"Raider created a mathematical formula and we considered years of service and team and league awards," Cohen said. "It came down to Leetch and Rod Gilbert. Winning the Stanley Cup wasn't the biggest factor for me. The biggest for me was the impact Leetch had on the franchise. It was greater than Gilbert's. Others agreed. The Rangers have yet to have another defenseman that has remotely produced the way Leetch could."
Nashville Predators general manager David Poile was the Washington Capitals GM when Leetch broke in with the Rangers in 1987-88. He said it wasn't long before preparing for the Rangers meant preparing to deal with Leetch.
"Your whole game plan against the Rangers started with Brian Leetch," Poile said. "He was the perfect defenseman. Offensively. Defensively. Big minutes. Durable. He played in all situations. Every year he was in the running for the Norris Trophy."
Leetch, a 2009 Hockey Hall of Fame inductee, was the first American to win the Conn Smythe Trophy, and he's still the only American defenseman to do so.
"In terms of skating, passing and hockey sense, no other American defenseman can touch him," USA Hockey executive Lou Vairo said. "He's our version of Bobby Orr."