By the Numbers: Why Number 4 Is Legendary in Hockey—Béliveau, Orr, and Lowe’s Hall of Fame Legacy

2 min read• Published November 17, 2025 at 6:56 a.m. • Updated November 28, 2025 at 10:59 a.m.
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Every hockey fan has a few jersey numbers that instantly bring a player—or even a whole era—back into focus. Jersey number “4” is one of those special ones. It keeps showing up across NHL history, worn by players who helped shape the game in different but equally memorable ways.

Let’s take a closer look at three Hall of Famers who made the number “4” matter.

1. Jean Béliveau: A Canadian Icon Wearing #4

You don’t have to be a Montreal Canadiens fan to appreciate what Jean Béliveau meant to the game. He joined Montreal in the early 1950s, and from that moment on, he carried himself with the kind of poise and class you rarely see in any sport. Béliveau’s 10 Stanley Cups as a player tell part of the story, but anyone who watched him play will tell you the real impact was how he made people feel. For generations of fans, the number “4” in Montreal is Béliveau: leadership, grace, and the heartbeat of an era that shaped hockey in Quebec and far beyond.

2. Bobby Orr: Redefining What #4 Could Be

Then came Bobby Orr, who joined the NHL in the mid-1960s and basically rewrote the rulebook for defensemen. Even if you weren’t alive to see him play, you’ve probably seen clips—Orr flying up the ice, dangling through checks, making plays nobody else even imagined at the time. He wore number “4” for the Boston Bruins, but his reach crossed borders easily. Canadian kids watched him and suddenly wanted to be defensemen. Just think about that for a second—how often does a single player change what young players dream of becoming? Orr gave jersey number “4” a whole new personality: fast, fearless, and fun to watch. He didn’t just play hockey; he pushed it forward.

3. Kevin Lowe: A Defensive Pillar for the Edmonton Oilers

A different kind of number “4” emerged in Kevin Lowe, the first player ever drafted by the NHL’s Edmonton Oilers. While the Oilers of the 1980s were known for firepower and highlight-reel moments, Lowe brought the calm, steady presence every elite team needs. He wasn’t the one blasting home 50 goals, but he was the guy shutting things down when it mattered. Six Stanley Cups later (5 with Edmonton), his importance to those Edmonton teams is impossible to ignore. Ask long-time fans across Oil Country what jersey number “4” means to them, and you’ll hear words like dependable, tough, and team-first. Lowe’s version of number “4” wasn’t flashy—it was rock solid. And that’s why it stuck.

Why Jersey Number “4” Still Echoes Through Hockey’s Greatest Conversations

So while jersey numbers usually fade into the background, these three players made sure number “4” earned a place in hockey conversations that still pop up today—whether you're talking history, heroes, or the stories fans never get tired of telling.

Related: By the Numbers: Legendary Canadian NHL Goalies Who Gave #1 Its Meaning