Saturday night, the 38-year-old defenseman plays in his 1,000th NHL game. Only 363 other players have reached the milestone in more than a century of league history, including just 120 defensemen.
The NHL Draft started in 1963. Since then, only 10 undrafted defensemen have appeared in 1,000 games or more. Giordano won the Norris Trophy, awarded to the league's top defenseman, at age 35 in 2019. He's one of only four D-men to do so at age 35 or older. The other three, Nicklas Lidstrom, Al McInnis and Doug Harvey, are all in the Hockey Hall of Fame.
Soak it in, Kraken fans. We all know Giordano might be traded by the March 21 deadline. Enjoy watching him quarterback the first-unit power play on this road trip, which starts in Washington Saturday and Carolina Sunday. Appreciate how expertly he moves up into the offensive action (especially on the penalty kill, lately scoring two shorthanded goals in the last five games) yet blocked shots in practically every period of every Kraken game he has played this year.
"He's incredible," says Adam Larsson, a stellar defender of his own right (they both are among league leaders in not making mistakes in the defensive zone). "Not just staying and playing in this league that long but he is still going strong out there ... He doesn't even take any practices off. He is so competitive every single game."