Orr said one of the great disappointments of his career is that knee injuries prevented him from playing with Gretzky and Lemieux in an international tournament. Orr retired in 1978 after multiple knee surgeries.
"Obviously I watched them play a lot," Orr said. "I watched Mario score his first goal in Boston Garden and it was a pretty good goal. I thought, 'He might have something going here.'"
"Yeah, he's got a chance," Gretzky added, laughing.
Orr, though, did slyly bring up the one time he and Gretzky did play together. He wouldn't give details, leaving it to the journalists in the room to dig up the info.
"I'll leave that with you," he said, smiling.
It was a charity game in Winnipeg in the spring of 1980. Gretzky was available because the Oilers had already been eliminated from the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
"I had to fly in from Hawaii," Gretzky said, "and the only reason I flew from Hawaii to Winnipeg was so I could play with Bobby Orr."
He did it because of how much he respected Orr. In fact, it was only a year before that charity game that Gretzky used to pepper former Oilers teammate Garnet "Ace" Bailey with questions about Orr. Bailey, who died on Sept. 11, 2001, played with Orr in Boston from 1968-73.
"I think he probably got tired of me asking him Bobby Orr questions because all I wanted to know was what did Bobby Orr eat, what did Bobby Orr do, how did Bobby Orr practice?" Gretzky said. "We're fans as kids and we're fans as players."
And they're fans in retirement too.
Gretzky is a partner and vice chair with the Oilers. Orr is a player agent who calls Oilers captain Connor McDavid a client. Lemieux is the co-owner of the Pittsburgh Penguins.
"But we were all kids, we all idolized the game," Gretzky said. "That's been the most interesting thing for me about this top 100 is that whether it was Doug Harvey or Bobby Orr or Mario Lemieux or Wayne Gretzky or Mark Messier or Gordie Howe we all followed Hockey Night in Canada, we all followed the National Hockey League, we all collected hockey cards and we all came from really nice families and great parents that gave us an opportunity to play the game we loved."
They are three of the best to ever play it. And they finally got to talk about their experiences in the game together in the same place Friday.
"From a distance I see Wayne and Mario, but I don't spend a lot of time with them," Orr said. "To come here and be able to spend some time with them, have a few laughs, talk a little hockey, it's very special. Very, very special."