November 29, 2010

Len Lunde Dies

Sad news tonight as Len Lunde passed away this weekend.

Lunde was a solid second or third line checker with some play making ability. His professional hockey career would last 18 seasons, taking him all over the world, but only 321 times did he participate in a NHL game. Given how hard it was to crack a NHL line up in the days of the Original Six, this was no small feat.

The Campbell River, BC born Lunde was a dominant scorer in junior, starring with the Edmonton Oil Kings in the mid 1950s.

Read the full Len Lunde biography here.

The Great Tretiak: Montreal Hero


Jim Craig and Vladislav Tretiak shake hands following the American's shocking upset at the 1980 Winter Olympics.

Don't feel too bad for Tretiak though. He's got a few other gold medals to celebrate:


Dave Stubbs of the Montreal Gazette has a special piece on Tretiak and his special connection with the city of Montreal. Here's a quick sample:

"A happy if flight-delayed Tretiak landed back in Montreal from Moscow via Paris on Sunday evening, 41 years after he first arrived as a 17-year-old. He is delighted to be back for the auction that will benefit his foundation and that of Kovalev, the popular former Canadien who will arrive in town Tuesday following his Ottawa Senators game Monday in Ottawa.

“The first time I came to Montreal, I remember it the same as yesterday,” he said in his hotel suite Sunday night, his body telling him it was nearing 4 a.m. after an endless travel day. “Canada, for us, was a special country. It was very close to Russia on the mental side — we both loved hockey. I remember big cars. Good cars. Oldsmobiles, Chryslers, big Fords. Russian cars were not so big, the design didn’t look so good. Here, big streets, big downtown, big buildings.

“The first time I went to the Forum — unbelievable, fantastic.”

You can read the full Montreal Gazette article here. You can also view some excellent video courtesy of Stubbs at Habs Inside Out.

November 27, 2010

Hockey Books Make Kirstie's Day


Let's face it - hockey, like most sports, has always been dominated by males. In the last 20 years or so that has started to change some, as women's involvement in hockey is more and more accepted and anticipated. On the ice, on the broadcasts and in the stands.

Let's add on the bookshelves now too.

With a few very rare exceptions, hockey books (all print journalism really) has been completely dominated by men. But did you know that the best selling hockey author in the world right now is a woman?

According to the Globe and Mail Bestseller's list, Kirstie McLellan Day has two of the top ten books in all of Canada. She helped Bob Probert write his autobiography Tough Guy. And, still selling strong from 2009, she also helped write Theo Fleury's shocking autobiography Playing With Fire.

The only other hockey book ranked in the top ten non-fiction books in Canada right now is Don Cherry's Hockey Stories Part 2.

McLellan Day may is undoubtedly on par with the likes of Stephen Brunt and the late Jack Falla when it comes to hockey's top writers. Her ability to retell the tragic stories of Fleury and Probert while maintaining all the raw emotion is amazing.

That being said, she's leaving tragedy behind in her next project. Watch for Ron MacLean's autobiography in 2011!

November 25, 2010

Updating Hockey's Greatest Moustaches


Without doubt, Mike Brown of the Toronto Maple Leafs should be crowned as the current moustache champion of the hockey world. At least his incredible handlebar is easier to look at than Ian White's terrible moustache of years past.

But how does he measure up against the greatest moustaches in hockey history? I think it is time to update the most popular posting in GreatestHockeyLegends.com history.  But who do you drop to make room for Brown?

Did you know that November has been renamed Movember? Movember is when men grow mustaches in support of raising awareness and funds to fight prostate cancer. Visit Movember.com and consider ways you can contribute to fighting prostate cancer.

New Hockey Legends Profiled

I added a few new profiles of retired hockey players lately:

With things starting to slow down at HockeyBookReviews.com I hope to get back to regularly profiling former NHL and international players on a regular basis. We have close to 1400 players featured now! Enjoy the archives!

Pucks on the 'Net: Holy Smokes!

Here's an interesting article from the Toronto Star on smoking amongst hockey players:
"....a little known statistic about former NHL star Steve Larmer that doesn’t appear in record books: He puffed his way through more than a pack of cigarettes each day of his career.

Back in Larmer’s era, the ’80s and early ’90s, there were often a half-dozen smokers on every team. The players lit up on the way to the rink and between periods. Many were stars of the day: Guy Lafleur, Mike Bossy, Rick Vaive among others.

“Denis Savard and Larmer were two of the best players I ever played with, but they both smoked liked chimneys,” said former Leafs defenceman Bob McGill, who played, and smoked, with Larmer for four years in Chicago.
And don't think it does not happen still today.
"You’d be hard-pressed to find someone who admits to smoking cigarettes in the NHL these days. Those around the game say some still do it but do it less publicly due to the anti-smoking bylaws and stigma attached to smoking.

"Using snuff and chewing tobacco, however, still appears to be popular among many players, including Washington superstar Alex Ovechkin."
Elsewhere in news concerning former hockey stars:

November 23, 2010

Canada Cup '87 DVD Box Set

Attention all Canada Cup fans! You will definitely want to ask Santa for the new Canada Cup '87 DVD box set this Christmas.


For the first time ever, Canada's complete tournament, featuring all nine Team Canada games and including the dramatic three game final between Canada and the Soviet Union will be available on an exciting new six-disc DVD set that's a must-have for hockey fans everywhere! - Buy The DVD: Amazon.ca - Chapters - Amazon.com

This historic series has some of the greatest superstars playing in the prime of their careers. Legendary players such as WAYNE GRETZKY, MARIO LEMIEUX, MARK MESSIER, PAUL COFFEY and RAY BOURQUE among others face off against the equally brilliant IGOR LARIONOV, SERGEI MAKAROV, VLADISLAV FETISOV and the up and coming VALERI KAMENSKY – all pushing themselves to their personal limits in skill and emotion to win the last significant series between best on best prior to the breakup of the Soviet Union and the release of many Russian stars to the NHL.

MARIO LEMIEUX's goal, assisted by WAYNE GRETZKY in game 3 of the finals to win the Canada Cup was arguably one of the most memorable plays in Canadian hockey history.

Games included:
August 28, 1987: Canada 4 vs. CSSR 4
August 30, 1987: Canada 4 vs. Finland 1
September 2, 1987: Canada 3 vs. USA 2
September 4, 1987: Canada 5 vs. Sweden 3
September 6, 1987: Canada 3 vs. USSR 3
September 9, 1987: Canada 5 vs. CSSR 3, Semi-Final
September 11, 1987: Canada 5 vs. USSR 6, Final 1
September 13, 1987: Canada 6 vs. USSR 5, Final 2
September 15, 1987: Canada 6 vs. USSR 5, Final 3

Buy The DVD: Amazon.ca - Chapters - Amazon.com

Interested in this item? Also check out: Gretzky To Lemieux: The Story of the 1987 Canada Cup

November 22, 2010

Bobby Hull's Pickles

When Bobby Hull scored his record breaking 51st goal of the season in 1965-66, he was given 51 gifts including a hockey stick studded with 51 diamonds, 51 jars of pickles, 51 weeks' supply of tobacco, and 51 tubes of suntan oil. His wife was given gifts including 51 floor mops, while Brett and the other kids were each given 51 clusters of candy bars!
 
It's all in the new Eric Zweig book The Twenty Greatest Hockey Goals now featured over at HockeyBookReviews.com.

Pucks On The 'Net

Here's some random thoughts for a Monday:
  • As you likely already know, Pat Burns and Gaye Stewart died last week. Add Rolland Rousseau to the list. He was a Quebec senior star who played two games with the Montreal Canadiens in 1952-53.
  • I added three new profiles to the site this week: Lorne Davis (best known as Edmonton Oilers super-scout); Larry Wilson (father of Ron Wilson, the Toronto Maple Leafs coach) and Metro Prystai (what a great hockey name!) Research assist goes to Jennifer Conway.
  • Bankrupt baseball star Lenny Dykstra's house was sold in a foreclosure auction for $760,000 and change. Why is that notable here? Dykstra bought the house off of Wayne Gretzky in 2007 for $18.5 million!
  • Rough weekend for the Canucks, with back to back regulation time losses at home. It is the first time since January that the Canucks lost a regular season game in regulation on home ice.
  • Carey Price's shutout of Toronto on Saturday was the first time the Habs have blanked the Leafs in Montreal since Ken Dryden did the deed on November 12th, 1977!
  • Jarome Iginla is finally starting to find the back of the net, which is good news for my hockey pool. He had the 11th hat trick of his career on Friday. Only Kent Nilsson (14) and Theo Fleury (13) have had more in Calgary Flames history.
  • Interestingly, only 3 of Iginla's 11 hat tricks have come on home ice.

November 21, 2010

Bobby Hull Getting Into Christmas Spirit


Hockey great Bobby Hull is going to make his theatrical debut this holiday season.

The 72 year old Hall of Famer will join Charles Finch of the Make-A-Wish Foundation in a one-night-only appearance on December 14th at Chicago's Goodman Theatre production of “A Christmas Carol.” Hull will join the 11-year-old Finch onstage in select scenes throughout the Dec. 14 performance of the holiday favorite, capping off their appearance with a verse or two of “We Wish You A Merry Christmas.”

Over at HockeyBookReviews.com I take a look at Bobby's new coffee table style autobiography, The Golden Jet. It is a neat project that I hope other hockey greats will adopt.

November 19, 2010

Pat Burns Dies

The hockey world has lost a legend as Pat Burns has died today.

Somewhere up in heaven tonight you know the great hockey coaches of yesteryear getting ready for a great discussion about hockey strategy.

Check out this special tribute posting at Kuklas Korner for Pat Burns.

Gaye Stewart Dies

Sad news as former Toronto Maple Leafs standout Gaye Stewart has died:

From Slam! Sports (stick tap to Kevin Shea):

Gaye Stewart, whose eventful NHL career included two Stanley Cups with the Maple Leafs and stints with five of the six Original Six teams, passed away Thursday night at a Burlington hospital at age 87.

Here is my original profile of Gaye Stewart.

Classic Hockey Fight: Bob Gassoff vs. Fred O'Donnell

These two may not be the most memorable names in hockey's pugilistic lore, but they sure had a doozie on this night:

November 18, 2010

Butch Bouchard's Two Goal Hat Trick

Glen Harmon was a long-forgotten Montreal Canadiens defenseman. He may be best remembered nowadays for the quirky fact that he spent his summers working in his wife's hat store.

Before a game against Detroit, Harmon brought in one particular hat that Butch Bouchard really wanted. But when Harmon informed him of the price, Bouchard scoffed. So Harmon made his team captain a deal. If Butch Bouchard scored 2 goals against Detroit that night, he would get the hat free of charge. Bouchard - who had scored just 4 goals in the first half of the season - went out and scored both goals in a 2-0 victory.

At the end of the night Bouchard happily collected his prize.

November 17, 2010

Horner Met His Match

Toronto's Red Horner was hockey's baddest boy back in the 1930s. The in one particular playoff game against Detroit in 1940, the NHL penalty king met his match - a woman in the stands.

With Toronto leading 3-1 in game 2 when a huge fight broke out in the final minute of play. Horner, of course, was at the center of it all. He fought Black Jack Stewart, then Jimmy Orlando, then Ebbie Goodfellow and finally Alex Motter.

The officials finally calmed Horner down and got him off the ice. That's when the unknown lady attacked Horner. She smacked him with her purse and then reached down and started pulling on his hair.

Horner quickly retreated to the safety of the dressing room!

November 16, 2010

Pucks On The 'Net

A few random thoughts on the world of hockey:
  • Less than a year ago Steven Stamkos was a long shot at best to play for Team Canada at the 2010 Olympics. Now he is quite arguably the best player in hockey. 
  • Another player who would most certainly be a lock on Team Canada if they picked a team today - Claude Giroux of the Flyers. 
  • I think the most underrated player in the NHL today might very well be Alex Steen of the Blues. I suppose this should not be too surprising. His dad Thomas Steen was one of the NHL's best kept secrets when he played with the Winnipeg Jets. Both eat up big minutes in important situations - including both specialty team units - yet their offensive totals never truly reflected just how important their contributions really were.
  • I'm hearing a lot of mainstream media support for Steve Larmer for induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame. This surprises me. Larmer was a consistent, high level performer for a long time, and as classy as an individual hockey has ever seen. But he was never really an elite hockey player. In fact he may be the poster boy for the Hall Of The Very Good, along with Brian Propp and Rick Middleton. So far the Hall has made the right call on Larmer - leaving him on the outside looking in.

November 14, 2010

Hockey Book of the Year?



As many of you know, I also run the website HockeyBookReviews.com . Here's a quick link list to the books I've reviewed so far. Any suggestions for 2010 Hockey Book of the Year?

New For 2010

100 Things Bruins Fans Should Know by Matt Kalman
100 Things Flyers Fans Should Know by Adam Kimelman
A Passion To Win by Lou Nanne
Battle of Alberta Trivia Book by Mike Leonetti
Best of the Best by Scott Morrison/Hockey Night In Canada
Blood Feuds by The Hockey News
Canada's Top 100 Greatest Athletes by Maggie Mooney
Canuck Captains by Jason Farris
Canucks At 40 by Greg Douglas, Grant Kerr
The Day I (Almost) Killed Two Gretzkys by James Duthie
The Diary of a Dynasty by Kevin Shea, Paul Patskou
Discrimination in the NHL by Bob Sirois
Don Cherry's Hockey Stories Part 2 by Don Cherry
Eddie Shore And That Old Time Hockey by C. Michael Hiam
Final Call by Kerry Fraser
The Glory Of Our Game by Richard Buell
The Golden Jet by Bobby Hull with Bob Verdi
Gold Medal Diary by Hayley Wickenheiser
The Greatest Game by Todd Denault
Hawkeytown by Chicago Tribune
The Hockey Book by Sports Illustrated
Hockey Greats: Awesome Centres by Mike Leonetti
Hockey Is A Funny Game by Merv Magus
Hockey Hall of Fame Book of Goalies by HHOF
Hockey Now! (Sixth Edition) by Mike Leonetti
Hockey's Top 100: Game's Greatest Goals by Weekes and Banks
Hockey Superstitions by Andrew Podnieks
I Am Not Making This Up by Al Strachan
Junior Hockey's Royal Franchise - The Regina Pats
The Making Of Slap Shot by Jonathon Jackson
Michigan Ice Hockey by Greg Nelson
The Mighty Blackhawks by Chicago Sun-Times
Next Ones: Hockey's Future Superstars by Lorna Shultz-Nicholson
Official Guide To Players of HHOF by HHOF
The Ovechkin Project by Damien Cox and Gare Joyce
Play Better Hockey by Ron Davidson
Reflections: Best of the Decade by NHL
Retired Numbers by Andrew Podnieks
They Call Me Killer by Brian Kilrea/James Duthie
Tim Horton: Stanley Cups to Coffee Cups by Don Quinlan
Total Penguins by Rick Buker
Tough Guy by Bob Probert with Kirstie McLellan Day
Twenty Greatest Hockey Goals by Eric Zweig
We Are The Champions by The Hockey News
The Year Of The Blackhawks by Andrew Podnieks

New to Paperback
Gretzky's Tears - Stephen Brunt
I'd Trade Him Again - Peter Pocklington
Playing With Fire - Theoren Fleury

Fiction/Other
Becoming Canada by Ken Dryden
Dragons, Donkey and Dust by Rudy Kong 
The Hanging Tree by Bryan Gruley
The Hockey News All New Top 100 (commemorative magazine)
The Penalty Killing by Michael McKinley

Kids Books

Brady Brady and the Missed Hatrick by Mary Shaw
Freddy's Hockey Hero by Susan Chalker Browne
Hockey 123 - My First Hockey Book by Christopher Jordan
Hockey ABC - My First Hockey Book by Christopher Jordan
Hockey Colours - My First Hockey Book by Christopher Jordan
Hockey Shapes - My First Hockey Book by Christopher Jordan
Hockey Opposites by Per Henrik Gurth
One Hockey Night by David Ward with Brian Deines
Thanks To My Hockey Coach by

Young Adult
Delaying The Game by Lorna Schultz-Nicholson
The Hat Trick by Tom Earle
Hockey Superstars by Paul Romanuk
Jarome Iginla by Nicole Martillaro
Jordin Tootoo by Melanie Florence
Something To Prove: Bobby Clarke by Nicole Martillaro
The Mighty Tim Horton by Mike Leonetti
Peter Puck's Big Book of Hockey by Brian McFarlane
Rink Rivals by Jacqueline Guest
Roughing by Lorna Schultz-Nicholson

The Hockey Cave

Every good hockey fan needs a hockey room, or a hockey cave as I call it. A place to enjoy games by yourself, surrounded by your collection of jerseys and sticks and memorabilia. Give me my hockey stuff, my big screen and my computer and I'm set!

My personal hockey cave lacks cool wall fixtures. I hang jerseys up there, but it is not quite as cool as an autographed Wayne Gretzky lithograph. Late in their current offering, Classic Auctions has some very reasonable prices on some perfect wall hangings.

First on my list would be the two (1 and 2) Steve Csorba canvas lithographs of Wayne Gretzky. Raising the Cup, pictured to the right, is my personal favorite.

Michel Lapensee has a beautiful offering of Rocket Richard, although I find his piece on Jean Beliveau is particularly striking.

Still with the Habs, Glen Green has a stunning piece on Guy Lafleur. Green also has a take on Jean Beliveau

Red Wings fans will undoubtedly recognize this great lithograph. This one is extra special as it is autographed by Gordie Howe, Ted Lindsay and Sid Abel..

If autographed framed photos are more to your liking, there is lots to choose from here. My favorites: Wayne Gretzky as a Ranger and Rocket Richard and Allan Stanley shaking hands.

All of these great items can be had for very reasonable prices.

November 13, 2010

Numbers Game


You have to be a Canadian of a certain vintage to recognize this picture. It is the once world famous Dionne Quintuplets, here all wearing Toronto Maple Leafs jerseys. Born near Callandar, Ontario way back in 1934 (long before anyone heard of Kate Plus Eight), the sisters are famous for being the first known set of quintuplets in the world to survive infancy.

About a month ago I did a story about a set of triplets playing hockey in Nanaimo, British Columbia. Bruce Hutchinson of the National Post has more on their story.

Win This Scotiabank Hockey Club Prize Pack

The Scotiabank Hockey Club is kicking off The Big Save contest. The idea: teach kids about teamwork through hockey and about saving money. Two worthwhile causes which is why I have agreed to support this cause.

The grand prize will be to send one lucky youth hockey team to Whitehorse, Yukon for Hockey Day In Canada in 2011. Prize includes: airfare, hotel accommodations, ground transportation, meals and lots of fun activities - a grand prize worth $45,000. Here are the full details and entry form.

For supporting this initiative, the nice people at Scotiabank have given me this Scotiabank Hockey Club prize pack to give away to one lucky reader. Here's a look at the prize pack treasures that can outfit the entire family.


How can you win it? Simple. In the comments section of this posting, tell me your favorite Canadian hockey memory. It could be the Sidney Crosby's Golden Goal. Or Jayna Hefford's epic goal at the 2002 Olympics. Or Gretzky to Lemieux in 1987. Or Henderson scoring for Canada way back in 1972.

A winner will be randomly selected from amongst the commentors. So enter today. Contest closes on November 30th, with a winner annouced on December 2nd.

November 12, 2010

Baby Bep

Armand "Bep" Guidolin is and almost certainly always will be known as the youngest player to ever perform in the National Hockey League.

When he debuted with the Boston Bruins on November 12th of 1942, he was just 16 years old! Due to war-time player shortages the Bruins used several youngsters that season. Guidolin played on a line with 17 year old Don Gallinger and 20 year old Bill Shill. With the famed "Kraut Line" of Milt Schmidt, Woody Dumart and Bobby Bauer absent from the Bruins line up due to war commitments, the Boston press was quick to dub the rookie line as the "Sprout Line."

Guidolin spent 4 seasons with the B's, though he missed the 1944-45 season due to his own military service. He later played with Chicago and Detroit in the NHL before rounding out his career with several seasons in the minor leagues. By 1958 he was reinstated as an amateur in Canada and helped the Belleville McFarlands win the Allan Cup.

Read the full Bep Guidolin biography, including his impact on Wayne Gretzky's Edmonton Oilers

November 11, 2010

War And Hockey History

War has made a significant impact on hockey history.

The NHL has continued play through many conflicts, with the two World Wars having the most profound effect on the league. Many players interrupted their careers, either voluntarily or through conscription, for military service. With so many players serving during World War II, the NHL debated shutting the league down. But at the urging of both the Canadian and US governments, the NHL announced prior to 1942-43 season that the league would continue to operate "in the interest of public morale."

NHL team owners often successfully ensured that star players received non-combat assignments, serving with training bases or supply firms back in Canada. The armed forces and Canadian government also found value in such an arrangement. The special "home defense draft" ensured most hockey players stayed away from the battlefields and thats highly competitive hockey leagues were formed on these bases, creating a nice diversion from war life for all troops and the communities.

Very Few Casualties

In fact only two NHL players died in either of the World Wars. Hockey researcher Patrick Houda suggests that "more than 100 NHL players fought in World War I and World War II," but there were very few causalities.

"There are actually very few NHL'ers who died in the war. The only known casualties are Dudley "Red" Garrett and Joe Turner, pictured to the right, both killed in 1944, just three weeks apart."

Pre-NHLers Allan "Scotty" Davidson and George Richardson, both Hall of Famers, died in World War I. Hobey Baker, the famed American star on the ice and in the air, died in a post-World War I accident before he had a chance to play in the NHL.

"It's quite amazing given the fact how many fought in both World War I and World War II," adds Houda.

The Society for International Hockey Research has a complete listing of players who served one way or another in the war.

Conn Smythe - P.O.W. Turned Major

In fact the NHL's most famous connection with war lies with not a player but owner and manager Conn Smythe.

The take-no-prisoners builder of the Toronto Maple Leafs was himself a prisoner of war in World War I. Serving in the battle fields with the artillery and then later in the air with the air force, he was shot down by German forces in October, 1917 and would serve 14 months imprisoned. That, nor his immense business and hockey success or his age (nearly 50), did not make Smythe hesitate to return to the battlefields in World War II. He was badly injured by shrapnel in France in 1944.

Howie Meeker, one of Smythe's Maple Leaf prospects, was so badly injured by a grenade blast he was told he may never walk again let alone play hockey. Needless to say he did return to the ice, edging out Gordie Howe for rookie of the year honors in 1946-47.

The NHL Adjusts

The depletion of NHL rosters created opportunities for athletes who might otherwise have never played an NHL game. By 1942-43 approximately 80 NHL players were in the armed forces, gutting rosters around the six team league.

As mentioned, this opened opportunities for many players. Players like Bep Guidolin, who at only 16 was too young for conscription. Needless to say he was the youngest player ever in NHL history.

An oft injured forward with the Canadiens also got his chance, and responded by scoring 50 goals in 50 games. Rocket Richard's immortal status in Montreal was born.

In response to the dilution of talent during World War II, the league changed its rules to encourage a faster paced game. Until 1943, a player was not allowed to make a forward pass across his own blue line. That changed in the 1943-44 season, when the NHL ruled that players could pass from their defensive zone up to the middle of the rink, which would be marked by a new red line at center ice. This changed the game drastically, as many returning war veterans discovered upon their return. Also, regular season overtime had to be discontinued due to wartime curfew restrictions. OT would not return for 41 years.

The NHL talent effluence was said to have clearly have deteriorated play in the mid-1940s, regardless of NHL rule changes. Yet all of the Original Six franchises continued to do well at the gate. Interestingly though, errant pucks into the audience had to be returned because of the wartime rubber shortage.

The war also shifted the power balance in the league, with Montreal placing building blocks that would make them the dominant team of the next few decades. The Habs were often successful finding jobs for players and prospects in essential industries like munitions and shipbuilding, the Montreal Canadiens kept their talent home, building the foundation for several Stanley Cup championships.

The Bruins and the Rangers, two league powers as the 1940s started, were especially hit hard by players leaving for war. It is no coincidence that these two teams plummeted immediately in the standings, and struggled for years beyond that.

No conflicts since World War II have directly effected the NHL, though hockey continues to be a great morale booster for troops serving both in Canada or the United States and overseas. Memorable moments in recent history include the American national anthem being played at the NHL All Star Game in old Chicago Stadium in 1991, just as the Gulf War broke out. Also, the Stanley Cup's arrival in enemy territory to visit Canadian troops serving inside Afghanistan in the 2000s.

The International Game

International hockey has often played out against a backdrop of tension and conflict. From the 1960s through the 1980s, games between North American and Soviet Bloc teams reflected Cold War tensions.

Players of international note also served in actual battle. In the book World of Hockey, European hockey experts Birger Nordmark and Patrick Houda compiled a list of 34 international players whose lives were ended in either World War I or II, including 3 Canadians, 4 Germans, 4 Romanians, 5 Finns, and 6 Poles.

Houda also writes a chapter where he highlights some war heroes with hockey ties, specifically Bram van der Stok of the Netherlands and prince Bazu Cantacuzino of Romania.

Here in Canada the Winnipeg Falcons served quite famously in World War I. Upon their arrival home they returned to the ice and became the Canadian Allan Cup amateur champions and then the very first Olympic hockey champions, in 1920. Teammates/best friends Frank Fredrickson and Konnie Johannesson (pictured to the right, courtesy WinnipegFalcons.com) were expert fighter pilot instructors for the allied forces.

World War II saw the cancellation of the World Championships from 1940 through 1946.

By The Way: Former hockey players are still getting involved with the armed forces to this day.

Ben Stafford, who spent four seasons with the AHL Philadelphia Phantoms, the Flyers' American Hockey League affiliate, deployed for Iraq as a member of the United States Marine Corps.

Stafford is a Yale graduate was part of the Phantoms' 2005 Calder Cup championship team, playing along side the likes of Mike Richards, Jeff Carter and close friend Antero Niittymaki.

Harry Hyland

One of hockey's earliest stars was Harry Hyland, a goal scoring right winger from Montreal who played mostly in his hometown and most famously with the Montreal Wanderers from about 1910 through 1918. 

"A fast skater with powerful, accurate shot," Hyland knew how to score goals. He once scored 8 times in a single game (January 25th 1913 against the Quebec Bulldogs). He scored a hat trick in the Stanley Cup championship game in 1910. He scored 4 goals in the PCHA championship game in 1912. He is the 4th highest scorer in National Hockey Association (fore-runner to the NHL) history. And on opening night in NHL history on December 19th, 1917, he scored no less than five times! In total (NHA, PCHA, NHL) he scored 198 goals in 159 big league games.

Harry Hyland was born in Montreal on January 21, 1889. He grew falling in love with the game of hockey, and soon became one of it's greatest heroes.

Harry played for the Montreal Galics, the St. Ann's and the Shamrocks. He entered into the Eastern Canadian Hockey Association (ECHA) by becoming a member of the Montreal Shamrocks while still within the junior age limit. Harry shared his ECHA debut with the famous Joe Malone who too was new into the league playing for the Quebec Bulldogs. Their introduction to the league were against one another where Harry scored twice leading the Shamrocks to a slight victory of 9-8 over the Bulldogs. Harry had an astounding first year racking up nineteen goals in the eleven games he played.

During the 1909-1910 season Harry played for the Montreal Wanderers...just in time to make a run for the Stanley Cup. During the two years with the Wanderers, Harry showed he was not much a playmaker as he was a pure goal scorer.

For the 1911-1912 season, the Pacific Canadian Hockey Association (PCHA) managed to get Hyland to play for the New Westminster Royals. In fifteen games, Harry terrorized goalies with a smashing twenty six goals! This amazing feat led his team to capture the league championship.

In 1913 Hyland - a small but tough little bugger - rejoined the Wanderers. On January 27, 1913 he scored eight goals which landed him in second for the highest single game total in history of the National Hockey Association (NHA). The only two people to do better were Newsy Lalonde and Tommy Smith who both managed to score nine goals in a single game.

Most famously teaming with Odie Cleghorn and Gordon Roberts, Harry remained with the Wanderers until they joined the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 1917 - 1918 season. At this time Harry was picked up by Ottawa in the dispersal draft after Montreal's arena was destroyed by a fire. That year Harry retired from the NHL.

Harry is one of the few players to win two national championships; the Stanley Cup with the Montreal Wanderers (1909-1910) and the Minto Cup, symoblic of the Canadian Professional Lacrosse supremacy, with the Montreal Shamrocks.

Harry Hyland was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1962. Seven years later on August 8, 1969 Harry passed away.

25th Anniversary of Pelle Lindbergh's Death

On this date in 1985 Pelle Lindbergh, the Flyers great goaltender, died in a drinking and driving automobile accident. He was just 26 years old.

Here's a viodeo of Flyers fan visiting Lindbergh's final resting place near Stockholm on November 11th, 2010 to offer respects on behalf of all Flyers fans.



If you didn't see this book from 2009, be sure to check out the memorial book Pelle Lindbergh: Behind The White Mask.

Hockey Firsts: First Empty Net Goal

On November 11th, 1943 the National Hockey League recorded it's first empty net goal.

Trailing 5-4 late in a game against Chicago, Boston coach Art Ross pulled his goalie in favor of the extra attacker. But Clint "Snuffy" Smith broke in on the unattended goal and, despite Bruins defender Flash Hollett's best attempts, scored into the empty net to seal the victory.

Smith was a pint sized scorer whose impressive career landed him in the Hockey Hall of Fame. He scored 161 goals and 397 points in 10 seasons, but his most impressive number was his 24 career penalty minutes. Yes, you read that right. The two time Lady Byng Trophy winner only had 12 minor infractions in 483 games! In three seasons he went completely penalty free, and in three others he took only one minor penalty each season. In his final season, 1946-47, he practically gooned the ice up with his 6 minutes in 52 games.

Read more about Clint "Snuffy" Smith here.

November 10, 2010

Eddie Wiseman

Small in stature (5'7" and 160lbs), Eddie Wiseman scored a few big goals in the 1930s and 1940s.

Wiseman, originally a Detroit Red Wings, joined the New York Americans in 1935. Over the next 4 years he and Gene Carr battled for top billing on the Amerks right wing. Relying on his speed as his main weapon, Wiseman scored 12, 14, 18 and 12 goals respectively.

Wiseman, who was born in Newcastle, New Brunswick but hailed from Regina, Saskatchewan, was traded to Boston part way through the 1939-40 season. Who was the player he was traded for? The legendary Eddie Shore. The Bruins were just looking to dump their aging and increasingly cantankerous star. Wiseman was not exactly fair trade value, but the Bruins took him anyways. The New York Times described Wiseman as a "no better than average hockey player."

The Bruins did not regret acquiring Wiseman. He played well in Boston, especially in the following season. After a strong regular season that saw him score 16 times and assist on 24 others (6th best total in the NHL) for a career best 40 points, he led all NHL shooters with 6 playoff goals as the Bruins won the 1941 Stanley Cup.

Wiseman would play one more year in the NHL before World War II interrupted and, for all intents and purposes, ended his hockey carer. He served with the Royal Canadian Air Force out of Saskatoon while also playing senior hockey with the Air Force team.

When all was said and done, Eddie Wiseman played in 454 NHL games, scoring 115 goals and 165 assists for 280 points. In the playoffs he added 10 goals and 20 points in 45 contests.

Wiseman, who was also noted for his ability on the golf course, would go on to coach junior hockey in Saskatchewan. He would also serve as the Bruins western Canada scout. He eventually settled in Red Deer, Albert and opened real estate and insurance businesses.

Eddie Wiseman died in Red Deer on May 4th, 1977.

Billy Colvin Dies

Bill Colvin died on November 3rd, 2010.

You can be forgiven if you don't know immediately know who Bill Colvin was. He never played in the NHL. But he did play for Canada in the Olympics.

He was a solid player with the St. Michael's Majors in the 1950s. He joined the Kitchener Waterloo-Dutchmen in 1955-56. They won the Allan Cup championship as Canada's top amateur team in 1955, meaning they were automatically selected to represent Canada at the Olympic Games in Cortina, Italy. Canada, quite infamously, won the bronze medal that year.



Colvin, pictured above third from the left in the back row, briefly played some semi-pro with the Toledo Mercurys of the IHL in 1956-57, but returned to Kingston to play some senior hockey while continuing his education. He would enjoy a 30 year career as a lawyer.

Bill, who also was at one time a teacher, was married for 48 years and had three sons and four grandchildren. 

How About A Red Wings Sweater For Christmas?


447 wins. 103 shutouts. 4 Stanley Cups.

He is arguably the greatest goalie in hockey history. And now you can own Terry Sawchuk's game worn sweater. This photo-matched wool sweater comes from the 1954-55 season when Sawchuk was near the top of his game.

Mind you, it will cost you a pretty penny. Actually a lot of pretty pennies. It looks like by the time this auction is said and done, you could also buy a decent car for the cost of this sweater. But this is so much cooler.

If that is out of your price range, why not take a look at this beautiful Detroit Red Wings cardigan from the same time period. It  belonged  Jimmy Skinner, a Red Wings coach in the 1950s. It's a beautiful item, and a  fraction of the cost.

Here's a direct link to all the Detroit Red Wings items available at the current Classic Auctions offering, including

November 09, 2010

Tuesday Top Tens: Things You Didn't Know About Slap Shot


It is a cult classic, the top hockey movie of all time. Many fans can recite famous lines in their sleep. And everyone knows of the Hanson Brothers and old time hockey, like Eddie Shore!

Of course I am referring to the 1978 Paul Newman movie Slap Shot. But how well do you really know the iconic film?

Here's the top things you did not know about the movie Slap Shot, as chosen by Jonathan Jackson, author of The Making of Slap Shot - Buy the book - Amazon.ca - Chapters - Amazon.com - Read the full review


* Al Pacino wanted the role of Reggie Dunlop and could have had it if he had played his cards right.
 
* Peter Strauss was considered to play Ned Braden but broke his leg during his audition.

* Henry Winkler, aka The Fonz, was almost cast as one of the Hanson Brothers.
 
* Allan Nicholls, who played Chiefs captain Johnny Upton, is the grandson of a Hockey Hall of Fame
netminder Riley Hern.

* The character Nick Brophy was originally to have been named Nick Fotiu, after the future New York Ranger whose pro hockey career began in the North American Hockey League, on which Slap Shot's Federal League was based.

* Paul D'Amato also considers himself a pacifist who needed coaching and some unwitting inspiration from Bobby Schmautz of the Boston Bruins in order to play a convincing goon.

* The character Tim McCracken was inspired by real life veteran tough guy Ted McCaskill, the father of baseball pitcher Kirk McCaskill.

* It's well known that Washington Capitals coach Bruce Boudreau was an extra in Slap Shot, but so was future NHL referee Paul Stewart.
 
* The late Brad Sullivan, who played the lecherous Mo Wanchuk, was a born-again Christian who was uncomfortable with the character he immortalized.

 * When the Carlson brothers first arrived in Johnstown, Pa., to begin their career with the Jets, they really did attack a pop machine.

Here's the full review of The Making of Slap Shot courtesy HockeyBookReviews.com.

A Gift Fit For A Queen



On November 9th, 1952 Rocket Richard scored the 325th goal of his NHL career. With great fanfare he had broken Nels Stewart's record for most NHL goals scored in a career.

But did you know that the famous puck that Richard scored with does not reside in the Hockey Hall of Fame or in the Richard family collection? No, it was forwarded by Canadian government officials to Queen Elizabeth II as a souvenir.

November 05, 2010

Hockey Hall of Fame Weekend



The Hockey Hall of Fame is set to induct 608 goal scorer Dino Ciccarelli and female pioneers Angela James and Cammi Granato into the player's category. In addition, Jimmy Devellano and the late Doc Seaman in the builder's category.

"The Hockey Hall of Fame is proud to welcome these five hockey legends as Honoured Members," said Jim Gregory, who along with Pat Quinn co-chairs the Hockey Hall of Fame selection committee. "Their contributions to the game of hockey are well documented and their election to the Hockey Hall of Fame is richly deserved."

Scroll through the front page of GreatestHockeyLegends.com for full details. Also, here's a look at the Class of 2011 and who will be the Next Women to be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame

Cammi Granato: American Beauty

"When you think women's hockey, you think Cammi Granato. She's one of the pioneers. The one who opened the doors. So many little girls wanted to be Cammi Granato."
-- Mike Eruzione, captain of 1980 Miracle on Ice team

If Cammi Granato was not the best female hockey player ever, then she was almost certainly the most recognizable.

When women's hockey took to the main stage of the 1998 Olympic games, Granato was fawned over as the sister of NHL role player Tony Granato. By the end of the Olympics everyone recognized Cammi as the best American female player, if not the best in the world.

By the time her career ended, she was women's hockey's all time leading scorer, tallying 54 goals and 96 points in 54 international games. Her trophy case included 1 Olympic gold and 1 silver, as well as 1 World Championship gold and 8 silver.

In 2007 she was honoured with the NHL’s Lester Patrick Award for outstanding service to hockey in the U.S. She was inducted into the International Ice Hockey Federation's Hall of Fame in 2008. And now in 2010 she joins Angela James as the first women inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Read the full Hall of Fame story of Cammi Granato.

Angela James: Hall of Fame Pioneer

The year is 1998. For the first time in Olympic history, women's hockey will be included as a medal sport at the Winter Olympic Games in Nagano, Japan.

It is a great victory for women hockey players around the globe. So many women had pioneered the sport to this moment. Finally women's hockey had arrived at it's grandest stage.

Team Canada had an incredibly difficult decision to make, however. Hockey Canada desperately wanted to win the inaugural gold medal, and that would take the best 20 female players in the country to stave off the upstart Americans. In an unthinkable move Team Canada decided the top 20 did not include the legendary Angela James, the leading name in women's hockey.

She was so vital to the women's hockey scene that the decision to leave her off the roster of the 1998 Olympic Team was every bit as controversial as the decision to leave Mark Messier off the men's team that same year.

Read the full Hall of Fame story of Angela James, one of hockey's greatest pioneers.

Dino Ciccarelli: Hall of Fame Garbage Man

Dino Ciccarelli was hockey's version of a sanitation engineer. He scored over 600 NHL goals, seemingly all of them by parking himself in front of the net and banging away at rebounds and loose pucks. Meet Dino Ciccarelli - garbage man.

"It's just a matter of getting the puck on the net and getting traffic in front of the goalies. I don't know why more teams don't do it. I still believe 90% of the goals scored are ugly goals, 10% are pretty goals. You won't find many of mine on the highlight films," explained Ciccarelli.

While scoring more than 600 garbage goals landed him in the Hockey Hall of Fame, there was a time when it didn't look like any NHL team was willing to take a chance on the high scoring junior star. A badly broken leg in his second year of junior resulted in doctors telling Ciccarelli he'd never be able to play hockey again.

Read the full Hall of Fame story of Dino Ciccarelli's career.

November 04, 2010

HHOF Class of 2011?



Now that the Hockey Hall of Fame has welcomed the class of 2010, the focus will turn to the class of 2011.

2011 features a weak class of first year eligible candidates. Ed Belfour headlines a group that also includes Trevor Linden, Glen Wesley, Derian Hatcher, Stu Barnes and Dallas Drake. As much as I love Linden and Hatcher, it is safe to say Belfour is the only candidate with a legitimate shot at making the cut.

As of this publishing Belfour ranks third in career goalie wins (484), is tied for ninth with Tony Esposito in shutouts (76), is tied for fourth with Isles great Billy Smith for playoff victories (88). He won a Stanley Cup in 1999, two Vezinas, a Calder Trophy, four William Jennings Trophies for the league’s best GAA and had five all-star appearances.

His list of accomplishments should one day get him inducted. But I don't think it will be in 2011.

While many complain about how low the bar is set for Hall of Fame induction, the goaltending standards are surprisingly tough. Comparable goalies to Belfour who remain on the outside looking in include Tom Barrasso and Mike Vernon. If those two are made to wait, maybe Belfour will be, too.

Also working against the Eagle's immediate chances are some off ice-incidents. Sportsmanship and character are parameters for induction, and the holier-than-thou selection committee has made others pay with exclusion (Barrasso) or lengthy waits (Dino Ciccarelli, Glenn Anderson). Unless Belfour can give the selection committee the one billion dollars that the Dallas police force never received from him, it is highly likely Belfour will be made to wait until another year.

So who is likely to be enshrined in the Hall of Fame in 2011? One thing is for sure - I give up trying to predict it. There is a serious back-log of good candidates, and it would seem like the opportune time to get some of those players in. Then again, they had the same opportunity in 2010, but failed to do so.

A maximum of four players can be inducted in one year. The back-log of players that will comprise the 2011 ballot includes: Doug Gilmour, Joe Nieuwendyk, Eric Lindros, Pavel Bure, Alexander Mogilny , John Leclair, Peter Bondra, Adam Oates, Theo Fleury, Guy Carbonneau, Dave Andreychuk, and Sergei Makarov.

I am not saying all of those players should be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame, but they are the top candidates. It is in the committee's best interests to clear a few names from the docket - one way or the other - as the class of 2012 looks strong - Mats Sundin, Jeremy Roenick, Brendan Shanahan, Gary Roberts, Claude Lemieux, Olaf Kolzig and Markus Naslund.

If I had a vote for the 2011 induction I would continue to support Gilmour, Nieuwendyk, Lindros and Oates.

Who Should Be The Next Women In The Hockey Hall Of Fame?

Now that Angela James and Cammi Granato have been enshrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame, the question becomes who will be the next women to be included in hockey's most hallowed halls.

Here's a look at some worthy candidates:

Manon Rheaume - Ironically, she may not have the most impressive resume amongst female players, but she is probably the most famous. By playing in a NHL exhibition game and subsequently playing in the minor leagues, Manon Rheaume legitimized women's hockey and brought it to the mainstream like no other player. Her contributions will one day land her in the Hall of Fame.

Geraldine Heaney - Canada's "female Bobby Orr" was arguably the best offensive blueliner in Canadian women's hockey history. She won six world championships, twice while being named best defenseman. Heaney, who was also a great in-line skate players in the world, won Olympic gold in 2002 and Olympic silver in 1998. gold-medal victory in 2002.  In 2008 Heaney joined Cammi Granato and Angela James as the first women to be inducted into the International Ice Hockey Hall of Fame.

Cassie Campbell-Pascall - Canada's golden captain at the 2002 and 2006 Olympic Games, Cassie Campbell has always been a leader. A heady player who played both on defense and at forward, her passion for the game continues long past her playing days. This five time world champion has gone on to pioneer female acceptance in the world of hockey broadcasting, becoming a regular with Hockey Night In Canada.

Daniel Goyette - One of Canada's top offensive players. She led the 1998 Olympics in goals (8) and in 2002 she tied for point lead (10). When she retired her 25 career Olympic points was the second most in Canadian history. Her storied Olympic career includes 2 gold medals and 1 silver. She was also Canada's all time leading scorer at the World Championships, scoring 29 goals and 53 points in eight world titles!

Hilda Ranscombe - Now we're going old school. During the 1930s the Preston Rivulettes were the best womens team in the world, sporting a record of 348-2. Ranscombe was the team's best player, and many considered her to be as good as the boys she played against in her youth, some of which went on to notable careers. Author Michael McKinley believes it was the Rivulettes that were the most prominent force in women's hockey history, and Ranscombe was the biggest reason for their success.


There are two other names that I think deserve mention. They likely will not be inducted as players, so they will have to compete against men in the builders category. Hazel McCallion and Fran Rider have been instrumental forces in getting the women's game to where it is today, and both deserve recognition.

Hall of Fame Quips

"The Hockey Hall of Fame was made for legends. It was a place you go to visit to see the legends of hockey, your idols. To know you are being inducted into that club is just hard to wrap your head around. It gives me chills to think about it."

- Cammi Granato

"I sit back and think 'Why is this happening to me? I'm just a kid from the projects. I'm just a goof. That's what I tell my friends. They say 'You're not a goof' and I say 'I'm a goof.'

- Angela James

"It would've been nice to get the call was 2006 when my dad (Vic) was dying of cancer. I would've liked him to know. But he told me before he died, he was proud of me, proud of my career. My mom (Celeste) died this year too, before I got the call. It wasn't God's will, but I know they'll have the two best seats in the house for it."

- Dino Ciccarelli

Mario Lemieux's Crazy Hockey Mom

Hockey is very much about family. There are many great stories throughout hockey history of fathers and sons enjoying the game, and bonding together.

Equally as important and not to be overlooked are the hockey moms. I recently discovered a wonderful website for all hockey moms - Hockey Mom In Canada. It started out as one hockey mom's blog that has turned into an amazing resource and community for hockey moms everywhere. There are over 4300 hockey moms on the Facebook page. Now hockey moms from all across the country and socially connect and discuss everything from on and off ice issues, fund-raising activities, equipment innovations - pretty much anything and everything when it comes to hockey parenting, specifically from the mom's point of view.

Of course, that reminds me of my favorite hockey mom story. It's about Mario Lemieux's mother, Pierrette, pictured below.


Mario Lemieux biographer Lawrence Martin best tells the story in his 1993 unauthorized biography, Mario.  He describes Pierrette as "a loud and brassy dynamo, a bowling ball crashing through the pins. Pierrette' s voice thundered through the arena, urging her boy on while harpooning every opponent with vociferous, unholy vigor."

Martin makes Mario's mom sound like a bit of a crazy lady. Then again, this next story of her dedication to her son's hockey career confirms her questionable sanity status.

"According to local lore, when the snow got too deep to play hockey outside, Madame Lemieux transported shovels of snow into the house. She threw the snow on the carpet and pounded it down to a smooth surface that glistened like ice. With the heat in the house turned off and the doors opened to let the cold blow in, she had her boys, just past toddler age then, practice hockey on the rug."

After he turned pro and became famous, Mario admitted he actually learned to skate in his living room. His mom added, "They really did quite a job on my rug. But it was good for strengthening their ankles."

Maybe the ladies at Hockey Mom In Canada can incorporate the living room rink into their sons' and daughters' budding hockey careers.

November 03, 2010

The Flying Father: Les Costello

The November 1st, 2010 edition of The Hockey News features a wonderfully written feature about "the Hall of Fame's Missing Saint," Les Costello.

Costello was a Stanley Cup champion with the 1948 Toronto Maple Leafs but he gave up the ice for the cloth. Yet hockey always remained a big part of his life. He founded the famed Flying Fathers, a Harlem Globetrotters inspired team of hockey-playing priests who play charity games. Their all-time record: 900 wins, 6 losses and 1 tie. Far more impressively, they have raised over $4 million for charity.

Writer Ken Campbell argues that Costello deserves enshrinement into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Okay, Costello only played 15 regular season games and the 5 playoff games, but he is a Stanley Cup champion, and a junior superstar with two Memorial Cup championships before that. He spent most of his three professional seasons in the minor leagues.

That is hardly a Hall of Fame worthy resume. So why should the Hall of Fame induct Costello?

Campbell argues "Costello deserves to be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame because, when you think about it, no man has ever used the game for a more noble purpose. That he died doing God's work through hockey makes the case for his induction as a builder that much stronger."

It is an interesting suggestion by Campbell. By using hockey as the means, his message of charity did more for hockey than several of old boys network gang who pat each other on the back and overpopulate the builder's category. Bill Wirtz? Harold Ballard? Give me a break!

Costello's inclusion would be a great story, although I still very much a long shot. But you never know. I assume his name will be nominated at the next induction debate. Depending on the ballot, it could happen.

By the way, a 74 year old Costello died tragically in 2002 following complications from a puck to the head injury during a Flying Fathers game. 2200 people came to his funeral in Timmins, Ontario, fittingly held at a hockey rink.

You can learn more about Les Costello here.

Ice Hockey In Kenya?

Thanks to @Sean_Leahy for this link:
In a country famed for its distance runners and sweltering sun, few would expect Kenya to be enthusiastic about winter sports. But at an ice rink in the capital, some young Kenyans are playing a new and exciting western game.

Ice hockey is not usually associated with Africa, but at the Solar Ice Rink in Nairobi, the players are happy to try something different: Ice hockey.

Full story, including bonus video footage.

QMJHL Announces Hall of Fame Class of 2011

Former NHL great Vincent Damphousse headlines the list of inductees who will enter the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League Hall of Fame next spring.

Damphousse starred with the Laval Voisins/Titan from 1983 through 1986. In 229 games in the Q he scored 123 goals, 245 assists for 368 points. He would be the 6th overall draft pick in the 1986 NHL Entry Draft.

Joining Damphousse in the Hall is another long time NHLer, Martin Lapointe. Lapointe also starred with Laval, playing in parts of four seasons from 1990 through 1993.He scored 338 points (149 goals and 189 assists) in 195 games. Detroit selected Lapointe 10th overall in 1991.

Joining those two NHL veterans in the QMJHL Hall of Fame is Robert Desjardins. The little known goalie used to be known as the little goalie in the Q, playing with 4 different teams back in the 1980s. Although he was twice named as the top goalie and once crowned as the league's most valuable player, at 5'5" no NHL team ever drafted him. He attended Concordia University in Montreal for four years, starring between the pipes for the Stingers hockey team. He later toiled in the ECHL for three years before retiring.

Harold Mackay was instrumental in the QMJHL's expansion into Atlantic Canada .

November 02, 2010

Ed Litzenberger Passes Away

Ed Litzenberger has passed away at the age of 78.

Litzenberger was a National Hockey League player of significant repute in the 1950s and 1960s. Litzenberger was a rangy center who also played some right wing, known for his consistency and leadership abilities, much like Trevor Linden as a modern day comparable. At 6'3" and 195lbs, Litzenberger was a giant player in his era. He never played with a lot of snarl though. Litzenberger was known throughout the league as a gentlemanly figure on and off the ice who had everyone's great respect.

Litzenberger was a junior standout with the Regina Pats (twice helping the WHL team reach the Memorial Cup tournament). He was invited to the Montreal Canadiens training camp in 1952, although he certainly did not plan on a NHL career.

"I was supposed to be an engineer," he told Frank Pagnucco in the book Heroes: Stars of Hockey's Golden Era. "I went down to the University of Colorado and registered. Then I went to the Montreal training camp and they offered me a contract and I kind of forsook my college degree."

Litzenberger would play a couple of seasons with the senior league Montreal Royals while making a couple of call ups to the Canadiens. It was a big adjustment for the kid from Nedorf, Saskatchewan.


"It was a matter of growing up," Litzenberger continued. "When you're a big fish in a little pond and all of a sudden you're a little fish and there's an awful lot of big fish, you become confused. I found out in a week that I had grown up and that I was not only good but better than most of the guys."

Despite his promise, the Canadiens mysteriously "sold" Litzenberger's playing rights to the floundering Chicago Black Hawks. It was the "Help The Hawks Plan" as Litzenberger described it, a deliberate attempt by the NHL to stock the Chicago team with good players to rescue them from their terrible struggles.


"I cried real tears," said Litzenberger of the trade to Chicago. The night before he had scored the game winning goal for Montreal, and then his world was turned upside down. "You become a little bit of an instrument but I look back with affection. It gave me a chance to learn what (life) was all about."


Litzenberger was a significant factor in the Black Hawks resurgence, leading the way with class and distinction, not to mention goals.


Despite the mid-season trade Litzenberger would earn the Calder Trophy as the NHL's rookie of the year, scoring 40 points in the final 40 games. Gangly but deceptive, he would go on to become a regular linemate of Bobby Hull (with Lorne Ferguson), a 6 time All Star Game participant and score 32 or more goals in three consecutive seasons.

Perhaps most importantly, he was the leader of the Hawks, named team captain, and he led by example with hard work and pure class. Though his scoring had dried up, he helped complete the Black Hawks return to glory by leading the team to the Stanley Cup championship in 1961!

Litzenberger had to overcome personal tragedy to enjoy that championship. A year earlier he and his wife were in a serious car accident, hitting a viaduct on icy roads. His wife, who was driving, died while he suffered cracked ribs, contusions of the liver, and a bad concussion.

After the Cup win, Litzenberger remarried but he was never the same player on the ice. The Hawks traded off their team captain after that Stanley Cup championship. Litzenberger briefly went to Detroit (playing in 32 games) before find a home in Toronto. It could not have been better timing for Litzenberger. His veteran presence helped secure the rise of the Toronto Maple Leafs dynasty. Litzenberger and the Leafs won the next three Stanley Cups - in 1962, 1963 and 1964!

By the third championship Litzenberger had become a bit player with the Leafs. He continued to play in a mentoring role with the Leafs farm teams in Rochester, where he would win two Calder Trophy championships in 1965 and 1966. Imagine that - Litzenberger is the only player who won a league championship title in six consecutive seasons!


Litzenberger sensed it was time to leave the ice in 1966. He retired with 178 goals and had 238 assists in 618 regular season games. In the playoffs he scored 5 goals and had 13 assists in 40 games.

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