10/29/1966 Bruins at Maple Leafs Bobby Orr fourth NHL game (third period)!

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • This video is the Hockey Night In Canada broadcast of the third period of the Oct. 29, 1966 National Hockey League game between the Boston Bruins and the Maple Leafs in Toronto (for score, see summary below). It is the fourth game of Hall of Fame defenseman Bobby Orr's rookie season, and the budding star is very active as the Bruins score twice to earn the tie.
    Announcers Bill Hewitt (play by play) and Brian McFarlane (color) note how impressive his first three games had been, and that while he'd played well, he might have more to show, and indeed he does. Minutes after a great block, he rushes into the Leafs zone and sets up Johnny McKenzie with an open net (although Pie tried to pass it back to Bobby)! After another block, No. 4 makes the same pirouette move he would make in the 1972 Finals against the Rangers and rings an absolute rifle shot off the post! At game's end he makes a mad dash toward the opposition blue line, and although the play is broken up, it is an example of what looks to be a scrappy, hustling, on-the-rise squad!
    The modest Orr always jokes, "Yeah, I was great, our first year we actually finished lower in the standings", and while that was true, despite Orr picking up the Calder Trophy as Rookie of the Year, it was obvious some pieces (Ed Johnston, Ted Green, John Bucyk, Ed Westfall, McKenzie, Dallas Smith) were there. Soon general manager Milt Schmidt would acquire Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge, and Fred Stanfield, and Derek Sanderson would come on the scene, and under Harry Sinden the team would really take off.
    It was a bit odd, but also very interesting, to see the players who wore 7, 8, 16, and 17 before they became famous as the Bruins won it all in 1970 and 1972. But as usual, it was hard to take your eyes off Orr, and as usual, he delivered!
    Copyright National Hockey League, CBC, Hockey Night In Canada, or any other party. I don't claim the rights to, and don't profit from, this video. I just posted it for historical and educational purposes, and for those who will enjoy it as much as I did.
    The summary:
    www.hockey-ref...

Комментарии • 670

  • @tommyrawlings3046
    @tommyrawlings3046 9 месяцев назад +42

    Orr is still the greatest hockey player I ever saw!

    • @d.thorpe2046
      @d.thorpe2046 8 месяцев назад +3

      It would have been crazy if he went coast to coast on that last rush

    • @bigbadbruins1
      @bigbadbruins1 7 месяцев назад +4

      I have seen a lot of Hockey. Orr & then Lemieux.

    • @gooddognigel9992
      @gooddognigel9992 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@bigbadbruins1my dad said Orr was the best he had seen, until #99 took the NHL by storm.

    • @kurtrindgen4708
      @kurtrindgen4708 5 месяцев назад +2

      Played in a golf outing a few years ago. After I was at a table with a few sports writers from Philly, basically they said he was the best, especially if you had the opportunity to actually see him play.

    • @user-ig1uu1kw9m
      @user-ig1uu1kw9m 5 месяцев назад +1

      Фирсов был, пожалуй, посильнее.

  • @sisuriffs
    @sisuriffs Год назад +16

    So nice to see the players and the puck. Clean ice. No ads. Beautiful.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      Rod, where did you first learn of this vid? I only ask because over the last two weeks, I've had thousands more views, and I wonder why? Thanks!

    • @sisuriffs
      @sisuriffs Год назад

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 It just came up on my feed. Maybe because my wife and I recently watched some nostalgia television on RUclips?

  • @gargle99
    @gargle99 Год назад +32

    and no advertising crap on the boards, the ice, the glass- so enjoyable to be able to watch the game without distractions

    • @dan2buys
      @dan2buys Год назад +5

      God,those moving digital graphics on the boards now are horrific aren't they!? Bettman says you should be focusing on the game and not obsessing on the boards,so I guess it's just us.

    • @sdgakatbk
      @sdgakatbk Год назад +4

      @@dan2buys Absolutely!! I also hate the loud music bombardment at games today!! If I want to go to a rock concert with a light show and music, I'll go to a rock show! The sport doesn't need all that as it is fun to watch and can hold a fan's attention with the action and intensity alone.

    • @thebenefactor6744
      @thebenefactor6744 Год назад +7

      No names on the backs, no constant cutting away from the ice with incessant unnecessary replays, graphics, dumbed-down strategy explanations, and vapid non- stop empty commentary; rather, just allowing you to watch the game and immerse yourself in it, without producers treating you like you have the attention span of a gold fish. This is the true pleasurable hockey viewing experience. Of course, if they ever figured out that we still actually want this, guess what, they'd try to sell it back to us as some premium package option that you'd have to pay extra for.

    • @sdgakatbk
      @sdgakatbk Год назад

      @@thebenefactor6744 🎯
      Shoot. At a rec center I used to go to, they have an ice rink. I'd check it out after my work out. Sometimes there would be a hockey game, either high school or younger kids. Sometimes I'd sit in the stands. THAT was fun to watch!! Just a great sport.

    • @gargle99
      @gargle99 Год назад

      Exactly what I was thinking re the premium package. And don't get me started about how Las Vegas treats the game .... hockey for moronic children @@thebenefactor6744

  • @tomlew55
    @tomlew55 Год назад +48

    I went to a lot of Boston sporting events back then. The Red Sox '67 impossible dream, the Celtic dynasty years, with all those great players, later on with Brady and the Patriots but Orr was something special. Every time he flew around the back of his net and was going to carry the puck up ice the whole Garden would hold their breath. It's hard to explain the excitement he generated. Once in a lifetime player.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +5

      Yes! I say this a lot, but I feel sorry for sports fans who didn't experience that time!

    • @scottgebow6539
      @scottgebow6539 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@petegoodwinboston4825I’m 67, so I lived through the Bobby Orr era and the “Big Bad Bruins.”

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  9 месяцев назад +2

      @@scottgebow6539 Great times!

    • @scottgebow6539
      @scottgebow6539 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 Absolutely!

    • @grandpavanderhof
      @grandpavanderhof 9 месяцев назад +8

      I remember a game where he took the puck from behind Cheevers and skated almost all the way up to the opponents net. Some player poke checked the puck away from him and it went to Derek Sanderson. Sanderson passed it back to Orr who took it all the way back to behind Cheevers again and then took off up the ice. This time they didn't stop him and he scored. I don't care what anyone says, he was the greatest hockey player of all time.

  • @RodCalidge
    @RodCalidge Год назад +15

    It amazes me when footage like this surfaces. Without the internet, it is buried in some dusty old building for no one to see.
    Thanks so much for sharing.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +4

      You're welcome. I know there's great stuff still out there, but it's hard to be in the right position to get a crack at it. TV execs, if you've got any old sports broadcasts you need catalogued, get in touch!

  • @johnnystones8498
    @johnnystones8498 Год назад +54

    Wow!! The leafs were blowing third period leads even back in the 60's lol.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +10

      At least they're consistent! 🤣

    • @moral19D
      @moral19D 9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for the giggle. 😅

    • @Levnoxious
      @Levnoxious 9 месяцев назад +1

      Too soon. 😢

    • @charlesbaldo
      @charlesbaldo 9 месяцев назад +3

      Except in this year (66-67) they won the Stanley Cup, so they couldn't have been playing all that bad. Haven't won it since.

    • @xbman1
      @xbman1 9 месяцев назад

      It’s a Leafs tradition. It’s a must play.😂

  • @shocktocker8282
    @shocktocker8282 9 месяцев назад +10

    Orr was something special for sure. Unlike any player in any sport, on AND OFF the ice. Great athlete and even greater Human Being. More than I can say for most athletes.

  • @mikelynch-zeroviewz2507
    @mikelynch-zeroviewz2507 Год назад +11

    I long for the days of zero advertising on the boards and rink surface ... it's pure

    • @L1V2P9
      @L1V2P9 Год назад +5

      I may be in the minority on this, but I still think ties are not a bad thing. When two teams play equally hard against each other, why not let the game end in a tie and split the points without all the foofaraw that we go through today?

  • @thewolfdoctor761
    @thewolfdoctor761 Год назад +41

    It's nice to see my all-time favorite player, Dave Keon.

    • @negativecreep7963
      @negativecreep7963 Год назад +1

      Why is he your favorite?

    • @thewolfdoctor761
      @thewolfdoctor761 Год назад +4

      @@negativecreep7963 I was a big Leafs fan back then. I think I watched every airing of Hockey Night in Canada between 1958 and 1970. Keon was my favorite. Of course, I was a fan of Mahovlich, Horton, Red Kelly, Bower, etc. as well. After that, the Leafs became my second favorite team, behind the Sabres.

    • @lindsaydoke9308
      @lindsaydoke9308 11 месяцев назад +4

      Dave Keon the best 2 way forward ever to play for the Leafs bar none.

    • @thewolfdoctor761
      @thewolfdoctor761 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@lindsaydoke9308 Yes and the best at faceoffs I've ever seen.

    • @shanghunter7697
      @shanghunter7697 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@thewolfdoctor761 Lifelong sabre fan here as well, my dad grew up with coach in the 50's and 60's. My dad asked for signed sticks from all 3 members of the French connection. I have them encased on my wall display. He used to take me to the Auditorium for games and wrestling matches. Nostalgic memories, hope you have great holidays.

  • @dan4345
    @dan4345 Год назад +12

    No annoying Ads on the ice, boards, or superimposed on the screen. The good ole' days.

  • @rosswatson9144
    @rosswatson9144 Год назад +34

    I was 7 then. Orr was my first hero...but the voice of the commentator is what brings me back..this voice of Toronto...the other of Montreal.. both iconic as the music on hockey night in Canada...they both started on the radio..voices of hockey back in my father's day..this is truly historic.. a time when these weekly televised games united the nation.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +4

      I had never heard the HNIC theme song before I started posting these highlights ... now I will never forget it!

    • @bombasticbushkin4985
      @bombasticbushkin4985 Год назад +12

      Toronto's Bill Hewitt (son of the great broadcast pioneer Foster Hewitt ("He shoots, he scores!"), grandson of Toronto Star journalist W. A. Hewitt) was the fabulous announcer. The articulate anglophone voice of the Montreal Canadians was Sydney, Nova Scotia born Danny Gallivan, author of the "spinarama" and pucks getting caught up in "paraphernalia".

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +2

      @@bombasticbushkin4985 Legends all!

    • @dm19609721
      @dm19609721 11 месяцев назад +3

      if I am not mistaken the voice of the play by play was Bill Hewitt, son of Foster Hewitt.....hockey is not the same today.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  11 месяцев назад

      @@dm19609721 Correct!

  • @fredtaylor5268
    @fredtaylor5268 Год назад +61

    This is amazing to me! #24 for the Leafs, John Brenneman is my first cousin. This is the first time I've ever seen video footage of him. Thanks so much!!! John is 80 now and still healthy. After 41 games this 66-67 season, he got dropped down to the minors (hear Brian McFarlane's comment at 21:44). Even though the Leafs won the Stanley Cup that season, John did not get his name on it. This bothers him to this day.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +8

      OMG, that's awesome! Glad I could give you such a special discovery! And 41 games ... he should have gotten his name on the Cup! He should petition the Hall of Fame!

    • @daniellinehan63
      @daniellinehan63 Год назад +2

      Crappy

    • @dwightropp3014
      @dwightropp3014 Год назад +4

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 -- Ya, it seems like it's up to each team to do whatever the 'ell they want in that regard. If you'll recall, Don Awrey played 72 (of the 80) reg-season games for the Habs in 1975-76 but was sat out by coach Bowman for the entire Cup-playoffs, which they won, after which the Habs didn't allow Don's name to be put on the Cup either.
      But then, two years later, Yvan Cournoyer played 68 reg-season games and no playoff games due to his back injury, but the Habs did put his name on the Cup anyway. And then the year after that, when the Habs won their last of their four straight Cups, Cournoyer had only played 15 reg-season games and then retired due to the recurring injury, but the Habs again put his name on the Cup.
      And so, I'm guessing that in defence of their decisions, the team brass would have reasoned that because Awrey was a healthy scratch, presumably to a performance drop, he didn't qualify for his name to be on the Cup, whereas it was different for Cournoyer since it was due to an injury and not a performance drop that kept him off the ice.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +3

      @@dwightropp3014 Good context!

    • @johnsewell6593
      @johnsewell6593 Год назад +4

      Thats a truly great post. And YES, if he skated with the "Big Team" at ALL-- He deserves to be engraved-for eternity-on North Americas greatest trophy....!

  • @microy
    @microy 9 месяцев назад +4

    Foster Hewitt was a legend in Toronto and stayed as leaf radio broadcaster for years after his son Bill took over... week-days could only watch 1st period then to bed but would listen on radio under the blankets till I fell asleep...

  • @claudebuysse7482
    @claudebuysse7482 Год назад +15

    For me Orr was the best player i ever saw...The last season the Leafs won the Stanley Cup. Sad to see that franchise so deep since a long time.. It's always a pleasure to see all those great players like Mahovlich , Ellis and Kelly. Bucyck too...

  • @northernlight696
    @northernlight696 Год назад +15

    I saw the Bruins a few weeks later on December 3, 1966 at the Boston Garden versus New York Rangers. It was a 2-2 tie and Orr got an assist on the first goal by John Bucyk. I was 14 and visiting Boston with my father and brother from Canada - great memory.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +3

      Awesome! Bucyk is fond of saying he scored so many goals because of Bobby Orr!

  • @yo-yotension4613
    @yo-yotension4613 Год назад +11

    Love this hockey. No helmet or mask. It was hard hitting and fast up and down hockey.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      Same great game, different era!

    • @yo-yotension4613
      @yo-yotension4613 Год назад +3

      Absolutely, just it was great to see these men I remember watching every Wednesday and Saturday on Hockey Night in Canada. Really miss Saturdays with the extended family fixated on the black and white TV.

  • @robertkabatoff817
    @robertkabatoff817 9 месяцев назад +3

    I was probably watching this on TV. I was a hockey fanatic. Orr, Hull, Keon , and Bower were just a few of my idols . Mom would be in the kitchen, my sister would be playing with with her dolls and maybe my dad would be watching the game with me. That was my perfect world....love and miss you every day mom and dad

  • @reubination
    @reubination Год назад +12

    And that’s how a tied hockey game should end.

  • @MrLextune
    @MrLextune Год назад +41

    What an amazing piece of hockey history. Thanks for sharing it with the world.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +4

      You're welcome, MrLextune!

    • @smokeymcb4553
      @smokeymcb4553 11 месяцев назад

      Stompin Tom Corners - Good Old Hockey Game
      ruclips.net/video/YS3GQverRiQ/видео.html

    • @lv2keepfit493
      @lv2keepfit493 9 месяцев назад

      agree! takes you back in time... way back. Amazing how the goalies never wore a mask, bad enough the players without a helmet. Thankfully all that protection is available these days.

  • @paulya1269
    @paulya1269 Год назад +6

    I grew up in Montreal. When I was about 7 or 8, my father came home from work with a pair of tickets for the Habs vs. Bruins for that night. I couldn’t believe I was going to see Bobby Orr play in person. I’ve never been more excited to see a hockey game, and I’ve seen many. Probably my fondest sports memory. I’m a lifelong Habs fan, but back in his prime, everyone loved Bobby and wanted to see him play. My friends and I would pick NHL stars when we played street hockey and we always argued over who’d get to be Bobby Orr. Good times, long ago.

  • @1400craigger
    @1400craigger Год назад +9

    Lost my dad eight days after this game! Nov 6 1966 ,hunting accident in Parry Sound area. This was the last year they won the Cup. He was a leafs fan! RIP Dad/Russ B

  • @user-jj5bf4hl1v
    @user-jj5bf4hl1v 8 месяцев назад +3

    What a polite hockey game. And no ads, anywhere

  • @jimanderson7648
    @jimanderson7648 Год назад +16

    fairly fast game considering the old tube skates and 2 line offside pass is in effect.

    • @jimanderson7648
      @jimanderson7648 Год назад

      also lots of clutch and grabbing . which probably slowed the game down more than anything

  • @marisalombardi385
    @marisalombardi385 7 месяцев назад +5

    Bobby Orr, will forever be #1
    ❤❤❤❤❤

    •  7 месяцев назад

      What are you talking about, he was #4

  • @MapleSyrupPoet
    @MapleSyrupPoet Год назад +11

    Nice to see Ted Green 👍

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      Yes! That was something, being able to see him in his early years!

    • @MapleSyrupPoet
      @MapleSyrupPoet Год назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 absolutely 💯 thanks ✌

  • @SetInStoneNow
    @SetInStoneNow 7 месяцев назад +1

    No ads on the boards or ice, organ music, no flash no trash, just good old fashioned NHL hockey. The good old days.

  • @Imintune...
    @Imintune... 11 месяцев назад +7

    This is when hockey was hockey.

  • @harryposner7584
    @harryposner7584 Год назад +20

    I was fifteen and likely watched this game. The games were easily as entertaining and hard fought as today's whistle-prone hockey. Also, in those days, the game came on the CBC, but it was about 20 minutes into the first period when the broadcast started, because of the scheduling conflicts. Oh for the good old days... the next year (1967) would be the last time the Leafs hoisted the Stanley Cup. And young folks who gobble down Tim Horton's donuts should understand what kind of a great player and decent human being he was. Most have no idea who Tim Horton was.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +2

      I think I read once what they delayed one of the games for, and it didn't seem too important!

  • @GodsInTheMachine
    @GodsInTheMachine 6 месяцев назад +3

    Having Bobby Orr on D is like having a second goaltender.

  • @whackattack4634
    @whackattack4634 6 месяцев назад +3

    I like the boards being free from advertising

  • @Glennstestsite112
    @Glennstestsite112 Год назад +9

    Wonderfully, beautifully sloppy hockey! Great! Refs let 'em play; no whistle every nine seconds for something. Love the commentary about "getting their sticks a little high!" MLG announcer's voice gave me chills...how many times did I hear that voice...Thank you for posting.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +2

      You're welcome! The PA guy was Paul Morris!

    • @RobbyByrne
      @RobbyByrne 8 месяцев назад

      Yes and no. Those quick whistles when players from both teams were tied up with the puck along the boards slowed down the play significantly.

    • @20thCenturyManTrad
      @20thCenturyManTrad 2 месяца назад

      @@RobbyByrne Yeah but the officials dropped the puck with speed. Now, they hold the puck up along the boards forever, like 30-40 seconds, at 20 seconds, I think freezing the play is preferable to watching a fishing derby.

    • @RobbyByrne
      @RobbyByrne 2 месяца назад +1

      @@20thCenturyManTrad I hear you. I wish the writers for my favorite team would ask one of the centers what's going on during the face off circles these days that wasn't going on 3 years ago. I understand it's all about fairness, but the delays are getting worse.

    • @20thCenturyManTrad
      @20thCenturyManTrad 2 месяца назад

      @@RobbyByrne As long as it isn't blatantly illegal, just drop the puck and get on with it. Also players still pin the puck up against the boards, it just takes forever to get a whistle, which as I said, by the 20 second mark, blow it dead, have a face off and get the game going again.

  • @miskwaad
    @miskwaad Год назад +50

    Watching this it's interesting to see how skilled the 6 league team players were. It was a fairly fast game...watching Horton you see how good he was.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +10

      Someone recently tweeted out a pic of Tim Horton, not an ounce of fat on him, and wondered how he ever hooked up with a doughnut franchise!

    • @miskwaad
      @miskwaad Год назад +4

      I've seen that picture; body fat under 5%. Hull was the same. Howe was also a genetic monster. No modern training methods, no plyometrics. It's amazing to watch the speed of this game then watch the 74 cup finals as they essentially tackle Orr repeatedly. Mid 70's hockey was awful.

    • @cryptohalloffame
      @cryptohalloffame Год назад +7

      agreed, it's a very modern game, fast, great passing etc, the best players in canada playing, very competitive

    • @larryking1108
      @larryking1108 Год назад +4

      Original 6.

    • @HerptasticVideo
      @HerptasticVideo Год назад +3

      Yeah people try to dis Bill Russell because for awhile he was winning while there were only 8 NBA teams. It's like do you realize that means if there were 8 teams today 8 players on each team wouldn't be good enough to play in the NBA.

  • @dhosquet
    @dhosquet 9 месяцев назад +16

    This is a beautiful pace for hockey. Remember when you could get a whistle simply by 'freezing' the puck along the boards. No constant pushing and shoving and yacking after every whistle. Sticks down, beautiful game.

    • @dhosquet
      @dhosquet 9 месяцев назад +4

      oh, and a game could end in a tie!

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  9 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed!

    • @terryblake5076
      @terryblake5076 9 месяцев назад +2

      'sticks down'. I take it you have. never heard of the Green/Maki or the Ziedel/Shack or the Richard/Laycoe fiascos. And none of them had helmets. Ted Green wound up with a metal plate in his head. Sticks down... lol

    • @yuckyool
      @yuckyool 9 месяцев назад +3

      That's what I notice. Sticks down . . . High sticking was 2 minutes for good reason (no helmets or face-guards).

    • @peterdefabio9470
      @peterdefabio9470 7 месяцев назад +1

      Agree, too...the game I grew up loving. Just clean and fluid.

  • @altfactor
    @altfactor Год назад +45

    Even as an 18-year-old rookie in just his fourth NHL game, you can see that Bobby Orr had already mastered some of the moves and abilities that made him an all-time great.

  • @matteodi555
    @matteodi555 Год назад +13

    Great to see a young Bobby Orr but also all the future Hall of Famers.

  • @BearBreath70
    @BearBreath70 4 месяца назад +1

    I remember watching this game on our B&W TV. My late mother’s 1st cousin was #23 for Boston, Ron Schock.

  • @henryniznik406
    @henryniznik406 7 месяцев назад +2

    I remember watching that game and saying re Bobby Orr ; " Look how good he is !"

  • @AdrienneMonestere
    @AdrienneMonestere 6 месяцев назад +1

    You can tell Orr wasn't allowed to take over the game yet because he was such a kid. They had him sitting back playing defense. No Espo, Cashman, Hodge, Stanfield, Sanderson or Cheevers yet. This is so cool to watch. Thanks for posting.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  6 месяцев назад

      Thank you. And yes, he was definitely under wraps for a while there.

  • @acousticshadow4032
    @acousticshadow4032 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is wonderful footage, for which I am most grateful. My earliest memories of watching hockey was when we got that guy from Parry Sound. Orr changed everything in Boston.

  • @37BopCity
    @37BopCity 5 месяцев назад +2

    I sure do love these old hockey games on RUclips. They take me back to the '60s when I was a teenager and I had all the Original Six hockey cards and I was a totally dedicated young hockey player and NHL fan. I recognize the names of all the players on both teams. However, all these years later there's something that I would sure love to see ---- all these great historic games colorized, speed-corrected, and cleaned up for a modern audience. It would be fantastic to see those legendary players in modern high-resolution digital video.

  • @killmesoft64
    @killmesoft64 Год назад +4

    Awesome! my family was most likely watching this game live, I would have been 2 years old, Hockey Night in Canada on Saturday evenings was a constant. I remember the names of the players, a young Bobby Orr, Dave Keon, Ron Ellis, Eddie Johnstone, Tim Horton.

  • @danielstephens9748
    @danielstephens9748 Год назад +7

    Hockey night in Canada...saturday night...tv set on..I was 12 and had recently 'jumped ship' from the leafs to Boston,after my dad took me to see the oshawa generals and Orr the yr before when they came to town to play the Hamilton jr. red wings

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +2

      No kidding! That's awesome! He must have been awfully impressive, although that was a given with Bobby, even at that age!

    • @danielstephens9748
      @danielstephens9748 Год назад +5

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 yeah...my whole family, including grandparents were mad at me for 'leaving' the leaf camp..lol

    • @patrickregan3463
      @patrickregan3463 Год назад +1

      Nothing like. Hockey night...the "Game". An old movie afterwards....pop corn... falling asleep with the TV on... sleep overs. Sunday morning Breakfast....yep. Simple. But Fun

  • @wallyedmonds8199
    @wallyedmonds8199 11 месяцев назад +1

    I was born the next year , love watching all these old games .

  • @robgraham5016
    @robgraham5016 Год назад +7

    That was awesome! No helmets, no masks, no glass and most noticeable - no ads on the boards! They look almost naked, don't they? How about the random face-off spots too and "freezing the puck"?

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      LOL! The freezing the puck thing freaked me out!

    • @tomtalley2192
      @tomtalley2192 Год назад +2

      And two line offside. I was 10 at the time and a couple of years before channel 38 started televising Bruins games and I was hooked on hockey as well as all New England. As a side note, the Celtics were in a run of championships, and couldn’t sell out theGarden, while the perennial loser Bruins always sold out the Garden.

    • @robgraham5016
      @robgraham5016 Год назад +1

      @@tomtalley2192 Uh ... The Leafs haven't won the cup since 1967 (I can hardly remember it) and sell-out every game since!

  • @Shadowwolf7774
    @Shadowwolf7774 10 месяцев назад +2

    I went to hockey games in the 60's. I was in awe as a little 8 year old. I still have a puck from back then.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  10 месяцев назад

      Tremendous keepsake!

    • @Shadowwolf7774
      @Shadowwolf7774 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 I saw Ross Lonsberry and Glen Sather in their 18's and 20"s.

    • @Shadowwolf7774
      @Shadowwolf7774 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 Thank you. Boston and the Stars are my favorite teams.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Shadowwolf7774 The North Stars, with the Gumper and Maniago in net, occasionally would give the Bruins fits!

  • @KIIDKYAAS
    @KIIDKYAAS Год назад +12

    That was a great hockey game. Check out that spinarama moves then rang it off the post. Orr was spectacular and it was apparent that he would be the greatest

    • @daniellinehan63
      @daniellinehan63 Год назад +1

      Loved seeing his Chicago Blackhawk jersey in the HOF

    • @gobobbyorr2928
      @gobobbyorr2928 Год назад

      He made his career with the Bruins. Screwed by his agent. Never cashed a Hawk check knowing he didn't earn them. Once a Bruin, always a Bruin. Dream on Hawk fan, you got nothing!@@daniellinehan63

  • @jemsmay2167
    @jemsmay2167 9 месяцев назад +2

    I was 8, living in Rochester NY with a friend (nicknamed “Bailey” cause his brother called him Ace…) whos dad had a fancy tv antenna so we could watch HNIC from Toronto. I grew up a Montreal fan for some reason, but really like watching the Bruins back then. This vid takes me back, interesting how much the game has changed and how much it is the same.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  9 месяцев назад

      I'll excuse you for the Montreal thing, and agree that it's fun to look back at old-time hockey!

  • @steveotterbeinhopealivemus53
    @steveotterbeinhopealivemus53 9 месяцев назад +2

    Tim Horton! I was 11 then and likely watched this game. Great memories

  • @Zobrisdj01
    @Zobrisdj01 6 месяцев назад +1

    If i had a time machine.....one of the 1st things id do is go to an NHL game in the 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s. It just looks so badass.

  • @davidthompson62
    @davidthompson62 2 года назад +22

    Thank you for this post as it is the earliest game of Orr’s career that I’ve seen. Sometime in 69, my father and I had the opportunity to see Orr in most of his home games and away games when they were televised. For those who never seen much of him, he was a must see as he would often do something you never saw before on the ice either defensively or offensively. Gretzky, being a forward, scored more goals and was also incredible, Orr was often off the charts with the moves he would make.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +7

      He checked every box, but mostly it was that skating! And doing it as a defenseman! Completely transformative!

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Год назад +1

      His first game was on October 19, 1966 at Boston Garden against the Red Wings, the Bruins won the game 6-2

  • @heywoodplanes6651
    @heywoodplanes6651 7 месяцев назад +2

    these are some of the players that inspired me to play this game. Miss the blank boards and two-line passes, Love that those offside faceoffs were spotted where the passes originated, the refs only used the dots if they weren't certain. I am lucky to have been able to play every position through the years that I played this game for fun - beer leagues and youth hockey. We played in the backyard in Ontario in 1966, 67, 68 and 69. on a rink our Grandfather would make in the winter. My first pair of skates were Bauer's - Sherwood sticks and Cooper pads. CCM, and Winwell came later - you had to curve your own stick blade, fellers - they were all straight back then. It's one thing to hear these names spoken in a roll call of hockey legends - and something else entirely to hear them called in the game by the announcers as they played the Game. So glad this was found and posted on YT - Good on ya Pete Goodwin. Gerry Cheevers was a favorite goalie of mine.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  7 месяцев назад +2

      Great stuff, Heywood, and thank you. I was unable to play hockey (asthma), but my two brothers did, and I remember one of them lighting a burner on the stove to curve his stick!

    • @heywoodplanes6651
      @heywoodplanes6651 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 yeah that's how we did it too! Here's the thing about all that hockey playing - it took a toll on the ol' Buick, if you know what I mean. She don't run so good, suspension is shot, and the frame is about done. I wouldn't trade those days for anything - but it WAS a trade off.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  7 месяцев назад

      @@heywoodplanes6651 I've outgrown my asthma, and the other day I thought, why not try to learn the game ... but I can't afford to get hurt if I can help it.

    • @heywoodplanes6651
      @heywoodplanes6651 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 I played in several recreational leagues over the years - some were friendlier than others. Best to play with people you know. If that's less than doable you just have to make the best of whatever situation and bail out if the knuckleheads outnumber the reasonable players. Attitude is latitude. On the other hand if you can find a rink that offers 'sticktime' where the fellers can just skate around with sticks n pucks thats a good alternative

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@heywoodplanes6651 Thanks for the 411!

  • @gord8382
    @gord8382 7 месяцев назад +2

    Paul Morris is the MLG announcer , bloody marvellous he his.

  • @KOZMOGRAFX
    @KOZMOGRAFX Год назад +9

    1966? That is surprisingly good footage... doesn't have the usual "flicker" from old cinescopes of that era. White boards, low glass, no helmets, serious back-checking, MLG's nasally sounding PA announcer! (And man, watching this, I can almost smell the winter cold that leaked through the windows while watching HNIC as a kid on the prairies!) As some have noted, original 6 hockey looked really fast back in the 60s, before the game was diluted by expansion and eroded by the goonery of the 70s. But I'm glad they stopped doing that quick camera close-up of the goalie whenever there was a shot on goal... you never saw the actual save!

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +2

      Great observations!

    • @rogerdennison8154
      @rogerdennison8154 11 месяцев назад

      Question for Pete Goodwin: If this is 1966, Bobby Orr is already playing as an 18 yo before expansion?? Wow. It was hard for anyone to break into a 6 team league back then. Mind you, it wasn’t exactly an international (professional) game back then as the league was about 99% Canucks. 😉

  • @bbb462cid
    @bbb462cid 5 месяцев назад +2

    This is actually pretty fair coverage. I miss the clean boards. Fun to see all the famous players. Keon, Bucyk, Orr, Mahovlich, Kelly, Green, Horton....Jesus all of them really. As a Bruins fan I know all the names and as a historical NHL fan the Leafs are here in a great season that wins them the Cup. Punch Imlach at the bench, Bower and Sawchuk in net, this was a great team. Good goal by Bruin Eddie Westfall, he was a very good player who gets overlooked. The Big M was really exciting to watch when he had the puck, eh?

  • @danh5150
    @danh5150 7 месяцев назад +2

    Every time they called "Horton" I had the urge for coffee and a Canadian maple. ;o)
    Seriously though, cool seeing all these legends in action.

  • @techheaven8132
    @techheaven8132 Год назад +4

    Thank you for this. I was only a few months old when this aired, so I am happy to see this now.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      YW! I'm a little older, but I feel the same way when I watch the OG stuff!

  • @robhurley5258
    @robhurley5258 2 года назад +15

    Thanks very much for this video. I'm a huge fan of Bobby Orr and the old Bruins teams. #4 truly was the best ever. If you have any more, please upload! Many thanks for all you do :)

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +7

      You're welcome! A few more treats in the pipeline, but it takes a while!

    • @robhurley5258
      @robhurley5258 2 года назад +4

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 agreed, I upload old videos myself and understand the time and effort involved

  • @thefozzybear
    @thefozzybear Год назад +10

    Many of today's NHL defensemen skate and move the puck like Bobby Orr. That's how he revolutionized the game.

  • @waynepratt9735
    @waynepratt9735 9 месяцев назад +4

    I was 12 and for sure watched this game with my Dad . Orr was the best player ever ,no one in his limited time playing was even close . Dad was a big Leafs fan so guys like Keon and Horton were good but not like Orr ! Amazing film thanks for posting this !

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  9 месяцев назад

      You're welcome! Awesome that you watched the games together! And yes, nobody came close to Bobby.

    • @willbyrd5717
      @willbyrd5717 9 месяцев назад +1

      Doug Harvey could play better defensively and control the game better the best Defenceman ever

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  9 месяцев назад

      @@willbyrd5717 He was great, but no match for Orr offensively IMO!

  • @jorgejohnson451
    @jorgejohnson451 9 месяцев назад +3

    This is hockey gold. Thanks for posting.

  • @whitneymacdonald4396
    @whitneymacdonald4396 9 месяцев назад +2

    More historic than this being Orr's fourth game, the Leafs were good! The excitement every time Orr had the puck, even in an away arena, was something to hear. Ted Green before he had his head bashed in... Gump Worsley without a mask... Great stuff. Thanks.

  • @molnya2
    @molnya2 8 месяцев назад +1

    Boy this brings back memories. All those players, Armstrong,Ellis,Keon, Mahovllich, Pappin, Horton and for the Bruins, Westfall, Bucyk,Orr,Oliver,McKenzie,Green and longtime referee Bruce Hood, as a young linesman. Those iconic announcers, Hewitt, McFarlane, and I wish I could remember his name, longtime PA announcer at MLG.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  8 месяцев назад

      Paul Morris!

    • @molnya2
      @molnya2 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 That's it. Along with Claude Mouton in Montreal, they were like Saturday night guests at home. Such legends.

  • @mikem820
    @mikem820 10 месяцев назад +2

    I think Orr would still own today’s game

  • @NickMasseyRideon
    @NickMasseyRideon 9 месяцев назад +1

    wow I remember listening to this game on the radio

  • @hannover5551
    @hannover5551 2 года назад +16

    Orr was the greatest shot blocker in NHL history. Amongst his other incredible talents

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +4

      Nobody better at it, at the least! Fearless!

    • @jamesanthony5681
      @jamesanthony5681 2 года назад +4

      He was good, as was Bob Goldham who stopped some with his chest.

    • @20thCenturyManTrad
      @20thCenturyManTrad Год назад +1

      I love Bobby, he's one of the best, but he doesn't hold a candle to Bob Goldham and Al Arbour, those two blocked shots like goalies. This in no way takes away from Orr, but I gotta set the record straight here.

    • @hannover5551
      @hannover5551 Год назад +3

      @@20thCenturyManTrad If Ed Johnston says Orr block as many shots as anyone whoever played the game, I’m going with him not you

    • @20thCenturyManTrad
      @20thCenturyManTrad Год назад +1

      @@hannover5551 I'm not saying different, Bobby blocked a lot of shots, but Terry Sawchuk, and Glenn Hall said the same about Goldham and Arbour. All contemporaries of the era agreed as much. I'm not hating on Orr, he was a good shot blocker, he merely wasn't the best at that facet of the game. Bill Gadsby was a great shotblocker too, great number 4 too, he had the same description as Orr. This isn't coming from me. It's coming from guys who played with these guys. When Marcel Pronovost one of the best Defensemen ever says that Goldham and Arbour were the greatest shotblockers, I'll go with him, because he played with both of them.

  • @rmelin13231
    @rmelin13231 Год назад +7

    Amazing footage, and priceless, to say the least. Thanks for all these gems you've provided!

  • @canuckowl
    @canuckowl Год назад +3

    Incredible! I know every name. It's cool to see some of the players on Boston that I actually know better from other places they played. Like Ron Shock for the Penquins and Wayne Connelly for the Red-wings. Bob Dillabough for the Oakland Seals. What a feast for the eyes and ears. Classic!

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      First I'd heard of ol' Bob, actually!

    • @canuckowl
      @canuckowl Год назад +2

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 well, where I lived every pack of hockey cards seemed to have a Bob Dillabough in it. That's how i recall him.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      🤣@@canuckowl

  • @macbirt56
    @macbirt56 Год назад +6

    This was definitely a trip down memory lane for me. This is actually 2 years before I became a Bruins hockey fan to be honest. I was just 10 in 1966, so all I could play in my small town was baseball or football. But after hearing about Bobby Orr and seeing a couple of games in 1968, all I wanted to do was play hockey. Except for the officiating, I still think hockey is the best sport of all. But I don't want to get into any debate here. This was a very pleasant surprise and a very nice one, thank you so much.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +3

      You're welcome! Thanks to the star power of Orr, rinks were springing up all over Greater Boston!

    • @macbirt56
      @macbirt56 Год назад +2

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 I remember well. On a side note, my friends used to tease me because I was a decent street hockey player in my hometown when we didn't have any ice, so they called me "Birt on tar." If you know, you know. lol

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +2

      @@macbirt56 Ha! That's tremendous!

  • @RileyRampant
    @RileyRampant 15 дней назад +1

    It was interesting hearing the criticism of Orr for rushing the puck and then being 'out of position'. He was changing the game, they hadn't caught up yet. Great time capsule.

  • @brsfan66
    @brsfan66 Год назад +7

    I love the fact that Orr wasn't such a sensation but his teammates know he was. He just made everybody better and you could see it in this game. Great video! I was only three and a half months old when this went on. He was just a baby going into a grown world and yet he's probably still the greatest player of all time if not then he was the most talented.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +5

      He was very humble for somebody who had to know he was better than everybody else!

  • @eLEMENTARYimage
    @eLEMENTARYimage 9 дней назад +1

    A time when jersey numbers higher than 31 were unheard of. I believe New York's MSG is the only surviving building from this era.

  • @danholtby1635
    @danholtby1635 8 месяцев назад +1

    What great nostalgia!! Those great play by play voices!! No helmets. Wooden hockey sticks, with no curves. And Bobby Orr. Mahovlich. Horton. Keon. Shack. And the rest of those great players.

  • @steveperry1344
    @steveperry1344 Год назад +2

    my heyday too as a school boy hockey player, took a lot of inspiration from the bruins and bobby orr and all the players in the nhl which was still a six team league. great memories. i got to go to some of the boston games between 1960-1968.

  • @neilkonitshek2906
    @neilkonitshek2906 Год назад +9

    Crazy that players protected everything else but their head.
    Bucyk nice play to Westfall for the goal

    • @user-db6pt7vr3l
      @user-db6pt7vr3l Год назад +3

      It's ok they all survived.

    • @giuseppenero110
      @giuseppenero110 Год назад

      @@user-db6pt7vr3l : minus their front teeth--of course

    • @giuseppenero110
      @giuseppenero110 Год назад +3

      For that reason the hits were generally less brutal with no intent to injure

    • @dwightropp3014
      @dwightropp3014 Год назад +2

      @@user-db6pt7vr3l- Well, all except one, of course, he being Bill Masterson of the Minnesota North Stars, who died in January of 1968 after falling and hitting his head on the ice during an NHL game.
      The Bill Masterson Memorial Trophy is awarded at each season's end since then as a result.

    • @20thCenturyManTrad
      @20thCenturyManTrad 2 месяца назад +1

      @@dwightropp3014 Likely because he was playing with another injury, Cesar Maniago, said during skating drills Bill Masterton's face would turn blue, before his tragic injury. So, it's likely that something else caused him to black out on what was an ordinary hard body check, which was why he didn't fall properly.

  • @moon-unit-zappa
    @moon-unit-zappa Год назад +2

    I was 10 days old when this game was played. 😮

  • @willbyrd5717
    @willbyrd5717 9 месяцев назад +1

    I had more interest in hockey cards and hockey coins back then than I have in the hockey today

  • @floofycatz
    @floofycatz 9 месяцев назад +2

    It just seems like the game flowed much more smoothly back then :) Love the maskless goalies, a true sport then.

  • @jimbo1959
    @jimbo1959 11 месяцев назад +1

    Wow!, Most of these players wouldn't make the NHL these days.The caliber of Hockey has greatly increased since then.Nice to see the players I grew up watching again! Thank You!

  • @rastapete100
    @rastapete100 Год назад +6

    Bobby Orr was the best player on the ice that night and it was only his fourth game. He was always the best player on the ice ever since then too.

  • @garyhenson117
    @garyhenson117 9 месяцев назад +1

    The Bruins were my favourites during the Orr era. The best team in hockey when his left knee gave out in autumn 1972; I still remember the catastrophic hit he sustained to his knee near the centre circle on one of his patented end-to-end rushes that effectively began the slide. It was fun while it lasted!

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  9 месяцев назад +1

      If only today's medical procedures were available then. But what we got was absolutely spectacular!

  • @unsafe_at_any_speed
    @unsafe_at_any_speed Год назад +6

    I was only 6 months old when this game was played. I was too young to remember the last time the leafs won the cup. I have a whole lifetime watching the leafs lose. This was real hockey! It's a shame what hockey has become in the 21st century.

  • @garyambrosi2075
    @garyambrosi2075 4 месяца назад +1

    Refs stopped play much quicker. I still can’t believe no masks for the goalies. I remember watching these games on tv and being so excited. Great hockey. And yes, no ads all over the ice and boards.

  • @davidbalfour9109
    @davidbalfour9109 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for posting!

  • @4houndswhoheal479
    @4houndswhoheal479 9 месяцев назад +3

    THE Greatest of ALL Time.

  • @johnmortin5603
    @johnmortin5603 9 месяцев назад +1

    I was 3. My first hockey memory was my Dad telling me to watch #4 for the Bruins. A lot of familiar names Cashman, Bucyk, Dallas Smith, Orr, Keon, Mahovlich and Hewitt and McFarlane from Hockey Night in Canada on our one station every Saturday night at 6 pm in Saskatchewan. No masks on the goalies still amazes me. I remember Cheevers and Dryden. Even with their masks a shot to the face would have been like a punch. I was surprised to see Orr was playing for the Bruins before Esposito.

  • @thecount1001
    @thecount1001 Год назад +10

    these guys skate faster than i imagined. passing isn't all that impressive, but the skating is.

    • @jimanderson7648
      @jimanderson7648 Год назад +3

      one of the reason for the passing being off is the clutch and grabbing

    • @mrktyb
      @mrktyb 10 месяцев назад

      true

    • @20thCenturyManTrad
      @20thCenturyManTrad 2 месяца назад

      The passing being less impressive is due mostly to the fact that the game was played in a tight defensive manner, particularly by the Leafs of the 1960s. It's very hard to get a sustained clean pass off, when you have every player covering their man like white on rice.

  • @jimcook8933
    @jimcook8933 11 месяцев назад +2

    Funny, I recognize a lot of the names. I had a ton of hockey cards. Most of them ended up in my CCM Mustang's spokes.the rest ended up abused playing various games up against the brick wall of my grade school during lunch hours!🤣

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  11 месяцев назад

      OMG, me too! I remember kids were flipping just as you describe and it was windy. A Jim Lonborg baseball card blew next to me, and I lightly stepped on it ... and stayed there until everybody ran in after the bell. It might have been the first dishonest thing I ever did, but I had the card!

  • @user-pv4ld1je5x
    @user-pv4ld1je5x 9 месяцев назад +1

    How cares who wins the game. Look at the player's. On leaf Tim Horton number 7. Red Kelly. All the greats. I love it. This is great video. Thank you to who put this video out . ❤

  • @roberttooth360
    @roberttooth360 Год назад +4

    You won't see another D man that good on all areas of the Game.! Shack playing some tight D Awesome footage 😅

  • @7777shayna
    @7777shayna 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for sharing this!!

  • @MarcelaR-dh1ok
    @MarcelaR-dh1ok Год назад +3

    Great era,,,NFL was 6 teams back then. Saw my first Bruin game at the Garden 67...vs Black Hawks...We had loge box seats and Bobby Hull passed by as we entered.

  • @patb5266
    @patb5266 9 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome upload thanks, I was almost 3 when this game was played but these guys kept going for another decade. Amazing hockey!

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  9 месяцев назад

      Glad you liked it, Pat B! The play is not so fast that I can't think along with each player and what he was trying to do, which I find enjoyable.

  • @MarcelaR-dh1ok
    @MarcelaR-dh1ok Год назад +1

    Love this site, Pete....Thanks so much for posting...Johnny Pie McKenzie...The Chief...what a great moment in time.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      Thanks, Marcela! Great nicknames during that time, too!

    • @MarcelaR-dh1ok
      @MarcelaR-dh1ok Год назад

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 Looking for more treasures at your site, Pete. Marcela is an old friend in CR...Names changed to protect the guilty...Take care...Bill

  • @tedebayer1
    @tedebayer1 Год назад +1

    My father was a leafs fan in those days so we likely watched it if it was on Hockey Night In Canada....(living in the Ottawa valley in those days, so it was unfortunately mostly Montreal games televised in our area) ...often we were holed up in the kitchen listening on the radio to leafs games. I remember the ice and boards in those days, no ads littering everything.. no helmets, no facemasks, goalies who actually moved to stop a puck

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      I am just loving all of the Canadian fans telling their stories of watching hockey back in the day!

  • @MapleSyrupPoet
    @MapleSyrupPoet Год назад +2

    Toronto rink annoucer ...1 of a kind ✨ like a voice from hockey 🏒 heaven 😍 😅

    • @johnmacmillan1436
      @johnmacmillan1436 Год назад +1

      The p.a. announcer was Paul Morris. Bill Hewitt calling the game.

    • @MapleSyrupPoet
      @MapleSyrupPoet Год назад +1

      @@johnmacmillan1436 yuppp...I heard Paul Morris at a game featuring Rick Vaive, Ian Turnbull ...when I saw 👀 classic Maple Leaf gardens, and heard Paul announce ...I knew I was at the BIG SHOW 🎪😁

  • @Jamie-1985
    @Jamie-1985 Год назад +5

    Classic Orr Spin-O-Rama @ 30:30

  • @squangan
    @squangan Месяц назад +1

    Just think, this was the era and video quality when the Toronto Maple Leafs last won the Stanley Cup.

  • @mikem820
    @mikem820 10 месяцев назад +2

    Wow no 20 minute commercials!! Wish we could say that nowadays

  • @samsantucci1044
    @samsantucci1044 Год назад +6

    Remember this - the Leafs would go on to win the Stanley Cup later that season - the last time the Leafs won the Cup.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +2

      That is hard to believe, but true. If the Bruins can't do it, I root for the Leafs ... but then again, Toronto is usually making tee times before Boston!

    • @saifonlawrence2044
      @saifonlawrence2044 Год назад +1

      It will NEVER happen again

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +2

      @@saifonlawrence2044 LOL. Don't be like that!

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Год назад +3

      And they're the oldest team to win the Stanley Cup the whole team the average age was 32 years old Terry Sawchuk was 37 years old Johnny Bower was supposedly 40 his exact age was never known George Armstrong was around 40

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      @@michaelleroy9281 Wow! Graybeards!

  • @cryptohalloffame
    @cryptohalloffame Год назад +5

    the leaf's announcer has been around for- evvver