Toronto Maple Leafs Sittler grew up in
St. Jacobs, Ontario, and played minor hockey in nearby
Elmira. He was drafted out of the Junior C
Elmira Sugar Kings by the
London Nationals, soon renamed the
London Knights, and played under coaches
Turk Broda and
Bep Guidolin. Sittler was selected eighth overall by the Maple Leafs in the
1970 NHL Amateur Draft. He was named team captain on September 10, 1975, after
Dave Keon left the team to play in the
World Hockey Association following a contract dispute with Leafs owner
Harold Ballard. In his first season as captain, Sittler finished the season with 41 goals and 59 assists, being the first Leaf ever to reach the 100 point mark. A few months later, he tied the playoff record for most goals in one game, with five against the
Philadelphia Flyers. That summer, in the inaugural
Canada Cup, he scored in overtime to win the final series for
Team Canada over
Czechoslovakia. On February 7, 1976, in a game between Toronto and Boston at
Maple Leaf Gardens, Sittler set an NHL record that still stands by tallying six goals and adding four assists for ten points (eclipsing
Maurice Richard's record of eight, set in 1944). All his points were scored against rookie goalie
Dave Reece in an 11–4 Maple Leaf victory. In
1977–78, Sittler's 117 points ranked him third in regular-season scoring behind
Guy Lafleur and
Bryan Trottier, and also earned him a Second Team All-Star selection. Sittler's scoring totals remained a Leafs record until being surpassed by
Doug Gilmour in 1992–93. The
1978–79 season saw Sittler suffer some knee problems and miss ten games. It was also the year Leafs owner Ballard fired and then rehired coach
Roger Neilson, a process which saw Sittler lobby on the players' behalf for Neilson's reinstatement. Sittler's relationship with Ballard slowly deteriorated, particularly after Ballard hired
Punch Imlach as general manager in July 1979. Imlach and Ballard both had strained relations with
NHLPA executive director
Alan Eagleson, who, as a player agent, represented more than a dozen Leafs, including Sittler and his best friend and linemate,
Lanny McDonald. Imlach believed Sittler had too much influence on the team and tried to undermine his authority with the players. When Sittler and goaltender
Mike Palmateer agreed to appear on the TV show
Showdown, as negotiated by the NHLPA, Imlach went to court to obtain an injunction to stop them. When Imlach said he was open to offers for Sittler from other teams, Eagleson said it would cost $500,000 to get Sittler to waive the no-trade clause in his contract. So, instead of trading Sittler, Imlach sent McDonald to the woeful
Colorado Rockies on December 29, 1979. In response, Sittler ripped the captain's
C off his sweater, later commenting a captain had to be the go-between with players and management, and he no longer had any communication with management. Ballard would liken Sittler's actions to burning the Canadian flag. Through the summer, Ballard insisted Sittler would not be back with the Leafs. But before the start of the
1980–81 season, Sittler and Ballard appeared at a news conference described as "all smiles and buddy-buddy" to announce that Sittler would be at training camp. He showed up with the
C back on his sweater, reassuming the role of team captain. Sittler had arranged the talks with Ballard on his own. But it took another seven weeks for the Leafs to make a deal. During that time, Sittler added the Islanders and
Buffalo Sabres to the list of teams he could be traded to. On January 5, 1982, on advice from his physician, Sittler walked out on the Leafs, saying he was "mentally depressed" because a trade was taking so long to complete.
Philadelphia Flyers and Detroit Red Wings Finally, on January 20, 1982, the 31-year-old Sittler was traded to the Flyers for
Rich Costello plus the
Hartford Whalers' second-round pick in the 1982 draft (used by the Leafs to select
Peter Ihnačák), and future considerations, which ended up being
Ken Strong. Only Ihnačák would play regularly for the Leafs. In 1980, Imlach had rejected an offer from Philadelphia, who were said to be willing to trade
Rick MacLeish and
André Dupont for Sittler. With the Flyers in
1982–83, Sittler earned his fourth All-Star game appearance. He returned to the Flyers the following season. Before the
1984–85 season, Sittler was told he would be named the Flyers' team captain. On the day the announcement was to be made—Sittler even had a brief speech prepared—he was instead told by Flyers' newly appointed general manager
Bobby Clarke he had been traded to the
Detroit Red Wings for
Murray Craven and
Joe Paterson. It was this incident that Sittler described as the biggest disappointment of his life. "Clarke can't come close to realizing how much he hurt me, and my family, that day," he wrote in his 1991 autobiography. Sittler contemplated retirement and did not report to the Wings for a few days, but then joined the team. He had an unproductive season, struggling to get ice time under coach
Nick Polano, and finishing the year with the worst goals-per-game average of his NHL career. The Red Wings bought out Sittler's contract after the end of the season. He received a one-year contract offer from the
Vancouver Canucks, but decided to retire. ==After retirement from playing==