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Paul Henderson's 1972 Summit jersey nears auction date
The Canadian Press

href="http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20100607/henderson-jersey-100607/20100607?hub=Canada">Date:

Monday Jun. 7, 2010

MISSISSAUGA, Ont. -- Canada's most

revered hockey jersey was face down on a non-descript boardroom table in the

fourth floor of a non-descript suburban office building. It still had Paul

Henderson's sweat stains on the collar, but even as he lifted it gently off the

table, he knew it did not belong to him.

It is owned by an unidentified

American who is putting it up for auction later this month. The company in

charge of the process reunited it with Henderson on Monday, asking him to vouch

for its authenticity while allowing him to wear it for the first time since he

scored the winning goal in the 1972 Summit Series with the Soviet Union.

Henderson, who is 67 years old and

seven months into a battle with cancer, wore it like he had never taken it off.

He presented it as a gift to Team Canada trainer Joe Sgro not long after the

deciding game 38 years ago, a decision which has ultimately left it on the

auction block.

"I probably didn't understand the

significance of it in 1972, I don't think anybody did," he said. "And there

wasn't the market for things like there is today. So it is what it is, and it's

free market, so it's going to be interesting to see how high it does go."

There have been 25 bids submitted

for the auction, which closes June 22. The highest bid is US$211,000, and Marc

Juteau, president of the company in charge of the sale, said there has been

speculation the winner could end up paying as much as US$500,000.

The jersey is white and heavy-knit,

with "Canada" spelled out in block letters between the shoulders, just above his

No. 19. Henderson cut it at the sleeves because it was too long, and pointed to

a mark near the waist as an impact point from when he was rubbed out along the

boards against the Soviets.

He donated a stick to the Hockey

Hall of Fame, along with his red Team Canada jersey. Henderson tried to buy his

white jersey back for $25,000 more than a decade ago, but the owner at the time

refused to sell it for less than $40,000.

There have been reports

Canadian-based companies such as Molson, The Forzani Group Ltd. and Canadian

Tire have been working to generate enough support to win the auction.

"We need to get this back in

Canada," Henderson said. "And, obviously, my first choice would be Canada's

Sports Hall of Fame."

Henderson was inducted into the

Canadian hall in 1995, and has long since parted with every piece of Summit

Series memorabilia he once owned. Most of the souvenirs have been donated to

charity, but many have simply been given away to friends.

"I mean, that's what life's about

-- giving things away," Henderson said. "And I've never been one for hanging

stuff in my closest and keeping it, anyway."

And it is not like the memories are

ever very far away, with nine out of every 10 people he meets over the age of 40

stopping him to say where they were when he scored that September. Henderson

said he was cutting his lawn earlier this spring when his neighbour of 20 years

mentioned for the first time he had gotten in trouble for skipping school the

day of the deciding game.

Those memories have, undoubtedly,

been stirred across Canada with word of the auction.

"Seven months ago, I get cancer,

and that was a big deal, and now this has come up," Henderson said with a smile

Monday. "I'm like a bad smell. I just refuse to go away."

He said the cancer was detected

during a routine checkup in November. Henderson said he has cut out all beer,

sugar and bread from his diet, and that he has not yet begun chemotherapy

because the type of cancer he has does not respond to early treatment.

"It's all in there -- it's in my

stomach, chest, my lymph nodes, and I have leukemia, also," Henderson said. "So,

I mean, there's a day of reckoning coming. But I'm doing everything I can do to

push it back."

In the meantime, he would like to

do everything he can to push his jersey back into Canadian hands.

The auction is being held at

face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">www.classicauctions.netface="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">.

"It's going to be interesting to

find out what the Canadian people think it's worth," Juteau said. "Because,

obviously, they're going to be the ones deciding."

Henderson is not monitoring the

bidding.

"If I owned it today and it was

worth $400-$500,000, I still wouldn't sell it," he said. "I'd still give it to

the sports hall of fame ... it's a part of Canadian history."



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