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    Uncle John's Bathroom Reader Shoots and Scores


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      The Bathroom Readers’ Institute

      Ashland, Oregon, and San Diego, California

      UNCLE JOHN’S BATHROOM READER SHOOTS AND SCORES UPDATED & EXPANDED

      Copyright © 2011 by Portable Press. All rights reserved.

      No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

      “Bathroom Reader,” “Portable Press,” and “Bathroom Readers’ Institute” are registered trademarks of Baker & Taylor, Inc. All rights reserved.

      For information, write…

      The Bathroom Readers’ Institute

      P.O. Box 1117, Ashland, OR 97520

      www.bathroomreader.com

      e-mail: mail@bathroomreader.com

      Page 321: Earliest known photograph of women’s hockey (Isobel Stanley, Lord Stanley’s daughter, is in white). Rideau Hall, Ottawa, Canada (circa 1890). Source: Library and Archives Canada/Proud past, bright future: one hundred years of Canadian women’s hockey/AMICUS 13669816/Page 6/nlc-5953

      eISBN: 978-1-60710-652-4

      E-book edition: June 2012

      CONGRATULATIONS!

      The Bathroom Readers’ Institute would like to congratulate the members of the BRI AllStar Shinny Team for their tremendous effort and great sportsmanship, and for making this book possible.

      THE “WRITE” LINE

      The journalists and writers who scouted the rinks and went into overtime in their quest for the most interesting hockey facts and stories.

      Frank “Faster than Bobby” Orr (Captain) — Center

      Mark “The Fog” Weisenmiller — Right Wing

      Rob “Emmy” Adler — Left Wing

      Kevin “Pappa” Woodley — Defense

      Lucas “Barbershop” Aykroyd — Defense

      Jeff “The Human Highlight Film” Rud — Rover

      Adam “Suitcase” Schroeder — Goalie

      Sue “Sweet Feet” Steiner — Goalie

      Thom “Too Tall” Little — Enforcer

      Derek “The Impossiblist” Fairbridge — Team Hypnotherapist

      BEHIND THE BENCH

      The editors and designers who pulled the team together and made a book out of it.

      Silas “Roadrunner” White — Assistant Coach

      Alexandra “The Hammer” Wilson — Equipment Manager

      Teresa “Boom Boom” Bubela — General Manager

      Michael “Miracle” Brunsfeld — Team Mascot

      AND THANK YOU!

      To everyone else behind the scenes who helped pull together this “miracle on ice.”

      Gordon Javna

      JoAnn Padgett

      Melinda Allman

      Amy Miller

      Jay Newman

      Monica Maestas

      Annie Lam

      Ginger Winters

      Jennifer Frederick

      Sydney Stanley

      Gary Lloyd

      Michelle Benjamin

      Jennifer Thornton

      Jennifer Browning

      Mana Monzavi

      Dylan Drake

      Antonia Banyard

      Cindy Connor

      Jamie Broadhurst

      Paddy Laidley

      Sandy Cooper

      Pete MacDougall

      John Sawyer

      Danielle Johnson

      Tom “Dijon” Mustard

      All our great friends at Raincoast

      Duncan McCallum and Friesens

      Sophie and JJ

      Publishers Group West

      And special greetings to Allan “the Godfather” MacDougall

      * * * * *

      DID YOU KNOW?

      In 2000, the year of his death, Maurice “Rocket” Richard became the only NHL player to have his number honored in a professional sport other than hockey. For the entire season that year, the Montreal Expos honored Richard’s memory by wearing his iconic #9 on the sleeves of their uniforms.

      CONTENTS

      INTRODUCTION

      UNCLE JOHN’S EARLY YEARS OF HOCKEY

      Where It All Began

      Miner League Hockey?

      The Real Millionaires

      From Renfrew to Replays

      Hockey in the Trenches

      Hockey Hero

      When Hockey Trumped Hitler

      First Photo

      THOSE OTHER LEAGUES

      Down in the Eh, Eh?

      The 10-Cent-Beer-Night Caper!!

      The “Other” Big League

      Jet-Propelled Oilers

      Their Cup Runneth Over

      Other NHLs

      On the Table

      THE GREATS

      The Fabulous Nines

      Hockey’s First Olympic MVP

      Brothers-In-Twine

      Béliveau Says No

      Crossover Artists

      Direct Lines

      1987: Pure Heaven

      Red

      Bobby Orr of Hockey Lore

      The Great Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader Hockey Quiz

      The First Great Draft

      The Great One

      The Many Sides of Tie

      Defining Moment in Hockey

      LAW & ORDER

      The Richard Riot

      Injured, Weirdly

      Legendary Meltdowns

      The Men in Stripes

      The Green-Maki Stick Fight

      The Bodyguard

      THE RECORD BOOK

      Medical Records

      And the Award Goes To…

      The Versatile Dit

      A Young Man’s Game

      Sophomore Jinx

      Hockey Goes to Hollywood

      A Novel Game

      Vital Statistics

      Keep It in the Family

      The Long and Short of It

      THE ROAD TO THE CUP

      Stanley Cup Strata

      Models of Consistency

      The Longest Road Trip

      Big, Bad, and Broad

      Draft Day Drama

      Lengthy Stays on the Throne

      Best in the Crunch

      Hold That Tiger

      OFF-ICE PERSONALITIES

      Was the Major a Kernel?

      He Shoots! He Scores!

      Losing with Pizzazz

      Best Behind the Bench

      Jolly Jack?

      Gallivan-ting

      Doughnut Disaster

      The Legend of Taro Tsujimoto

      Irrepressible Roger

      THE CHARACTERS

      A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Rink

      The Vanished Leaf

      Eddie, You’re Out!

      Tiger Talk

      Eddie Shore’s Wild Ride

      A Boy and His Dog

      Buzzer Beaters

      Winner’s Heart in A Comedian’s Body

      All Bets Are Off

      Those Nutty Netminders

      The Fabulous Fatman

      Clear the Track!

      The Noble Goalie

      Father Hockey

      UNSUNG PIONEERS OF THE GAME

      Hockey’s Color Change

      Stay-at-Home Czechs and Russians

      The Founding Father of Modern-Day Goaltending

      Skirts and Slapshots

      The Flying Fem Finn

      Europe Invades

      Shattering the Ice Ceiling

      The Stylish Swede

      More Than Just a Game

      Pioneer on Ice

      THE WORLD STAGE

      Goal(s) Heard ’Round the World

      A Woman’s Game

      The Big Red Machine

      Wild at the World Hockey Championships

      Miracle on Ice

      Sinden’s Thoughts on Glasnost


      BLOOPERS & MISCUES

      Engraving Errors

      Don’t Bother to Knock

      Brief Tour of Duty

      Don’t Mention That Trade

      When You Gotta Go

      Million Dollar “M”

      So Be Good, for Goodness Sake!

      Things Not to Say to the Boss’ Wife

      May the Best Man Win

      ACCESSORIES OF HOCKEY

      A Numbers Game

      N-H-L-Mets

      How to Make Ice

      The Masked Marvel

      A Tale of Two Blockers

      Masked Messages

      Z Is for Zamboni

      Equipment Pioneers

      How to Make a Hockey Puck

      Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Puck

      How to Marry a Millionaire

      Hairy Times in Hockey

      UNDERDOGS, UNDERACHIEVERS, & UNLIKELY HEROES

      Little Big Men

      Hero for a Game

      Hey Kid! Suit Up!

      Their 15 Minutes

      Sieves and Swiss Cheese

      Rare Jewel and a King

      What Ever Happened To…?

      CEREMONIES & SUPERSTITIONS

      You Are Getting Sleepy, Very Sleepy

      Very Superstitious

      Curse of Muldoon

      Animal Icecapades

      The Battle of Alberta

      Are All Goalies Crackpots?

      The Incredible Goodbyes

      MIXED BAG

      The Name Game

      Donors v. Recipients

      Hockey? Good Grief

      Slap Shot Science

      8 Places to Sk8 Before You Die

      Stick Action (Off the Ice)

      Nude Hockey News

      Weird Hockey News

      THE BUSINESS OF HOCKEY

      The House That Smythe Built

      Rise of the Union

      Morenz Money, Not More Money

      Owners of the Game

      It’s All About the Game…Or Is It?

      The Labor Front

      The Duke and the Tampa Bay Lightning

      Hype and Pucks in New York

      LET ’EM ENTERTAIN YOU

      Paris Hilton: Hockey Player

      Sitcom Hockey

      Hockey Pubs

      Welcome to Hockeyville

      THE LAST PAGE

      * * * * *

      “Every day is a great day for hockey.”

      —Mario Lemieux

      INTRODUCTION TO THE NEW EDITION

      WELCOME, HOCKEY FANS!

      What do a bunch of West Coast pop culture geeks know about hockey? That’s the challenge our friends in Canada gave us back in 2005 when we published the first Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader Shoots and Scores. They even bet us four loonies and a case of Molson that we couldn’t do it, but we surprised them with a colossal compendium chock full of facts, figures, and trivia tidbits. Hockey has changed since then, though, and Uncle John wondered recently if it would be a good idea to update our book for all our new fans.

      THEY SHOOT! THEY SCORE!

      So last winter, when most of us at the BRI were spending too many chilly weekends glued to our sofas watching Hockey Night in Canada on satellite, Uncle John called us “a bunch of slovenly Americans” and encouraged us to get out there and actually play some hockey instead…for inspiration.

      We still didn’t have any ice, so once again, it was shinny—road hockey—for us. We headed out to the frozen concrete in front of the BRI with our taped-up sticks, a couple of old tennis balls, and two plungers for goal posts. After some annoying vehicular interruptions (“CAR!”), we got right to it, impersonating our favorite hockey heroes on our ultimate dream teams: “Gretzky passes to Lemieux, Lemieux streaks past Hull, Messier races in and steals the puck, he passes to Jagr who hammers it at the net, Crosby reaches for it…he SCOOOORES! And they win the Stanley Cup!”

      After the game, the BRI AllStar Shinny Team got to talking about the updated edition: playing hockey was pretty fun, and reading more about it was bound to be a blast! So we decided to dust off our old copies of Shoots and Scores and plunge into all the new hockey trivia out there to see if there was enough to update and expand the book. After a bucket of fries with vinegar and three cups of cocoa each (well, Amy had tea), eureka! We discovered that there was!

      UJ DRAFT DAY

      So we enlisted the help of all the hockey fans we know (“hockey experts,” they call themselves), and they came up with more than 70 new pages of interesting stories, hilarious history, fascinating quotes, and at least four entirely useless facts.

      So get ready for the puck to drop. There are no refs in this game (though we do mention a few in the book…), but please try to stay out of the penalty box. Enjoy! Game on!

      And as always…

      Go with the flow, eh?

      —Uncle John and the BRI Staff

      THE NAME GAME

      Want to know why you call your favorite hockey team the Stars, the Flames, or the Devils? Read on.

      • The Calgary Flames inherited their name from the Atlanta Flames when that franchise was sold and relocated to Alberta in 1980. The original team was named after the fire that General William T. Sherman’s Union troops set in Atlanta as they blazed their way across the South at the end of the U.S. Civil War.

      • The name of the Columbus Blue Jackets was also inspired by Civil War history. It’s a reference to the blue uniforms worn by Union soldiers and celebrates the fact that Ohio contributed more soldiers per capita to the war than any other state in the Union. (Ohio is also the home state of pyromaniacal General Sherman—see above.)

      • The Dallas Stars were not so-named because Texas is the “Lone Star State.” The franchise was originally the Minnesota North Stars, named for Minnesota’s state motto: “L’Etoile du Nord” (French for “star of the North”). The team moved to Dallas in 1993, but left the “North” part behind.

      • The Nashville Predators are named in tribute to the saber-toothed cat bones that were found in 1971 in downtown Nashville when workmen were excavating land for the construction of a new bank.

      • When the NHL’s Colorado Rockies relocated to New Jersey in 1982, they renamed themselves the New Jersey Devils for a mysterious, evil, winged creature called the “Jersey Devil” that, legend says, roamed the Pine Barrens of southern New Jersey in the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries.

      • The inspiration for the name Tampa Bay Lightning actually comes from the weather. According to the St. Petersburg Times, Tampa is the “lightning capital of the nation.” In June 1993, at the conclusion of the franchise’s first NHL season, more than 21,000 cloud-to-ground lightning flashes occurred within a 50-mile radius of Tampa Bay.

      DONORS V. RECIPIENTS

      Are you ready for some…er…interesting hockey?

      PRIEST v. SEMINARIANS

      Every February, priests from across the U.S. and Canada congregate at the St. Thomas Aquinas Seminary (a Roman Catholic high school in Winona, Minnesota) for meetings on religious topics. They also have a hockey game. Every year since 1988, the visiting priests form a team and face off at a local ice arena against a team of kids from the school. “When they all meet at center ice and do their Latin prayer,” says rink manager Jim Martin, “it really is surreal.” Best part: many of the priests choose to play in their robes. (The priests have beaten the kids just twice in the game’s history.)

      SEEING V. NON-SEEING

      If you ever get a chance to see the Toronto-based Ice Owls play hockey, the first thing you’ll notice is that the game sounds different. That’s because the puck is hollow…and filled with bits of metal that make it rattle as it moves across the ice. That’s so the Ice Owl players, who are either vision-impaired or completely blind, can hear it. The Ice Owls have been around since 1972, and every year they play in benefit games all over Canada. (You can find their schedule on their Web site.)

      TISSUE DONORS V. TISSUE RECIPIENTS

      In April 2011, two hockey teams faced off in Halifax, Nova Scotia. One team was made up of people
    who had donated organ tissue to people in need of transplants. The other: people who had received organ transplants. It was the second annual “Donor v. Recipient” hockey game, brainchild of Halifax-based “Life: Pass It On,” an organ donation advocacy group. Among the players on the recipient side: goalie Trevor Umlah, whom the organization’s Web site describes as an “ice hockey goalie with a slow glove hand, gaping 5-hole, cystic fibrosis, and brand new lungs.” Winner of the 2011 game: Everybody. (Although the score was Recipients, 3, Donors 2.)

      ENGRAVING ERRORS

      As the largest trophy awarded by any major North American professional sports league, the Stanley Cup has a lot of surface area—lots of room for names to be engraved…and lots of room for errors.

      • Hockey Hall of Fame goalie Jacques Plante won the Cup six times and his name suffered four different misspellings: Jocko, Jack, Jacq, and Plant.

      • A few other Hall of Famers also experienced misspelled names: in 1951, Toronto’s Ted Kennedy became Kennedyy; in 1952, Detroit’s Alex Delvecchio became Belvecchio, and teammate Glenn Hall became Glin. (Hall shouldn’t even have been included that year; he didn’t play for Detroit until the next season.)

      • Dickie Moore won six Cups with the Montreal Canadiens, and his name was rendered five different ways: D. Moore, Richard Moore, R. Moore, Dickie Moore, and Rich Moore.

      • Pete Palangio appears twice on the Cup, despite winning it only once. His name was accidentally engraved twice as a member of the 1938 Chicago Black Hawks…once correctly and once as Palagio.

      • Even the names of the teams themselves weren’t foolproof. According to the inscription, the Cup was won by the Toronto Maple “Leaes” in 1963, by the “Bqstqn” Bruins in 1972, and the New York “Ilanders” in 1981.

      • Edmonton Oilers owner Peter Pocklington tried to pull a fast one on the NHL when his team won the Cup in 1984. As a tribute to his dad Basil, a huge hockey fan, he sneaked his father’s name into the list of team names. Alas, the NHL caught up to him and had the name “Basil Pocklington” deleted by having X’s engraved over each letter.

      • In 1996 Adam Deadmarsh of the Cup-winning Colorado Avalanche became the first player inscribed on the cup in NHL history to be honored with a correction. His name was initially spelled “Deadmarch.”

      MEDICAL RECORDS

      Like all professional team sports, hockey keeps track of its players’ distinguished statistical achievements. But what about those not-so-distinguished records? Here are four that show just how dangerous the game is.

     


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