WEBVTT
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Hello, I'm Neil.
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I grew up in a login camp.
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Top hundred foot trees to pay for my education and spent time in places most people haven't heard of.
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From the Russian flurries to the halls of politics.
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But this podcast is not about me.
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It's about the people I've met who are at a desert resort in California in old neighborhoods and across the lifetime of terms I never saw coming.
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Some episodes will make you laugh.
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Others might make you positive.
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Season one of Upper Creek with Neil is about the great grief and joy that shape real people.
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So if you've ever felt like you're a little stuck, a little strange, or just plain curious about how others are making it through them all, pull up a chair.
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New episodes will arrive this morning.
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Find us at UpperCreekwithNeil NEML.com or wherever you get your podcast.
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Thanks for listening and have a great day.
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Alright, gentlemen, where are we anyway?
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Grand Forks BC, as I recall.
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And Jim, you're quite a golf player, I understand.
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A golf player?
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Yeah.
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That's about a spirit golf.
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Did you ever try hockey?
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I fooled him for a few years.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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So how many teams did you play with?
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I started off in Boston, uh, traded Toronto, uh went to the World Hockey and played in Ebonton, Cleveland.
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Uh ended up going back to the NHL in Chicago, and then finally uh finished my career in Ebenton.
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I came in with Bobby Orr and went out with Gretzky.
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Two of the greats.
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Two of the greatest, yeah.
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Who was the greatest in your mind?
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I'd say Bobby Orr.
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Yeah.
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I mean, there's I mean, Gretzky was good, but uh, you know, I mean, Orr just controlled everything.
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He was so so good.
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But these guys are so classy, all these guys.
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I mean, Gretzky's I was only there for three, four months because I had a back operation, and my claim to fame was I took him duck hunting for a couple times.
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So, but uh no, Gretzky was good.
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But there was Gordy Howe, there were so many great players.
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It's hard to compare, it depends what year it is.
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So uh yeah, no, I I would still say Orr is probably the best player I've ever seen.
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Are you still in touch with uh Bobby Orr?
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Yeah, we go fishing when Boston's a great alumni.
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We end up going to brought my wife and my back twice now for the Stanley Cup and uh the 100th anniversary, and uh I mean a class organization, so we see each other quite a bit, but uh you know, most of the guys live out east, most of them in Florida, and either Palm Springs or they're mostly buddies, but there's not many that live out west now and come back home.
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What do you see in the biggest difference in the current young players and those greats like the GOAT Bobby Orr?
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Well, I think the training and the knowledge that they have, and I mean, you know, there was only six teams when I started, and you know, the guys were playing until they're 40 years old.
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And uh now, you know, guys are starting at their 18.
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Yet, you know, if you made it when you were 20, you were lucky.
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And uh the players train so hard now and they're so talented.
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I mean, I if you look at the old videos which we see once in a while when I played, and I go I'm embarrassed that we skated so slow.
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Wow.
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So it's a whole different game.
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And I think it's a lot to do with training, and as a young person, I mean, you know, we we practice once a week.
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These guys practice, you know, uh every day as a kid, you know, that that makes a big difference.
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Yeah.
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There's books written about you, or book, and uh, I've had a chance to thumb through a few pages.
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You were kind of like uh from uh the state side, you look kind of like Burt Reynolds.
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You kind of had that moxy look and kind of had a good look and charm and did all right on the ice.
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So you you did well.
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Well, it was fun.
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Yeah, I mean uh hockey was good to me and still is.
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Uh, you know, the NHL alumni and um the NHL have treated us pretty good.
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Uh you know, once things changed with new our alumni and our our uh player reps and everything else, things have changed for the money that's around now is just unbelievable.
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And uh the NHL had come back and helped us out a lot.
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But you know, it's a dream as a young kid in Canada.
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It was a religion when I was a kid.
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Every Saturday, every Sunday, you only had a radio, we had no TV, and you listened to hockey.
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Your dream was to be a hockey player.
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Everybody's dream was, you know, if you made it, it was it was you know, a dream come true.
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How old were you when you were drafted?
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I went to uh the Esteban Blues, which was owned by Boston, and I was uh 15 years old.
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I left home and went there to Saskatchewan, and I signed a C form uh for$250, and uh there was there's 20 players in the team.
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They don't sign everybody to C form because a lot of them, you know, they don't they don't think they'll make the NHL.
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So I signed a C form for$250, and I was Boston Bruno's property.
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Wow, wow.
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What does that mean, a C4?
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It means that they have the owner rights.
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Uh you know, they in the old days there was no draft, so we were owned by Boston-owned Niagara Falls, Oshawa where Bobby Orr was, and Esteban.
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They owned that team and they would sponsor it, and they own those players.
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Um, Montreal had all of Quebec.
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They couldn't, nobody could get a player out of Quebec.
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Uh Detroit had Hamilton, Weyburn, uh places like that.
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So that's all those players that went there were their property.
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So that was the draft came in in, I believe, in the late 70s, I think, but I'm not sure exactly.
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And Gary Monaghan was the first, he was a friend of mine who played in Toronto, was the first draft player drafted.
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Do you remember when you were first on the ice?
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I still played junior.
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I had a back operation when I was 18, so I would have probably been there a year or two before, but they brought me back to training camp, which was a month long.
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You got to train camp to get in shape, and that's when Orr and Boston had the great teams.
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So, you know, I was a thrill to be around Esposillo and Cheevers and all these guys, and Bobby Orr as a as an 18-year-old.
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So uh you play a few exhibition games, and then uh you know, I it it was kind of a blurry, you get you get you you get to those big stadiums and you look around, you go, holy where am I?
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You know, 20,000 people to Chicago and things like that.
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So yeah, it was uh you know, for a little boy who uh come from a town of 250 people with no uh no not enough money, uh it was it was really something.
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How uh many games did your parents were they able to watch or go to?
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Is that difficult?
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My dad only saw me play one game in his lifetime.
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Uh my mother, nobody ever came to minor hockey.
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They just wasn't a thing.
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They just sure I played soccer, I played ball, and uh I don't think I spent much time at home because through through high school, but yeah, although they never had an opportunity because I moved to Saskatchewan, and then eventually at the end, uh my dad passed away fairly early.
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But my mother, we started bringing her to hockey games, and she would come to Toronto or Chicago or you know, uh, so she got to see some of the NHL games.
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That's great, that's great.
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Then when did you step up to the majors?
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I was uh I started with Boston, I think it was 67-68, the year they won the Stanley Cup.
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And then I was uh I played them one year, went to the minors for half a year, and then I started the next year because one of the top centers got hurt and I took his place.
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But ironically, we played uh Toronto in the uh their farm team, and uh I think I had a couple fights with a couple of their tough guys, so it was destined that I was gonna be wanted this my type of style player, so and they were cleaning house because they had won the Stanley Cup in '67 with a bunch of old guys.
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So when it came Christmas time, uh I was traded to Toronto.
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So I and they were in last place.
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So it wasn't a good deal for me.
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Rod uh Vatcher's here with us, and Rod, you've uh as a kid been able to watch the greats and see them play.
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And when do you recall first meeting at Jim?
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Do when do I when did I first meet him?
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Hear about him and well, uh through Leanne, who plays with uh Jim's wife Caroline.
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They play pickleball together.
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And uh so then I start I actually didn't know much about Jim, to be honest.
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And Jim took me through his uh shop, actually, the old fire hall, and the memorabilia that's in there, and the stories that Jim can tell you about his early days in the NHL were just it was it was I was just kind of engulfed in it all because this is an era of time that uh I grew up in Montreal and we had some really great hockey teams through the 70s.
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So he played in some of those, and uh it was it was just an interesting time.
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I actually lost touch with hockey for a number of years.
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Um, I don't know if it what why that was, it just stopped watching and uh I've kind of gotten back into it again.
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So it's kind of fun to to meet Jim and uh hear the stories from yesteryear.
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And uh do you remember hearing or seeing him on TV?
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No, I don't actually.
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Okay, okay.
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Well um growing up in Montreal, I mean, we saw basically all the Canadian games, and the only time not that Montreal and Toronto didn't meet or some of the other teams that Jim played with, but uh it I I followed the Canadians pretty heartily.
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Jim, out of curiosity, was that difficult to transition as a Canadian player and then go on and play for American teams?
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Well, it was um, you know, I think everybody wanted to play like the Rangers in Boston and things like that.
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They were great sports cities.
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So I mean, you had the opportunity to go.
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Um, I was a true Canadian.
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I loved uh, you know, if I could play for Toronto, that was my dream.
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But um in our era, we never you never associated, you never thought you'd get traded.
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Like the uh trades were not didn't happen unless it was a big block blockbuster trade.
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So uh, but yeah, no, it uh people didn't mind getting traded to the New Yorker.
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It gives you a second life a lot of time, you know, things weren't going well, so you got traded, so it gives you a new life.
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When I went to Toronto, I got to play more because in Boston that we had three really good centermen that you know there's no way I'm gonna knock them out and play ahead of them.
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So when I went to Toronto, uh, you know, they only had Dave Keon and a few other guys, and it gave me that opportunity to play.
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And what was it like when you you know, coming from a Saskatchewan or Albertan team and playing those guys from the East?
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Well, it was always the East-West uh games in training camp, and you know, I think the the East always admired the Westerns because we were we liked to drink beer and we were tougher.
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Like we uh, you know, then and we had more fun.
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We were always joyable, and uh it seems the easterners were kind of uh stuck up people.
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We it was always a rivalry.
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I grew up, my parents uh were farmed and they they hated the east because they always felt the west got the raw deal in politics and everything.
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So you grew up with that mentality.
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And I always uh we know that the bonuses when I signed the East got double the money we did, and they didn't make the NHL even some of these guys, but they favored the uh the Eastern kids, and uh then they found out very quickly that the Western kids were tougher and they came to play, and they were either worked in a farm or worked in a bush or whatever they were, and they were uh they were tougher kids.
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Do you remember that time when you were you felt you were just really passed over, they didn't see your talent, and you uh lost out to another kid?
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No, not really.
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I you know, I worked hard.
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I when I was on the ice, and you know, yeah, you know, there's always that uh you're trying to beat the best players to get ahead of that player.
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I played center, and you know, there was always just was pretty good sentiment in the NHL.
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There was only six teams, so you know there's a whole team sitting in the miners that you have a couple bad games or a bad year, you can be gone or traded.
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So I I was very fortunate that way.
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I worked hard and uh people I got along with the teammates.
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Uh teammates made a big difference if you were a guy, uh the team didn't like you if you're a hot dog or whatever it is like they have some of these guys today.
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Um, you know, the players could uh eliminate you pretty fast.
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You could be left out with the team.
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So uh I was very fortunate that way.
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I had some really good friends and still have those people as friends now.
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What was it like, as I recall, uh there was a time where you really weren't able to talk to the other players, other players of the other teams?
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Well, that was what uh when they had the original six, and even when the world hockey was starting to come in the 72, they didn't want you to talk because they didn't want anybody to know what to sell, which we had no made no money at all.
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My first contract was$11,000, and uh uh the person working in the grocery store made the same amount of money as us, and we had no pension.
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So uh the big thing was with the owners just keep these guys, and if you were ever seen talking to another teammate, you're either fined or sent to the miners.
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So many guys were sent to the miners for associating with uh with other teammates.
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So uh you gotta be it was really uh they controlled everything you did.
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And uh so you started at 250, 250 dollars.
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And I've got to ask it, what was your high?
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Um I signed with Evanton, uh Ballard, who was on the Toronto May Base, he made me promise that I would come back and sign with them because we were we had we would had some good young people uh Sittler and a few uh we were going the young so but I wanted to own a fishing lodge in the Arctic, which I did, and I went up there and as I got off the airplane in Eventon, uh Dr.
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Aller, who owned a team, uh the management met me there and they offered me$125,000,$75,000 bonus, a Jeep if they owned a Jeep dealership, and they uh bought my house because I had no furniture.
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We had two lawn chairs in the house, and they bought me so I signed, and they had a big shopping cart full of bills, and I went down Jasper Avenue.
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And the story is Ballard saw this and he swore I'd never play back for Toronto.
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So when I wanted to come back to the NHL, I had the opportunity.
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They stole my rights, they end up giving my race to Chicago because they didn't want him to do it with me.
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So uh, you know, that's the dollars that we changed from$11,000, and then and Ballard was gonna give me a$500 raise.
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And here the greatest hockey player that uh Toronto had is David Keon.
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He was making$18,500.
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$18,500.
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And he was uh also and he was the greatest player that they ever had, and he I think he has four or five starter cups in the era.
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Um so he you know, here I end up going to the world hockey, and because nobody thought this league would go.
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Everybody said it was it would fail, but uh you know, we took a gamble on it, and Dr.
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Hollard put my money in the bank, which nobody realized.
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The money was all there before I even started, it was an escrow and everything.
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So um you know they were uh it was really sad to see that uh the owners kept a lot of these players back, that were great hockey players that they made no money, and it happened to Hull and you know, Hull, Bobby Hull left for a million dollars, and I think he was I'm not sure what he made per year, but nobody told you what your salaries were.
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That was one thing they kept that really tight.
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And today, what is a what does a hockey player start out at?
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I think minimum wage is close to a million dollars.
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Wow, and you know, I'd like to play a month only, just uh a few more choice.
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But uh, you know, you score five goals and you're making a million dollars, you know, in our era.
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I scored 19 goals and I was the second highest scorer in Toronto, and you know, I made eleven thousand dollars.
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So it uh but it's it's just it's time, you know.
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I mean look at look at the cost of trucks and the cost of everything else.
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Sure.
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I'm really happy for the players now.
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I've had a good life.
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Hockey's been so good to me.
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Um, you know, we've had I've had some major back problems and and uh things like that.
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And my wife, my late wife, had cancer, her bills were in the thousands, fifty thousand dollars, and the players paid for it all, or all the guys sent money to pay her bills.
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So hockey's been hockey's been good to me.
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Could in that end of it.
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Could still I can go down the street and people stop and say, I remember you, and you know, every month I get probably five, six autographs uh to sign, and I charge five dollars uh autograph and I get that American money, which is nice.
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But it's just you know, and every all the players charge all because they used to sell these cards.
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I used to buy hockey cards for 35 cents and give the cards to kids.
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Now my cards are$85,$60, and then I thought, yeah, that's my signature, you know.
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So the people are getting the cards.
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Do you still have your cards?
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Oh, yeah.
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I get them every month.
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I get like I got lost to buy.
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I used to buy them all the time.
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Sure.
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Yeah, so it's it's uh, you know, the that end of it, you keep yourself involved with hockey.
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Who was the first major uh player you recall having a card for?
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Oh, gee.
00:17:26.480 --> 00:17:28.880
We never thought much of it like at that time.
00:17:29.119 --> 00:17:29.680
At that time, yeah.
00:17:29.839 --> 00:17:32.880
Hockey cards, you'd get them, and you just my kids used to play with them.
00:17:32.960 --> 00:17:36.799
I had a Ty Cobb baseball, and my kids used to play with it.
00:17:36.880 --> 00:17:48.319
And uh I ended up giving it uh because we had some major law uh uh legal bills when I was suing Eagleson and the NHL for what happened with a disability insurance.
00:17:48.480 --> 00:17:56.079
So I had to give that for him, and I'm not sure how many thousand dollars he got for it, but he was happy to take the taekwondo baseball.
00:17:56.319 --> 00:17:57.440
My kids used to play with it.
00:17:57.599 --> 00:18:03.680
I had Tim Hortons, who owns Tim Hortons Donuts, I had his jersey because they'd give you a jersey after every year.
00:18:03.920 --> 00:18:11.279
And uh when my wife was having a problem, Parker Hurst cards, uh Tim uh Carl Brewer phoned me and said, Would you sell the card?
00:18:11.359 --> 00:18:16.319
We'll give you some money, so they ended up getting me$3,000 for Tim Horton's sweater.
00:18:16.720 --> 00:18:23.119
I just got a call last year from a bro, uh, a card, a memorabilia dealer in Boston who's a friend of mine.
00:18:23.279 --> 00:18:25.599
He said, Do you still have that sweater from Tim Horton?
00:18:25.680 --> 00:18:28.160
He said, I got a guy who gave you$75,000 for it.
00:18:28.319 --> 00:18:28.480
Wow.
00:18:30.160 --> 00:18:32.799
Yeah, so that's the car, that's what these this stuff was worth.
00:18:32.880 --> 00:18:37.200
Like, you know, the Tim Horton jersey would be, you know, but my kids used to wear it.
00:18:37.359 --> 00:18:42.640
And it had an A on it, and I took the A off because I was embarrassed that I was never the Sitz said captain.
00:18:42.720 --> 00:18:46.400
So, but they used to wear it all the time, go on Halloween and put the jersey on.
00:18:46.480 --> 00:18:52.480
So and I had I used to have Gretzky sticks and ore sticks, and we yeah, we always get them.
00:18:52.640 --> 00:18:54.319
And um, I just gave them away.
00:18:54.400 --> 00:18:55.119
We'd give them the hug.
00:18:55.440 --> 00:18:57.839
So the value of those things now are unbelievable.
00:18:58.000 --> 00:18:58.240
Yeah.
00:18:58.720 --> 00:18:59.359
Yeah.
00:19:00.400 --> 00:19:02.240
Well, you've had an exciting career.
00:19:02.400 --> 00:19:04.160
I guess I'd like to ask.
00:19:04.640 --> 00:19:12.000
You learned a lot of things from that game, and it taught you a lot in the pain and the grief and all you went through it.
00:19:12.079 --> 00:19:18.160
But as you applied that after you got out of hockey, what do you what do you think you took most from hockey and applied to your life?
00:19:19.119 --> 00:19:29.599
Well, I think after I retired, it was mistrusted with a lot of things that happened because of you know the Eagleson who embezzled you know half of my money.
00:19:29.839 --> 00:19:39.440
And I lost me, he we found out that he owned uh part of the shares of lawyer, he had shares a lawyer in London, his buddies, and they would pay who they wanted the disability.