ST. LOUIS — The 2005 NHL Draft was important for the St. Louis Blues.
It was the draft headlined by Pittsburgh Penguins forward Sidney Crosby, who is having himself a Hall Of Fame career. But he was long gone by the time the Blues selected Timothy Leif Oshie with the 24th pick.
That draft was important, but not for the immediate impact that class would go on to make on the franchise, but it was one that would have to be the starting foundation for what would bring the Blues back to from what would turn into come lean years.
Following the 2004-05 NHL lockout, the Blues would go on to have the worst record and fewest points in the NHL in 2005-06 with 57 points (21-46-15). It would start a string of missing the Stanley Cup playoffs three straight years and five of six seasons.
Oshie announced his retirement on Monday after 16 seasons in the NHL:
T.J. Oshie, who helped lead the @Capitals to a #StanleyCup in 2018, has announced his retirement from the NHL after 16 seasons and 1,010 regular season games.
Full release and statement from Oshie: https://t.co/KZx1PFociUpic.twitter.com/osRPtKhjCP
— NHLPA (@NHLPA) June 9, 2025
He began his journey in 2008-09 with the Blues, which happened to be the one season of six starting in 05-06 that the baby Blues made the postseason.
They were swept by the Vancouver Canucks in four games in the Western Conference quarterfinal, but it was the benchmark for the franchise to move back into prominence. It included Oshie, David Backes, David Perron, Patrik Berglund, and Alex Pietrangelo. Then along came Vladimir Tarasenko, Jaden Schwartz and Colton Parayko, guys the Blues drafted high and used to become the faces of the franchise.
Oshie, who is now 38 and essentially ended his career with back issues, playing in his final game with the Washington Capitals on April 28, 2024 against the New York Rangers, spent the first seven seasons of his career with the Blues and was part of some of the best regular-seasons in Blues history in teams in 2011-12 (109 points), 2013-14 (111 points) and 2014-15 (109 points).
The Blues were prominent again, and the winger then-coach Ken Hitchcock always called the "engine of the team" was a big reason why.
And who could forget T.J. 'Sochi," as Oshie was nicknamed for putting the United States on his back in the shootout of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia against the home country? He would score four of six shootout attempts that went eight rounds in USA's 3-2 win:
It was another incredible…