St. Louis had 1,033 points (391 goals, 642 assists) in 16 NHL seasons with the Calgary Flames, Lightning and Rangers.
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He and Lecavalier were integral parts of the Lightning's Stanley Cup championship in 2004, when St. Louis won the Hart Trophy as NHL MVP, the Art Ross Trophy as NHL scoring leader and the Ted Lindsay Award as most outstanding player as voted by the NHL Players' Association.
"It's always nice to see a good friend and a player you played with be honored in such a way," Lecavalier said. "It's the biggest individual honor you can get. It shows how much you've done for the sport."
St. Louis, who was awarded the Lady Byng Trophy as the most gentlemanly player in the NHL three times (2010, 2011, 2013) and played in the NHL All-Star Game six times, is the Lightning's all-time leader in points (953), assists (588), power-play points (300), shorthanded goals (28), game-winning goals (64) and overtime goals (10). He also has the most goals (33) and points (68) in the Stanley Cup Playoffs in Tampa Bay history.
He had his No. 26 retired by the Lightning on Jan. 17, 2017. The team retired Lecavalier's No. 4 on Feb. 10.
"Obviously everything he's done on the ice is incredible," Lecavalier said. "But Marty was probably the hardest-working guy, dedicated to the game, great teammate, great leader and obviously a huge part in us winning the Stanley Cup. He's done so much for me personally as a player and as a friend. He's just done so much for the game of hockey."