Like it was yesterday, Chuck Fletcher remembers Tim Murray, then the Anaheim Ducks' chief scout and now the new GM of the Buffalo Sabres, going on and on about Corey Perry leading into the 2003 NHL draft.
"I still remember Timmy pushing Bryan and I on him," said Fletcher, the Wild's GM who was former Ducks GM Bryan Murray's right-hand man in Anaheim 11 years ago. "He took Bryan and I to go see him because the big knock on Corey was his skating. But he was so skilled and so smart and so competitive."
With the 19th pick, Anaheim took Ryan Getzlaf, a big, skilled centerman from the Calgary Hitman. As current Ducks assistant GM David McNab recalls, the rest of the first round, the Ducks' scouting staff was convinced "there was one premier player left in the draft — Corey Perry," a big power winger from the London Knights.
So Bryan Murray began frantically calling teams, offering two second-round picks to each for another first-round pick. Finally, the Dallas Stars, who liked Loui Eriksson, made the move, giving Anaheim the 28th pick for two seconds.
"We wouldn't have done it if Perry was gone," McNab said before scouting Thursday's Wild-Oilers game.
"It was just a franchise-changing draft for Anaheim to get Getzlaf and Perry nine picks apart in the same draft," Fletcher said. "Four years later, they were integral parts of a Cup-winning team, and to this day, they're 28 years old and franchise players."
Getzlaf and Perry, the 2011 Rocket Richard (leading goal scorer) and Hart (MVP) Trophy winner, are the third- and fourth-highest scorers in Ducks history and third and fifth in scoring this season for what is the NHL's best team.
Some of Perry's goals have been off the charts.