He had 10 goals in 23 Stanley Cup Playoff games in 1994, including a goal in Game 7 of the Cup Final against the Vancouver Canucks that gave the Rangers a 2-0 lead in a game they won 3-2. Graves remembers not feeling comfortable that night until the final buzzer sounded.
"After 54 years you couldn't expect anything different, right?" he said. "I think when we still look back and the odd time we watch that we're still nervous watching [even though] we know the outcome. That tells you how special it was to have been a part of."
Graves retired in 2003 after 16 NHL seasons. He had 616 points (329 goals, 287 assists) in 1,152 games with the Red Wings, Oilers, Rangers and San Jose Sharks.
In his current role with the Rangers, Graves supports fan development, community relations, hockey development, the Garden of Dreams, the New York Rangers Alumni Association and grassroots junior Rangers programs including the Learn to Play Hockey Program, where he works with fellow alum Brian Mullen.
As great a player as Graves was, it was his philanthropy that earned him numerous honors, including the NHL Foundation Player Award in 2000, and made him one of the most popular players to wear a Rangers jersey.
"When you're doing these different events, whether it's Casino Night for Garden of Dreams, Garden of Laughs for the Garden of Dreams … you have as much fun as the kids do," he said. "That's the best part because it's enriching both your lives. That is really the rewarding part of it. You meet people that become friends for life.
"The greatest gift is the people that I've met, the kids that I've met and the community leaders I've met and the different experiences I get to be a part of. Because you're lucky enough to play on Garden ice it does give you that opportunity to meet a lot of people you wouldn't otherwise get to meet."