The 2016 class of Eric Lindros, Sergei Makarov, Rogie Vachon and Pat Quinn were elected into the Hockey Hall of Fame Monday night in Toronto, so were turning our attention to next years inductions. In addition to obvious candidates Dave Andreychuk and Paul Kariya, here are three other players who should be considered for the class of 2017 in this, a special edition of Morning, Joe.Teemu Selanne: Selanne, 46, will be in his first year of eligibility and the Finnish Flash should be a no-brainer. After 21 seasons in the NHL with the Winnipeg Jets (1992-96), Anaheim Ducks (1996-2001, 2005-14), San Jose Sharks (2001-03) and the Colorado Avalanche (2003-04), he is 15th on the all-time scoring list with 684 goals, 773 assists for 1,457 points in 1,451 games, which is incredible. Hes the last player to score 70 goals in a season, a feat he accomplished with 76 goals as a rookie with the Jets. He won the Calder Trophy (1992-93), Maurice Richard Trophy (1998-99) and the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy (2005-06). Oh, and he also won that thing called the Stanley Cup, with the Ducks in 2007. His international résumé speaks for itself as well: He won an Olympic silver medal and three bronze medals playing for Finland, not to mention inspiring scores of players to take up the game.Mark Recchi: Its inconceivable that Recchi, 48, is not already in the Hall of Fame. He won three Stanley Cups as a player with the Pittsburgh Penguins, Carolina Hurricanes and Boston Bruins. He also earned another in a management role with the Penguins last season. As a player, he recorded 1,533 points in 1,652 games, which is 12th all-time. Recchi made a difference both on and off the ice, no matter where he played during his 22-year career: with the Penguins (1988-92, 2005-06, 2008-09), Philadelphia Flyers (1991-95, 1998-2004), Montreal Canadiens (1994-99), Hurricanes (2005-06), Atlanta Thrashers (2007-08), Tampa Bay Lightning (2008-09) and the Bruins?(2009-11). He officially retired while celebrating on the ice with his Bruins teammates after defeating the Vancouver Canucks in 2011. Its about time Recchi is inducted.Daniel Alfredsson: Alfredsson, 42, is also in his first year of eligibility and should receive serious consideration. He spent 18 seasons with the Ottawa Senators (1995-2013) and one with the Detroit Red Wings (2013-14) and recorded 10 seasons of 70-plus points. A six-time All-Star, Alfredsson never won a Stanley Cup, which could hurt his chances to start, but he will one day earn enshrinement. He won the Calder Trophy (1995-96) and the King Clancy Memorial Award (2011-12). Internationally for Team Sweden, he won an Olympic gold medal in 2006 and a silver medal in 2014. He is one of the most respected leaders of his generation. Air Force 1 Replica . Pierce was ejected in the third quarter of Indianas 103-86 win Monday. George Hill stole a bad pass and was going in for a layup, and Pierce hustled back and appeared to be trying to wrap him up. Air Force 1 For Sale . LOUIS -- Roman Polak was celebrating even before Alexander Steen scored the winning goal in Saturdays 4-2 win over the Carolina Hurricanes. https://www.cheapairforce1outlet.com/ .C. -- Todd Fiddler scored a hat trick, including the overtime goal, as the Prince George Cougars survived an 8-7 win against the Kamloops Blazers in Western Hockey League play Sunday. Air Force 1 On Sale . Only three players drafted by NHL clubs were included on the Czech selection camp roster on Wednesday. Those players were Dallas Stars 2012 first-rounder Radek Faksa, Winnipeg Jets 2013 fourth-rounder Jan Kostalek and Phoenix Coyotes 2012 seventh-rounder Marek Langhamer. Air Force 1 Store . Miller reached right to deflect Mikhail Grabovskis attempt with just over 2 minutes remaining in regulation, and then made two more saves in the shootout Sunday to give the Sabres a 2-1 win over the Washington Capitals. It may be September but its still bloody cold in Canberra.And coach Anthony Griffin concedes that could prevent Penrith being as flamboyant as they were in week one of the NRL finals.The Panthers are still riding high from their elimination final win over Canterbury - their sixth victory in a row heading into Saturdays semi-final with the Raiders in the nations capital.Their expansive style has earned them plaudits for being one of the competitions most exciting teams, averaging 33 points a match over the past six weeks.But the warm spring weather they enjoyed against the Bulldogs in Sydney wont be there at GIO Stadium.Theres a 40 per cent chance of showers in the evening, while temperatures are expected to drop as low as two degrees.We understand its not going to be a real flat and fast track like it was last week but were at the stage of the year where no matter what the conditions youve got to be able to do the job, Griffin said on Friday.The game will probably close down a little bit on what we were used to last weekend where we had a nice warm, Sunday afternoon in Sydney.Thatll be the challenge for us: to addjust to the conditions because the Raiders are obviously used to those.ddddddddddddTo ensure his side was prepared for the potentially dewy ground, coach Ricky Stuart scheduled a training session under lights on Wednesday night.It didnt exactly go to plan, though, with rookie Clay Priest slipping and breaking his ankle - ruling him out for the season.His spot on the bench is likely to be filled by either Jeff Lima or Paul Vaughan.The Panthers have had better luck with injury, having not had to change their line-up this past month.The stability has yielded good results and instilled plenty of confidence, according to Griffin.Part of that has been driven by fullback Matt Moylan, who the coach said had been leading from the front in recent weeks.Hes getting a lot of touches of football but hes had very little error in him and thats been key for us, he said.Matts a big part of our structure in attack but hes a leader there and his calming influence on the other guys has been very strong. ' ' '