After a week of lead-up, the 25th anniversary of Wayne Gretzkys Edmonton exit is finally here. But while it was the end of an era in Edmonton, it was not the end of a dynasty (a point that countless TSN.ca users have vehemently made over the past week). The Oilers would get stunned by Gretzkys Los Angeles Kings in the first round of the 1989 Stanley Cup playoffs and watch, stunned, as their provincial rivals the Calgary Flames lifted their one and only Stanley Cup to date. One year later, however, the dynasty would get its extension. After a regular season buoyed by a Hart Trophy performance from captain Mark Messier, the Oilers attended to unfinished business. After sweeping Gretzky and the Kings in the Smythe Division Final, the Oilers topped Chicago to take their sixth Clarence Campbell Bowl in eight years before dispatching the Presidents Trophy-winning Boston Bruins in the Final. The next two seasons would see the Oilers in the Conference Final, but 1992-93 would see the official end of the Oilers dynasty, kicking off a four-year run of early tee-times. So, what happened? The Gretzky trade is seen as many as the first straw in the unraveling of the Oiler dynasty, but in truth the beginnings can be traced to Gretzkys final season in Edmonton when Hall-of-Fame blue liner Paul Coffey withstood a contract dispute with owner Peter Pocklington, eventually forcing the team to deal him to the Pittsburgh Penguins. Edmonton got a solid return on Coffey with Craig Simpson. The Oilers also got blue line depth in Moe Mantha and Chris Joseph as well as forward Dave Hannan, but it was Simpson that paid immediate dividends, scoring 43 goals in 59 games for the 1987-88 Oilers. The next big move was Gretzky, of course. While the idea of "fair value" in trading possibly the greatest player of all-time cannot really be assessed, the Oilers did get a lot for Gretzky. Jimmy Carson - who still holds the NHL record for career goals before a players 20th birthday - was coming off a 55-goal season and would score 49 in his lone full season as an Oiler. Even the return on Carsons request to be dealt bounced the Oilers way with three crucial pieces to the 1990 Champions in Joe Murphy, Adam Graves and Petr Klima. Martin Gelinas would play 20 NHL seasons and over 1,200 career games. Adversity would hit the Oilers again in 1990-91 as Messier spent a large part of the season battling injuries and the dynasty was forced out. Jari Kurri found himself in a contract dispute with Pocklington and spent the entire season playing in Italy. The team performed well and made the Conference Final, but the writing for the glory days was on the wall. The levees broke in the following offseason as Kurri, Messier, Glenn Anderson, Grant Fuhr and Steve Smith were all dealt away between May and October and Graves would sign with the Rangers. Once again, the Oilers - despite trading their core - received value. Dealing Fuhr (who had lost his starters job to Bill Ranford) and Anderson netted them Vincent Damphousse, a 23-year-old with five years of NHL experience and three 25-plus-goal seasons under his belt. Kurri would net them Scott Mellanby, who would go on to a 22-year NHL career that would see him captain two different teams. Smith netted them enforcer Dave Manson and a pick that the Oilers would use to select Kirk Maltby, while the return on Messier would include Bernie Nicholls. The 30-year-old was a ways off from his 150-point days, but had still put up over 25 goals and over 70 points the previous year. Replacing a championship core that had been together for over a decade was a difficult ask for the Oilers, but the pieces they got in return - especially Carson, Simpson and Damphousse - seemed to be a good start on paper to keeping the team competitive. The undoing of the Oilers, apart from trading away the championship core was a combination of a decline of bad luck and impatience. Carsons early exit was not something the Oilers banked on and their handling of the three firsts was somewhat imprudent. They dealt the 1989 first prior to draft day, selected long-time NHLer Martin Rucinsky in 1991 but dealt him after just two games in an Oiler uniform and got just two games out of 1993 first-rounder Nick Stajduhar. Klima and Graves helped greatly in 1990, but they were both out of Edmonton within three years of their acquisition. Simpsons output stayed productive after his record 1987-88 output, racking up between 29 and 35 goals in each of the next three years, but he would be slowed by injury shortly thereafter and would have his career cut short after a back injury as a member of the Buffalo Sabres. Damphousse - like Carson - was a star in his debut Oilers season, scoring 38 goals in 1991-92. But like Carson, he would last just one year, getting dealt to the Montreal Canadiens for Shayne Corson the following summer and becoming a key piece in the Habs 1993 Cup run. Compounding this was the teams dry spell on the draft floor. The Oilers did not draft, develop and - most importantly - keep a high-calibre player between 1983 (when they drafted Esa Tikkanen) and 1993 (when they drafted Jason Arnott). As for the core of the dynasty, they would get their last hurrah – just not in Edmonton. The 1994 Cup Champion New York Rangers would boast seven players that had won Cups in Edmonton: Messier, Graves, Tikkanen, Anderson, Craig MacTavish, Kevin Lowe and Jeff Beukeboom. The Oilers would rebuild and revive in the mid-to-late 1990s with the likes of Doug Weight and Bill Guerin and later with Ales Hemsky and Anson Carter, but it was clear that the dynasty days were a thing of the past. Riley Ridley Womens Jersey . 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Dads a lawyer, moms a school teacher and among their brood of four are professionals in various disciplines including a sportsman. They are the kind of people who are skilled enough to find success anywhere but have chosen to stay at home in Zimbabwe, even as it lurches from one crisis to the next.All of my family lives here despite the troubles that the country has been through. We dont want to leave, Peter Moor tells ESPNcricinfo. I am extremely patriotic and even if financially, this is not the best place to be a cricketer, I dont want to go somewhere else.Especially not now, considering Moor is finally making it after years of trying to break into the international side. Having made his Test debut earlier this year, against New Zealand, now is an opportunity for him to build on his credentials against Sri Lanka at home.***A product of the prestigious St Johns College, Moors talent as wicket-keeper batsman was recognised young. He was picked for the Zimbabwe Under-19 side as a 16-year old and represented them at two youth World Cups - in 2008 and 2010 - on either side of what is regarded as among the most chaotic periods in Zimbabwean cricket. They had withdrawn from Test cricket, were muddling through limited-overs formats and the general unease had dripped down to lower levels.In 2008, Zimbabwe cricket was in shambles and we were underprepared and out of our depth, Moor remembers. When we got to the Under-19 World Cup, I remember seeing the other teams and being envious of the different kits they had, like the warm-up gear and the actual match shirts. We didnt seem to be on the same level.Zimbabwe lost all three group games by more than 70 runs, lost the ninth place playoff quarter-final by 99 runs to Nepal. They won the 13th place playoff semi-final before being defeated in the 13th place playoff to Ireland. Its fair to say it was a disastrous tour for all including Moor, who played four matches and scored 59 runs.Two years later, Zimbabwe had started to pull themselves together. They were attracting former internationals into the setup, begun to plan for a Test comeback and had the 2011 World Cup on their minds. At Moors age-group level, things were looking up. We had Kevin Curran as our coach and we were much better prepared. The important thing there was that we had the right selection. We didnt have hugely improved results but we had a better tournament.At that event, Zimbabwe still suffered heavy defeats to New Zealand, Sri Lanka and Ireland but beat the USA and Hong Kong to win the 13th place playoff. Moor had another average outing with 95 runs from five games, but returned home to a revamped domestic structure and a realistic possibility of turning cricket into a career.He was contracted to the Harare-based Mashonaland Eagles and had his parents support in his sporting endeavours. My dad was really happy that I was choosing cricket, he says.But it proved more difficult to establish himself than Moor imagined. For the first few seasons, he was unable to secure a regular spot in the team and began to wonder if he had made the right decision. He went on club stints to Ireland and England and concluded that the northern scene, wasnt for me. Although he doesnt go as far as saying he was homesick, he just couldnt see myself spending a lot of time there.Moor found his way in the 2013-14 season, when he moved to the Mid-West Rhinos, ushered by Grant Flower. He was my biggest coach and mentor, someone I talked to a lot and admired a lot.That season, Moor finished among the top 10 run-scorers in the Pro50 Championship . Even though his overall numbers were dominated by one century, he had made his mark. He was picked for Zimbabwes ODI squad to tour Bangladesh laterr that year, an outing that proved anything but fun.ddddddddddddBy the time Moor joined the touring party, Zimbabwe had lost the Test series 3-nil. He sat out the first two ODIs, which they also lost, played the next two, also as a member of the vanquished and was dropped for the final match. Zimbabwe returned home without a single victory.It would be more than a year before Moor was given another look in.In questioning himself again, Moor turned to cricket literature and immersed himself in biographies. He concluded his only option was to make his own luck. The biggest frustration was the lack of opportunity. I told myself that when I do get the chance, I have to make the most of it and be hard on myself about that. I worked on being mentally tougher, he says.Moor played for Zimbabwe A against Bangladesh A in November 2015 and scored two centuries in two first-class matches. Later that month, he scored another hundred in a first-class match. His form could not be ignored and, in the absence of Brendan Taylor who retired after the World Cup, Moor was picked for Zimbabwes limited-overs series against Afghanistan in 2015-16. He scored two half-centuries and a 42 in five ODIs games and showed his ability to adjust between formats. The way I bat is maybe more suited to short-format cricket because I like to play my shots and know my boundary options well but I have learned to bat for longer periods of time as well, he says of his game.He was only able to demonstrate the latter in August this year, when he was included in the Test squad to face New Zealand. Moor made his debut in the second match. There were tears when he received his cap from former Zimbabwe international Wayne James. His parents travelled from Harare to watch and he admitted to being quite emotional, about taking the field in whites. Then, he managed to out those feeling aside and proved himself a composed cricketer.With Zimbabwe 147 for 5 in response to New Zealands 582 for four declared, they needed someone to helped Craig Ervine restore respectability and Moor answered . He scored 71 in a 148-run partnership with Ervine but was not happy about getting out to a long hop after doing all the hard work.His chance to change that will come. Moor is part of the squad that will play Sri Lanka in two Tests starting Saturday, their last before another lengthy break. While he is not sure whether he will also keep wickets, his focus is on the collective performance Zimbabwe can put on. For us, its really important to compete and do well and show we are not a walkover. Maybe that will encourage other teams to tour us, he says.A triangular ODI series follows the Tests, which will be a chance to begin early preparations for the 2019 World Cup qualifier. For Zimbabwe, that tournament is as big as the World Cup itself. It is new coach Heath Streaks mandate to ensure Zimbabwe do not miss out on the showpiece event but Moor knows Streak cannot do it alone.It is everyones dream to play in a World Cup and we are desperate to qualify. We will do everything we can to make sure we get there, he says. Moor also hopes that in trying to improve, Zimbabwe will be able to retain their best players. Though he wont say it, he is an example of what can happen when they do. Zimbabwe definitely has a lot of talent but a lot of the guys leave before they reach the peak of their potential. Hopefully things come right soon.If they do, Moor wants to be at the forefront, which is why he has stayed. Id like to play in T20 leagues but one of my biggest goals is to captain Zimbabwe. Not now because I am not established enough but maybe one day. His family would want nothing else. ' ' '