
Pembroke MA– To honor Kevin Stevens properly, you don’t talk about him like a saint; you talk about him like a guy from the South Shore who did the work. You honor the 123-point season, but you also honor the fact that he’s still here to talk about it.
The Weight of the Jersey: Why We Still Honor Kevin Stevens
If you grew up skating in Plymouth County, Kevin Stevens was the ceiling. He was the kid from Pembroke who proved you could be the most skilled player on the ice and the most dangerous one at the same time. But the reason we honor him today isn’t just for the banners he hung in Pittsburgh—it’s for the honesty he brought back home.

The top fours
1. He defined “South Shore Tough”
In the early 90s, Stevens was the engine of the Penguins’ back-to-back Cups. He wasn’t just riding shotgun with Mario Lemieux; he was the one clearing the tracks. He was the first player in NHL history to put up 50 goals and 200 penalty minutes in a single season. That’s a specific kind of greatness—one that requires a total disregard for your own safety for the sake of the team.
2. He didn’t hide the scars
The hit in ’93 shattered his face, but the aftermath shattered his life. We honor Kevin because when the pills and the addiction took hold, he didn’t disappear into a “where are they now” mystery. He lived his recovery in public. For a guy who made his living being “untouchable,” admitting he was powerless was the gutsiest move of his career.
3. He’s still in the locker room
Today, Kevin isn’t just a name in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame. He’s a guy who picks up the phone. Through the Power Forward Foundation, he’s turned his darkest years into a blueprint for others. He’s in the rinks and the meeting halls, telling the real story—not the highlight reel version—to make sure the next kid from Silver Lake doesn’t have to fall as hard as he did.
4. A Hometown Legacy
You don’t get a statue for being perfect; you get honored for being resilient. Kevin Stevens represents the reality of the game: the grit, the cost, and the comeback. He’s a reminder that your worst day doesn’t have to be your last day.
Plimoth Today Note:
“Kevin Stevens didn’t just give us two Stanley Cups to brag about; he gave the South Shore a masterclass in how to stand back up. That’s the legacy that actually matters.”





