Bossy scored 573 goals and had 553 assists in 752 regular-season games over 10 N.H.L. seasons, all with the Islanders.
He was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1991.
A finesse player and slightly built, Bossy eluded hard checks and refused to get into melees.
“Guys knew he wouldn’t fight,” Trottier told Sports Illustrated in 1999. “They’d punch him, spear him, it didn’t matter. He didn’t need much room. The guy was so creative, he could make something special with just a half inch.”
“I probably developed what scouts called my quick hands and quick release more out of self-defense than anything else,” Bossy recalled in his memoir, “Boss: The Mike Bossy Story” (1988, with Barry Meisel). “The N.H.L. was zoom, zoom, zoom compared to junior. I learned to make quick passes and take quick shots to avoid getting hammered every time I had the puck.”
Bossy won the Lady Byng Trophy for gentlemanly play in 1983, 1984 and 1986. He incurred only 210 penalty minutes.
He was selected by the Islanders as the No. 15 pick in the 1977 N.H.L. amateur draft after being passed over by teams who, despite his remarkable goal-scoring in junior hockey, believed he didn’t have the checking skills to survive in the N.H.L.
It didn’t take long for Bossy to prove otherwise. He won the Calder Memorial Trophy for 1977-78 as the N.H.L.’s rookie of the year, scoring a rookie-record 53 goals that stood for 15 years. He won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player in the 1982 Stanley Cup playoffs.