLI via Getty Images)
Through the years NEW YORK, NEW YORK - CIRCA 1974: Bobby Hull of Team Canada plays against Team Russia circa 1974 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images) (Bruce Bennett/Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty )
Through the years HOUSTON, TX - 1976: Bobby Hull #9 of the Winnipeg Jets and Gordie Howe #9 of the Houston Aeros faceoff over the camera during a photo shoot between the two legends before their game circa 1976 at the Summit in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Melchior DiGiacomo/Getty Images) (Melchior DiGiacomo/Getty Images)
Through the years Unspecified - 1975: Bobby Hull competing in rowing competition on the ABC tv series 'Superstars'. (Photo by Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images) (Walt Disney Television Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Con)
Through the years PHILADELPHIA, PA - JANUARY 18: Brett Hull #16 of the Campbell Conference and the St. Louis Blues poses for a portrait with his dad Bobby Hull before the 1992 43rd NHL All-Star Game against the Wales Conference on January 18, 1992 at the Spectrum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Campbell Conference defeated the Wales Conference 10-6. (Photo by S Levy/Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images Studios/Getty Images) (Bruce Bennett/Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty )
Through the years TORONTO, ON - NOVEMBER 08: Brett Hull (L) and Bobby Hull (R) man the bench at the Hockey Hall of Fame Legends Game at the Air Canada Centre on November 8, 2009 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)
Through the years CHICAGO, IL - OCTOBER 07: Former Chicago Blackhawks player Bobby Hull is surronded by ballons during a Red Carpet event before the Blackhawks take on the Toronto Maple Leafs in the regular season opening home game at the United Center on October 7, 2018 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images) (Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)
Through the years MINNEAPOLIS, MN - JUNE 22 Bobby Hull speaks with people on June 22, 2020 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Hull bought a school bus and converted it into a medical facility one block from George Floyd's memorial site. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images) (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)