'72 Project Story: I Watched it All on My Radio
Courtesy of the '72 Project
To set the mood for the 1972 Summit
Series, I will take you back to the Canadian prairies where I grew up. I had
gotten married the year before and was in a small town, Eastend SK for a
cousin's wedding, on the night of the first game of the series. The discussion
had been raging, but the consensus was that the NHL would make the Soviets look
like the amateurs they claimed to be for Olympic purposes. The game started just
before we went into the church and early on, my Dad, who had a transistor radio
plugged into his ear, informed us that the Canadians had scored a couple of
goals and we all nodded smugly that the Canadians, true to earlier predictions,
were going win this easily. As you now know, by the time we came out of the
church, the Soviets had turned things around and we were all puzzled as to what
could have turned this upside down so quickly.
As the series progressed through
Canada things didn't get much better for the Canadians and we were all a little
less confident of the eventual outcome. We were beginning to question Al
Eagleson's insistence that the newly formed WHA league defectees would not be
allowed to play in this series. Canadian fans by now were sure that the NHL
would have fared better with the help of the most famous WHA signing, Bobby
Hull, who was not allowed to play for Canada. As the series moved to the
USSR, we were still feeling pretty shaky about the prospects despite Phil
Esposito's passionate comments in Vancouver.
By September 28th, I was back at my
welding inspection job on a pipeline just east of Red Deer, AB. My new wife, who
was about eight months pregnant had accompanied me and was in the motel in Red
Deer. I had to get out to the job early each day, so my only opportunity to get
the action live was to listen on my truck radio. On that day, I was waiting for
a weld to be completed so I had time to just sit in the truck and listen. I
remember it was shortly before lunch, Alberta time, when Henderson scored. I
announced it to all of my co-workers who were out in the ditch working and there
was much joy in Mudville at that moment. I got to watch the TV version of the
Henderson goal that evening as all of the games were rebroadcast during prime
time. My wife had our son a month and a half later and another son a year after
the '76 series and they both enjoyed their youth in the best minor hockey system
in the world -- didn't we prove that in '72?
Stay tuned for an upcoming
announcement in August regarding a special event and the launch of the
book!
The '72 Project is an
opportunity for baby boomers and older generations to share where they were when
Henderson scored and what it meant to them, leaving an archive for younger
generations. Stories will be collected, with the 72 most compelling will be
chosen for a book.
www.72project.com
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