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Even Bron has some continuity (wore 6 in Miami, 23 in Cleveland). It's very unusual that a star player change his number because usually guys don't change it for an arbitrary reason and in the past there was no marketing motivation to do so like there is today.
You had guys like Moses, Doc, Big O and Earl the Pearl with two different numbers retired, but they were with different franchises. I thought Pete Maravich was on that list also but apparently not. Foreseeably some guys with have two different numbers retired (e.g. Shaq) but none will be with the same franchise.
In MLB there are surprisingly few players with their number retired by two teams and almost all of them have the same number retired by both teams. There are exceptions like Carlton Fisk who had two different numbers retired, but it was by two different teams in each case.
In the NFL there are practically no player with their number retired twice under any circumstance. I think Reggie White and Sam Mills are the only players to have their number retired by two different teams and in both cases it's the same number, too.
In the NHL, there are also pretty few players with their number retired by two teams. You had a lot of continuity in the Original Six days and generally big stars have left after their primes. There are exceptions (Gretz, Mess, Roy, et al) in more modern times, I guess. The one guy who kinda sorta qualifies for what we are talking about is Ray Bourque. In addition to retiring his #77, Boston retired #7 during his career. It was retired for Phil Esposito, which is why Bourque changed to 77, but they surely would have retired it for Bourque also had he kept it. So it doesn't quite meet the criteria but it comes very close, since he wore 7 and 77 and both are retired. Oh, and he was one of the best defensemen ever to play.
And you will know MY JACKET IS GOLD when I lay my vengeance upon thee.
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