Jaromir Jagr had a lot of amazing moments as a member of the Pittsburgh Penguins.
For 11 years he was either the best player in hockey, or the second-best player in hockey (when Mario Lemieux was playing) and started to make his mark as one of the league’s all-time greats.
He was a key figure on two Stanley Cup winning teams, won an MVP award, was a finalist three other times, won five scoring titles, and for a stretch in the late 1990s was probably the single biggest reason the team remained a playoff contender.