Terry Sawchuk

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Terrance Gordon Sawchuk (December 28, 1929 – May 31, 1970) was a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender who played 21 seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Detroit Red Wings, Boston Bruins, Toronto Maple Leafs, Los Angeles Kings, and New York Rangers between 1950 and 1970. He won the Calder Trophy, earned the Vezina Trophy four times, was a four-time Stanley Cup champion, and was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame the year after his final season, one of 10 players for whom the three-year waiting period was waived.

Terry Sawchuk
Hockey Hall of Fame, 1971
Sawchuk with the Detroit Red Wings in 1963
Born (1929-12-28)December 28, 1929
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Died May 31, 1970(1970-05-31) (aged 40)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight 195 lb (88 kg; 13 st 13 lb)
Position Goaltender
Caught Left
Played for Detroit Red Wings
Boston Bruins
Toronto Maple Leafs
Los Angeles Kings
New York Rangers
Playing career 1949–1970

At the time of his death, Sawchuk was the all-time leader among NHL goaltenders with 447 wins and with 103 shutouts. In the decades following his death, his NHL win record has been surpassed by seven goaltenders, and his NHL shutout record has been surpassed by one goaltender, though Sawchuk was the all-time leader in wins and shutouts by goaltenders who played in the Original Six era (1942–1967). In 2017, Sawchuk was named one of the "100 Greatest NHL Players".[1][2]

Early life and playing career

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Childhood and junior career

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Sawchuk was born in the North End of Winnipeg and raised there until his family moved to Bowman Avenue in East Kildonan, a working-class, formerly Ukrainian section of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He was the third of four sons and one adopted daughter of Louis Sawchuk, a tinsmith who had immigrated to Canada as a boy from Galicia, Austria-Hungary (now Ukraine), and his wife Anne (nee Maslak), a homemaker. The second son died young from scarlet fever and the oldest, an aspiring hockey goaltender whom Terry idolized, died suddenly of a heart attack at age seventeen. At age twelve, Sawchuk injured his right elbow playing rugby and, not wanting to be punished by his parents, hid the injury, preventing the dislocation from properly healing. Thus, the injury left his right arm with limited mobility and was now also several inches shorter than the left, which bothered him for his entire athletic career. After inheriting his good friend's goalie equipment, Sawchuk began playing ice hockey in a local league and worked for a sheet-metal company installing vents over bakery ovens. His goaltending talent was so evident that at age fourteen a local scout for the Detroit Red Wings had him work out with the team, who later signed him to an amateur contract and sent him to play for their junior team in Galt, Ontario, in 1946, where he also finished the eleventh grade but most likely did not graduate from high school. He excelled in many sports. He played baseball for a number of years for the Elmwood Giants first in the Manitoba Senior AA League starting in 1948, when he won the league's batting title, and then in Mandak League. He played in both the infield and the outfield.

Detroit Red Wings

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The Red Wings signed Sawchuk to a professional contract in 1947, and he quickly progressed through their developmental system, winning honors as the Rookie of the Year in both the U.S. and American Hockey Leagues. Sawchuk also filled in for seven games when the Detroit goalie Harry Lumley was injured in January 1950. Sawchuk showed such promise that the Red Wings traded Lumley to the Chicago Black Hawks, though he had just led the team to the 1950 Stanley Cup. Nicknamed "Ukey" or "The Uke" by his teammates because of his Ukrainian ancestry, Sawchuk led the Red Wings to three Stanley Cup wins in five years, winning the Calder Memorial Trophy as the top rookie and three Vezina Trophies for the fewest goals allowed (he missed out the other two years by one goal). He was selected as an All-Star five times in his first five years in the NHL, had fifty-six shutouts, and his goals-against average (GAA) remained under 2.00. In the 1951–52 playoffs, the Red Wings swept both the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Montreal Canadiens, with Sawchuk surrendering five goals in eight games (for a 0.625 GAA), with four shutouts.[3] During the last of these eight games, the Legend of the Octopus began as the first of the eight-limbed molluscs was hurled onto the ice from the stands.

Sawchuk was ordered by Detroit general manager Jack Adams to lose weight before the 1951–52 season. After his weight loss, his personality seemed to change and he became sullen and withdrawn. He became increasingly surly with reporters and fans, preferring to do crossword puzzles than give interviews. He also struggled for years to regain the weight. Also contributing to his moodiness and self-doubt was the pressure of playing every day despite repeated injuries — there were no backup goaltenders. He frequently played through pain, and during his career he had three operations on his right elbow, an appendectomy, countless cuts and bruises, a broken foot, a collapsed lung, ruptured discs in his back, and severed tendons in his hand. A standup goaltender, he adopted a crouching stance to see through the legs of skaters.[4] Years of crouching in the net caused Sawchuk to walk with a permanent stoop and resulted in lordosis (swayback), which prevented him from sleeping for more than two hours at a time. He also received approximately 400 stitches to his face (including three in his right eyeball) before finally adopting a protective facemask in 1962.[5] In 1966, Life Magazine had a make-up artist apply stitches and scars to Sawchuk's face to demonstrate all of the injuries his face sustained over the years. The make-up artist did not have enough room for everything.[6]

Boston Bruins; return to Detroit; Toronto and Los Angeles

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The Red Wings traded Sawchuk to the Boston Bruins in June 1955 because they had a capable younger goaltender in the minor leagues (Glenn Hall). This devastated Sawchuk. During his second season with Boston, Sawchuk was diagnosed with mononucleosis, but returned to the team after only two weeks. Physically weak, playing poorly, and on the verge of a nervous breakdown and exhaustion, he announced his retirement in early 1957 and was labeled a "quitter" by team executives and several newspapers. Detroit reacquired Sawchuk by trading young forward Johnny Bucyk to Boston. After seven seasons, when they had another promising young goalie (Roger Crozier) ready for promotion from the minor leagues, Detroit left Sawchuk unprotected in the 1964 NHL Intra-League Draft, and he was quickly claimed by the Maple Leafs.[7] With Sawchuk sharing goaltending duties with the forty-year-old Johnny Bower, the veteran duo won the 1964–65 Vezina Trophy and led Toronto to the 1967 Stanley Cup. In Sawchuk's last game with the Maple Leafs, he stopped 40 of 41 shots in 3-1 victory over the Montreal Canadiens in the Cup clinching game 6. Left unprotected in the June 1967 expansion draft, Sawchuk was the first player selected, taken by the Los Angeles Kings where he played one season before being traded back to Detroit.

New York Rangers

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In June 1969, the Red Wings traded Sawchuk and Sandy Snow to the New York Rangers for Larry Jeffrey.[8] Sawchuk played sparingly for the Rangers, starting only six games.[5] On February 1, 1970, in only his fourth start of the season, he recorded his 103rd and final shutout of his career by blanking the Pittsburgh Penguins 6–0.[9] This was also his last NHL win.[10] His last regular season start was on March 14, 1970, in a 7–4 loss to the Chicago Black Hawks.[11] Sawchuk's last playoff start was in a 5–3 playoff quarterfinals loss to the Boston Bruins on April 9, 1970.[12] Sawchuk appeared in his last NHL game on April 14 in the same playoff series.[13] In game 5,[14] after Phil Esposito had scored at 7:59 of the third period to put Boston in the lead, Rangers coach Emile Francis, in an effort to slow down the game, replaced goalie Ed Giacomin with Sawchuk. He was in the net for less than a minute before Giacomin returned and the Rangers lost the game 3–2. Boston went on to win the series 4 games to 2.

Personal life

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Sawchuk married Patricia Ann Bowman Morey on August 6, 1953, after a brief courtship. They had seven children, and the family endured many years of Sawchuk's increasing alcoholism, philandering (he impregnated a Toronto girlfriend in 1967), and verbal and physical abuse. Morey threatened to divorce him numerous times, and finally did so in 1969.[5]

Death

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Tombstone of Terry Sawchuk, at Mt. Hope Cemetery in Pontiac, Michigan.

Sawchuk struggled with untreated depression, a condition that often affected his conduct. On April 29, 1970, after the 1969–70 season ended, Sawchuk and Rangers teammate Ron Stewart, both of whom had been drinking, physically fought over expenses for the house they rented together on Long Island, New York.[15] Sawchuk suffered severe internal injuries during the scuffle from falling on top of Stewart's bent knee. At Long Beach Memorial Hospital, Sawchuk's gallbladder was removed and he had a second operation on his damaged and bleeding liver. The press described the incident as "horseplay", and Sawchuk told the police that he accepted full responsibility for the events. Chronic traumatic encephalopathy was little understood during his era in sports but may have contributed to his depression and behavior and would be consistent with the degree of head trauma he experienced during his career.

At New York Hospital Manhattan, another operation was performed on Sawchuk's bleeding liver. He never recovered and died shortly thereafter from a pulmonary embolism on May 31, 1970, at the age of 40.[16] The last reporter to speak to him, a week before his death, was Shirley Fischler (wife of Stan Fischler), who went to see him in the hospital as a visitor, not identifying herself as a reporter. Sawchuk told her the incident with Stewart "was just a fluke, a complete fluke accident." Fischler described him as "so pale and thin that the scars had almost disappeared from his face."[17] A Nassau County grand jury exonerated Stewart and ruled that Sawchuk's death was accidental. Sawchuk was buried in Mount Hope Cemetery in Pontiac, Michigan.[5]

Legacy

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Sawchuk's #1 banner hanging in Joe Louis Arena.

During his career, Sawchuk won 501 games (447 regular season and 54 playoff), while recording 115 shutouts, (103 in the regular season and 12 in the playoffs).[18] Sawchuk set the standard for measuring goaltenders, and was publicly hailed as the "best goalie ever" by a rival general manager in 1952, during only his second season.[19] Sawchuk finished his hockey career with 447 wins, a record that stood for thirty years, and his career record of 103 shutouts remained unsurpassed among NHL goaltenders, until Martin Brodeur bested that mark on December 21, 2009. In 1971, Sawchuk was posthumously elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame and awarded the Lester Patrick Trophy for his contribution to hockey in the United States. The Red Wings retired his number 1 in 1994. In 1996, the book Shutout: The Legend of Terry Sawchuk by sports author Brian Kendall, was published. A second book Sawchuk: The troubles and triumphs of the World's Greatest Goalie was published in 1998 by David Dupuis, with the participation of the Sawchuk family. In 2001, he was honored with his image on a Canadian postage stamp, even though he had become a U.S. citizen in 1959. In 2008, Night Work: The Sawchuk Poems, a book of poetry about Sawchuk by Randall Maggs, was published. The Terry Sawchuk Arena in his hometown of Winnipeg is named in his honour. In 2019, a film about his life and times was released, titled Goalie.

When he joined the Maple Leafs, Sawchuk originally wore jersey number 24, but switched to 30. In the decades since, NHL goaltenders have chosen numbers in the 30s inspired by his example and that of players like the Canadiens' Patrick Roy, who would have used 30 (the jersey number Rogie Vachon had used), but he was forced to pick another since it was already taken by right winger Chris Nilan (he instead chose 33, which itself became popular as a choice).[20]

Awards and achievements

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Records

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  • NHL record - Career ties leader - 172.[22]
  • Sawchuk's NHL record for career shutouts (103) stood until broken by Martin Brodeur in 2009. Sawchuk held the record for shutouts for 46 years. He passed George Hainsworth with his 95th shutout on January 18, 1964, for the all-time shutout record.

Career statistics

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Regular season and playoffs

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Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA SV% GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1945–46 Winnipeg Rangers MJHL 10 8 2 1 600 58 0 5.80 2 0 2 120 12 0 6.00
1946–47 Galt Red Wings OHA 30 1800 94 4 3.13 2 0 2 125 9 0 4.32
1947–48 Windsor Spitfires IHL 3 3 0 0 180 5 0 1.67
1947–48 Omaha Knights USHL 54 30 18 5 3248 174 4 3.21 3 1 2 180 9 0 3.00
1948–49 Indianapolis Capitals AHL 67 38 17 2 4020 205 2 3.06 2 0 2 120 9 0 4.50
1949–50 Indianapolis Capitals AHL 61 31 20 10 3660 188 3 3.08 8 8 0 480 12 0 1.50
1949–50 Detroit Red Wings NHL 7 4 3 0 420 16 1 2.29
1950–51 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 44 13 13 4200 138 11 1.97 6 2 4 463 13 1 1.68
1951–52 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 44 14 12 4200 133 12 1.90 8 8 0 480 5 4 0.63
1952–53 Detroit Red Wings NHL 63 32 15 16 3780 119 9 1.89 6 2 4 372 21 1 3.38
1953–54 Detroit Red Wings NHL 67 35 19 13 4004 129 12 1.93 12 8 4 751 20 2 1.60
1954–55 Detroit Red Wings NHL 68 40 17 11 4040 132 12 1.96 11 8 3 660 26 1 2.36 .893
1955–56 Boston Bruins NHL 68 22 33 13 4078 177 9 2.60 .916
1956–57 Boston Bruins NHL 34 18 10 6 2040 81 2 2.38 .920
1957–58 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 29 29 12 4198 206 3 2.94 .905 4 0 4 252 19 0 4.53 .855
1958–59 Detroit Red Wings NHL 67 23 36 8 4019 207 5 3.09 .896
1959–60 Detroit Red Wings NHL 58 24 20 14 3476 154 5 2.66 .909 6 2 4 405 19 0 2.82 .899
1960–61 Detroit Red Wings NHL 37 11 17 8 2148 112 2 3.13 .897 8 5 3 465 18 1 2.32 .921
1961–62 Detroit Red Wings NHL 43 14 21 8 2580 141 5 3.28 .888
1962–63 Detroit Red Wings NHL 48 21 16 7 2760 117 3 2.54 .912 11 5 6 660 35 0 3.18 .893
1963–64 Detroit Red Wings NHL 53 25 20 7 3139 138 5 2.64 .916 13 6 5 677 31 1 2.75 .912
1964–65 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 36 16 13 7 2160 92 1 2.56 .915 1 0 1 60 3 0 3.00 .923
1965–66 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 27 10 11 3 1519 80 1 3.16 .903 2 0 2 120 6 0 3.00 .917
1966–67 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 28 16 6 3 1409 66 2 2.81 .917 10 6 4 563 25 0 2.66 .931
1967–68 Los Angeles Kings NHL 36 10 17 5 1934 99 2 3.07 .891 5 2 3 280 18 1 3.86 .871
1968–69 Detroit Red Wings NHL 13 4 5 3 640 28 0 2.63 .912
1969–70 New York Rangers NHL 8 3 1 2 412 20 1 2.91 .893 3 0 1 80 6 0 4.51 .872
NHL totals 971 445 336 171 57,156 2,385 103 2.50 106 54 47 6,288 265 12 2.53

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "100 Greatest NHL Players". NHL.com. January 1, 2017. Retrieved January 1, 2017.
  2. ^ NHL (March 22, 2017), Terry Sawchuk was four-time Vezina-winning goalie, retrieved April 25, 2017
  3. ^ John A. Drobnicki, "Sawchuk, Terrance Gordon ('Terry')," in The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Thematic Series: Sports Figures (Scribner's, 2002), Vol. 2, pp. 335-336.
  4. ^ NHL (March 22, 2017), Terry Sawchuk was four-time Vezina-winning goalie, retrieved April 24, 2017
  5. ^ a b c d John A. Drobnicki, "Sawchuk, Terrance Gordon ('Terry')," in The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Thematic Series: Sports Figures (Scribner's, 2002), Vol. 2, p. 336.
  6. ^ "Hockey's Reviled and Bludgeoned Fall-Guys: The Goalie is the Goat," Life (March 4, 1966), p. 33. See an image of the photo in the Life Photo Archive at: [1]
  7. ^ "Historical Hockey Stats & Trivia - 1964 NHL Intra-League Draft". historicalhockey.blogspot.ca. October 27, 2012. Retrieved March 9, 2015.
  8. ^ "Wings Trade Sawchuk For Larry Jeffrey". Newspapers.com. June 20, 1969. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
  9. ^ The Montreal Gazette, Feb. 2, 1970, page 17. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  10. ^ "Hockey Summary Project - Feb. 1, 1970, Pittsburgh Penguins 0 @ New York Rangers 6". Flyershistory.com. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  11. ^ "Hockey Summary Project - Mar. 14, 1970, New York Rangers 4 @ Chicago Black Hawks 7". Flyershistory.com. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  12. ^ "Hockey Summary Project - April 9, 1970, New York Rangers 3 @ Boston Bruins 5". Flyershistory.com. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  13. ^ "Hockey Summary Project - April 14, 1970 New York Rangers 2 @ Boston Bruins 3". Flyershistory.com. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  14. ^ The Montreal Gazette, April 15, 1970, page 14. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  15. ^ https://www.nytimes.com/1970/06/01/archives/sawchuk-of-rangers-dies-here-following-horseplaying-injury-sawchuk.html The New York Times, June 1, 1970, p.1
  16. ^ "Great goalie Terry Sawchuk dies; police investigation is launched". North Bay Nugget. June 1970. p. 13.
  17. ^ Shirley Fischler, "Last Interview," Hockey Illustrated (Nov. 1970), pp. 21-23.
  18. ^ "Hockey Hall of Fame - Legends Of Hockey, Terry Sawchuk". hhof.com/. Retrieved March 9, 2015.
  19. ^ John A. Drobnicki, "Sawchuk, Terrance Gordon ('Terry')," in The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Thematic Series: Sports Figures (Scribner's, 2002), Vol. 2, p. 337.
  20. ^ Pinchevsky, Tal (November 30, 2016). "Why goalies are increasingly ditching traditional No. 1". ESPN. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
  21. ^ "Terry Sawchuk". Canada Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  22. ^ Chaves, Kevin. "The Best Non-Gretzky Records in NHL History". nhl.com. Retrieved June 4, 2012.
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Preceded by Winner of the Calder Memorial Trophy
1951
Succeeded by
Preceded by Winner of the Vezina Trophy
1952, 1953
Succeeded by
Preceded by Winner of the Vezina Trophy
1955
Succeeded by
Preceded by Winner of the Vezina Trophy
with Johnny Bower

1965
Succeeded by