Howe retired in 1971 after 25 seasons with the Detroit Red Wings. He made a comeback in 1973 with the Houston Aeros of the WHA, and in 1977 moved to the Whalers. In 1979 the Whalers were one of four teams added to the NHL, putting Howe back in the League.
"Hartford was the icing on our cake," he told the Hartford Courant in 1980.
Howe's legs in his fifth decade weren't what they'd been for most of the first four. However his head, heart and elbows remained in excellent working order.
Among the Oilers on the ice that night was an almost-19-year-old center named Wayne Gretzky, who had idolized Howe since he was young and would go on to break many of his offensive records. Gretzky had a first-period assist; Howe didn't make the scoresheet.
Howe finished the season with 15 goals and 41 points, with all but five of his points coming at even strength. He also was a plus-9, a pretty neat feat on a team that finished with 73 points in 80 games and had a minus-9 goal differential. He retired after the season owning NHL records for games played (1,767), goals (801), assists (1,049) and points (1,850)
Gretzky went on to surpass Howe's totals for goals (894), assists (1,963) and points (2,857). But to No. 99, No. 9 will always be No. 1.
"Gordie Howe is the greatest player who ever lived," he said in 2015. "There's not even a question about it."