My Trade Deadline Day

No, you haven’t missed anything. Or, at least, you probably haven’t. The last time I sent out a story was my Happy Holidays post back in December. Just haven’t much felt like it lately. A winter spent squeezing in plenty of drives back and forth to Toronto between snowstorms hasn’t helped. Let’s go with that… Also, I don’t know about anyone else, but I enjoy these stories more these days when there’s something at least a little more involved with my own personal history rather than just hockey/sports history. (And yes, I did write about this a few years ago, but if you don’t like me repeating myself, you can ask for your money back!)

Anyway, with the better weather lately, and as I was driving home to Owen Sound this afternoon (yesterday as I post this), listening to speculation about the NHL Trade Deadline (which is today) and thoughts on the difficulty of dealing players in these days of no-trade clauses (Colton Parayko of St. Louis chose not to waive his when the Blues tried to trade him to Buffalo this week), I was reminded of my own personal Trade Deadline Day.

My best hockey team. Andrew Morrison Real Estate. I missed the picture at Mitchell Field, so that’s me in the inset. The captain is Kerry McIntyre, standing in front of his dad and our coach, Andy. Ross Takeuchi is holding the white helmet. Andrew Spitzer is our goalie. My defense partner Blake Jacobs is next to him with the yellow helmet.

Like most Canadian kids, I played hockey as a boy. I started the year I turned nine years old. It was the winter of 1972–73. I was terrible. But I improved a lot that summer after the first of two years at the Roger Crozier Hockey School in Barrie, Ontario, near where we had a summer cottage. I played six years, but never beyond house league. My best years were my second and third seasons, when I was an Atom and a Minor Pee Wee. My teams won the championship in both of those seasons. (Kind of sad, but I peaked in hockey at age 11!)

Playing house league, the Willowdale Boys Club tried to keep the teams even. I can’t remember it all exactly, but I think we were just assigned to teams. I don’t know if our parents rated our skills on sign-up forms, or if we’d been “scouted” from previous seasons, but after playing for four or five weeks, the league would switch players around if some teams were too weak and others too strong.

The North York Mirror reported on our house league games!

I was a pretty good house league player. A defenceman who liked to rush the puck. (I knew I wasn’t Bobby Orr … but I tried!) Anyway, in December of 1974, I was traded to a weaker team to help prop them up. I remember it as being the night of our family Hanukkah party at our Freedman cousins’ house. Looking it up, I see Hanukkah started on Sunday night, December 8, 1974 … so I bet it was that very night. I remember getting a call from the convener of the league before we left home. He told me the coach of Andrew Morrison Real Estate wanted me for his team. But it was my choice.

I didn’t want to go. My current team, Jerrett’s Funeral Home (honestly!) was in first place. I agonized over what to do, but I remember my father saying, “The coach wants you. He thinks you can help them.” I can’t remember anymore how I actually made up my mind (and I’m pretty sure they didn’t give kids the choice any more after me!), but we called back the convener later that night and I told him I’d go.

Stills from home movies shot by my father at Bayview Arena in 1975. Top left, patrolling the front of our net. Top right, picking up the puck on my backhand. Bottom left, carrying the puck out of our zone. Bottom right, at the opposing blue line.

It turned out, Andrew Morrison was a pretty strong team. We were led on offense by the coach’s son, Kerry McIntyre and Ross Takeuchi. I anchored the defence with Blake Jacobs. Our goalie was Andrew Spitzer; the best in the league. And we went on to win the championship.

Maybe the team would have come together without me. But they hadn’t yet.

Not until after my Trade Deadline Day.

NOTE: Later in the day, in the Zweig Brothers text group, David (who usually doesn’t remember things as well as Jonathan and I do), wrote: “wasn’t someone else who had to make a decision part of that trade?” I didn’t remember that, but when David and I were talking afterwards, he said he thought it was Ross Takeuchi. Then we sort of put it all together. Yes, Ross and I had been playing together with Jerrett’s and as I remember it now, Ross (who had played with David in our first season) only agreed to the trade after he heard that I’d agreed too! So, it was a more complicated Deadline Day deal than I first remembered.

14 thoughts on “My Trade Deadline Day

  1. Another fun story with good memories. Thanks for sharing.
    Winter is just about over and spring training is underway. Enjoy the spring and play ball.

  2. Reminds me of the 1947-48 Woodside Whippets of the Long Island City YMCA Roller Hockey League. Those were wood sticks, flat blades, no helmet, no goalie mask years and somehow we still loved it. Thank you Eric.

    1. I can’t say the same for myself, particularly about my younger years. My older sisters know more about me than I can remember. I just can’t remember the supposed stories about me as a kid to corroborate their reminisces. Laugh.

  3. I think the Leafs could use you Eric. You may still get the call today.

    I wore a Leafs jersey at floor hockey last night. I’m a goalie (most of the time).
    Our side won all three games.
    The Leafs’ six game skid is (in a roundabout way) snapped!

  4. They only trade the good players. Unfortunately when the cupboard is bare…as in Leafland……Trading an usherette in Scotiabank arena for two popcorn sellers is the best the Leafs could do. And with the cost of a hot dog, it isn’t going to bring The Cup to Toronto.
    Fun article, as always
    I think my wife, as a teen, may have dated Roger, when working in Bracebridge. Of course I am a much better catch for any girl!!!

  5. Loved reading this, Eric. I do remember you as young boy, but I must admit, I didn’t realize that you were into hockey. When my two grandsons began playing hockey at a very young age, my late husband and I often went to the games. Bryson, now 31+, was about 7 and his younger brother, Davis was about 5 and I know the hockey stick was more of support to keep him from falling. And they continued until each had finished high school. “Little Davis”, had a growth spurt at 14 and he now towers over everyone in our family at 6’3”, and he was given a lovely award when his team days ended. I believe it was one for Sportsmanship, which means more to me than MVP. Now, he plays about once a week with a group of friends to keep in shape. I am certain your family has warm memories of your days on the ice, and we certainly love ours of our boys. Poor Leafs, they certainly need something!!!

  6. WOW! What a great story!! Perfect timing with what is going on with the Leafs & the Trade Deadlines. Thank you for sharing with us.
    ((hugs)) Sherri-Ellen (BellaSita Mum) & **purrss** BellaDharma (who loves watching hockey….no surprise right?)

  7. Aha! your dusting off of your minor hockey days has brought my “semi-pro” career in Flesherton to mind. It was about 1971 when the new arena was opened and we needed to rent out the ice-time…if you owned skates, you were drafted. I thought “semi-pro” was a catchy way to promote something one level above pickup hockey but I recently found reference to a Grey County league by that moniker in the 1930s. Who knew the lads from Grey County were so creative…as well as good looking?

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