Eleven of the 21 players selected in the first round of the 1979 NHL Entry Draft went on to play over 1,000 regular season NHL games. The most career games played by this fine group of players is 1,612 by Ray Bourque. Bourque was selected eighth by the Boston Bruins.
Six of the 21 players scored more than 300 regular season goals during their NHL careers, with five of those surpassing the 400 goal plateau. Michel Goulet, selected 20th overall by the Quebec Nordiques, scored 548 in his career while Mike Gartner, who was selected fourth overall by the Washington Capitals, scored an amazing 708.
1979 was still a little ahead of the European invasion. None of the 21 players selected in the first round came from outside North America. Only one player, Mike Ramsay of the University of Minnesota selected eleventh overall by the Buffalo Sabres, came from outside the Canadian major junior system. Four players were drafted out of the newly defunct World Hockey Association but the four originally were products of either the Ontario Hockey Association or the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.
Seven players were selected from the WHL, six players came from the OHA, three came from the QMJHL and four were from the WHA. Of the four from the WHA, two (Rob Ramage and Mike Gartner) were from Ontario and two (Rick Vaive and Michel Goulet) were from Quebec.
It didn’t stop after the first round in 1979. NHL greats Dale Hunter (41st overall – Quebec Nordiques), Neal Broten (42nd overall – Minnesota North Stars), Mark Messier (48th overall – Edmonton Oilers), Glenn Anderson (69th overall – Edmonton Oilers) and Thomas Steen (103rd overall – Winnipeg Jets) are just a few of the players that went in the later rounds of the draft.