At 38 years old, Alain Caron became a legend of the North American Hockey League in what would be his final year of professional hockey. Caron suffered a heart attack in the off-season and was forced to retire from the game.
A veteran of a pro hockey career that began in 1959-60, Caron played one game with the NAHL's Syracuse Blazers in 1974-75 before spending the full 1975-76 season with the Beauce Jaros. In 73 regular season games with the Jaros, Alain scored 78 goals and assisted on 59 more for 137 points. Uncharacteristic of the league, Caron accumulated just 26 minutes in penalties.
His 78 goals was the second highest single season total in NAHL history, behind just Dave Staffen who scored 87 the following season. He finished first in goal scoring in 1975-76 and his 137 points were good for fourth in the league. In the playoffs, he added 21 more goals and 13 assists for 34 points in just 14 games as the Jaros reached the Lockhart Cup finals before falling to the Philadelphia Firebirds.
His career from 1959-60 to 1966-67 was spent in the minor leagues. With expansion in 1967, Caron was finally able to make it to the big show. He was property of the Chicago Black Hawks when the Oakland Seals selected him in the expansion draft. He played 58 games with Oakland in 1967-68 and two more with the Montreal Canadiens the following year.
Alain played an additional 195 games of major league hockey in the World Hockey Association between 1972-73 and 1974-75 with the Quebec Nordiques and Michigan Stags / Baltimore Blades.
However, it was during his minor league days that Caron excelled. in 1962-63, with the St. Louis Braves of the Eastern Professional Hockey League, Alain was first in the league with 61 goals in just 54 games. An interesting bit of hockey trivia - second to Caron on the Braves was Phil Esposito in his first year of pro hockey. Esposito scored 36 goals and finished fifth in the league.
The following year, Caron was still with the Braves but the league had changed to the Central Professional Hockey League. He once again led in goals with 77. His 125 points were also the best in the league.
With the Buffalo Bisons in 1965-66, his goal total was a more down-to-earth 47 but it tied him for the Americna Hockey League lead with Dick Gamble of the Rochester Americans.
The man that was also named "Boom Boom" was dissed by the major hockey card companies, with exception of 1972-73. Alain Caron was included in the 1972-73 O-Pee-Chee NHL set that featured a selection of WHA players in the higher numbers. The Alain Caron rookie card (and only card) is number 324 in that set.
Find Alain Caron Rookie Cards at eBay, right now!
It was heart problems that forced Caron from the game and it was heart problems again in 1986 that ended his life at just 48 years old.
The Encyclopedia of the North American Hockey League (NAHL) that existed from 1973-74 to 1976-77. The NAHL was spawned by the death of the Eastern Hockey League and is the inspiration for the 1977 classic cult movie 'Slapshot'.
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Paul Holmgren: Humble Beginnings in the NAHL
He had a fairly lengthy and successful NHL career and has
been in the head office of the Philadelphia Flyers for many years. Yet, Paul
Holmgren got his pro hockey start in the North American Hockey League.
Holmgren played just six games for the Johnstown Jets during
the 1975-76 NAHL season. He would be known in the NHL as an enforcer but for
his short stint in Johnstown, Holmgren was an offensive powerhouse who visited
the sin bin relatively seldom. Afterall, the Jets had the ‘Hanson Brothers’
(Dave Hanson, Jeff Carlson and Steve Carlson) of Slapshot fame to do the team’s dirty work.
In his six games in the NAHL, Holmgren scored three goals
and assisted on 12 for 15 points while sitting just 12 minutes in the box. The
Jets finished first in the West Division and second overall in the NAHL.
Johnstown lost in the semi-finals to eventual Lockhart Cup champions, the
Philadelphia Firebirds. Also playing an offensive role for the Jets early in
his pro hockey career was Bruce Boudreau.
Paul was a third round pick of the Edmonton Oilers at the
1974 WHA Amateur Draft, 38th overall. He was also taken by the
Flyers in the sixth round of the 1975 NHL Amateur Draft, 108th
overall. In that 1975-76 season, Holmgren also played 51 games in the World
Hockey Association with the Minnesota Fighting Saints, six games in the AHL
with the Richmond Robins and a single game in the NHL with the Flyers.
Holmgren played 527 regular season games in the National
Hockey League between 1976-77 and 1984-85 and accumulated 1,684 penalty
minutes. He was second in the NHL to Dave ‘Tiger’ Williams with 306 PIM during
the 1980-81 season.
Perhaps, his career year in the NHL came in 1979-80. In 74
regular season games with the Flyers, he scored 30 goals and assisted on 35 for
65 points. Staying in character, Paul also spent 267 minutes in the box. In the
playoffs, he scored ten and assisted on ten more for 20 points in 18 games. The
Pat Quinn coached Flyers finished first overall in the NHL with 116 points. In
the Stanley Cup playoffs, Philadelphia lost just 2 games over the first three
series before losing in six games to the New York Islanders in the finals.
Holmgren has been on the Flyers staff since retiring from
the game, with exception of a stint as head coach of the Hartford Whalers
between 1992-93 and 1995-96. Paul has been General Manager of the Flyers since
taking over from Bobby Clarke during the 2006-07 season. For the past two
years, Holmgren has been also GM of the Adirondack Phantoms of the American
Hockey League.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Gilles Bilodeau: NAHL Single Season PIM Record Holder
Perhaps, the North American Hockey League, as shown in the
movie ‘Slap Shot’, is best represented by Gilles Bilodeau. Gilles ‘Bad News’
Bilodeau had little to do with hockey and a lot to do with fighting and other
violence on the ice.
Gilles played one year of junior hockey in 1974-75 with the
Sorel Eperviers (Black Hawks) of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. The
year before, Sorel provided the hockey world with offense like it had never
been seen before.
The team in 1973-74, led by Pierre Larouche and his 251
points, had seven players total more than 100 points, two over 200. Three
Eperviers scored more than 90 goals during the 72 game regular season. Sorel
finished first overall in the 10 team QMJHL but fell in the playoff finals to
the Quebec Remparts.
As is often the case in junior hockey, the offensive power
moved on to the pro ranks and the 1974-75 Eperviers were left with a group
better fit for the boxing ring. Bilodeau sat 377 minutes in the penalty box
over 62 games. Although a high total, it was nothing compared to teammate Roger
Seguin who accumulated 494 minutes while somehow playing the full 72 game
schedule without suspension. The two finished 1-2 in the QMJHL for the PIM
category that season.
There were, of course, no National Hockey League takers for
Gilobeau at the NHL Amateur Draft. He did, however, fit a certain mold that the
World Hockey Association was looking for and the Toronto Toros selected him in
the ninth round of the 1975 WHA Amateur Draft, 121st overall. Over
his pro hockey career, Gilles played 143 WHA regular season games between
1975-76 and 1978-79 with the Toros, Birmingham Bulls and Quebec Nordiques.
It was in his first year of pro hockey, 1975-76, that
Bilodeau made his presence known in the North American Hockey League. Gilles
played 58 games with the Beauce Jaros while also playing 14 games for the WHA
Toros. In those 58 games, he scored eight goals and assisted on 17 more for 25
points. But, it was his penalty total that gave him ‘fame’.
The Jaros were first overall and had the first player in pro
hockey history to total more than 200 points in a season on the roster. Joe Hardy led the league with 208 points. Bilodeau was in the sin bin for 451
minutes, a 7.8 PIM per game pace. He finished first in the NAHL in that
category, 140 minutes ahead of the next contender, Dave Hanson of the Johnstown
Chiefs. In the playoffs, he added 46 more PIM, playing just five games while
the Jaros cruised to the Lockhart Cup finals before losing to the Philadelphia
Firebirds.
In his second pro season, Gilles sat 242 PIM in just 28
games for the Charlotte Checkers of the SHL. He played pro from 1975-76 to
1980-81 and had a two game stint with the Birmingham Bulls of the ACHL in
1983-84. Over 374 pro regular season games, Bilodeau sat 1,763 minutes in the
box, a 4.7 PIM per game pace.
Bilodeau actually saw action in the NHL. After playing with
the Quebec Nordiques in the final year of the World Hockey Association,
1978-79, he moved with the franchise to the NHL for 1979-80. Gilles played a
total of nine games in the NHL with the Nordiques. Unfortunately, Gilles
Bilodeau passed away in 2008.
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Rod Bloomfield: A Binghamton Hall of Famer
Rod Bloomfield played the full four year duration of the NAHL
with the Binghamton Dusters (also known as Broome Dusters). He carried on with
the club for one more season, 1977-78, when the franchise joined the American
Hockey League.
During his North American Hockey League career, Bloomfield
played 288 regular season games, scoring 187 goals and assisting on 310 for 497
points. In the tradition of the NAHL, Bloomfield also sat 417 minutes in the
penalty box.
Rod led the league in goals during the 1974-75 season with
55. He was twice the NAHL assists leader with 73 in 1973-74 and an incredible 124
in 1976-77. In the final season of the league, Bloomfield was the scoring
champion with 173 points. The point total was pretty incredible but a far cry
from the NAHL record of 208 set the year before by Joe Hardy of the Beauce
Jaros.
His four years with the Dusters in the NAHL and his one year
with the club in the AHL were his only five years in professional hockey. He
turned 26 years old during his first season and called it quits after during
his fifth year due to an injury resulting from a puck to the eye. I still find
it surprising he never saw at least some action with a WHA club. Sure, he was
small with a listed playing height of 5’6” and weighing in at just 160 lbs.
However, at the time, guys like Andre Lacroix in the WHA and Yvan Cournoyer in
the NHL were proving the little guys could get it done.
Bloomfield was Binghamton’s team leader in each of the four
seasons. In 1974-75, he led the Dusters to the Lockhart Cup finals before being
swept by the Johnstown Jets in four games. Over 15 playoff games, Rod scored
ten goals and assisted on nine more for 19 points.
The NAHL is known as the inspiration behind the cult classic
move, Slap Shot. Although uncredited, Bloomfield acted as Paul Newman’s on-ice
stunt double during the movie.
In 1999, Rod was inducted into the Binghamton Hockey Hall of
Fame. It was just the Hall’s second year of existence. The Hall of Fame doesn’t
have a web presence and is located inside the Broome County Veteran’s Memorial
Arena. The Arena was completed in 1973, just in time for the Dusters to be its
first tenants.
Bloomfield is also an inductee at the Bobby Orr Hall of Fame
in Parry Sound, Ontario. He was inducted as an individual in 2011. In 2012, he
was inducted again as a member of the 1961-62 Parry Sound Bantams, a team that
also included Bobby Orr.
Friday, March 15, 2013
Guy Trottier: Coach and Star of the Buffalo Norsemen
Guy Trottier played his last of 14 years in professional
hockey with the Buffalo Norsemen of the NAHL. Trottier also acted as the head
coach of the Norsemen, a team that finished fourth in the West Division with 30
wins and 60 points over the 74 game schedule. Buffalo met the Johnstown Jets in
the opening round and lost three games to two. The final and deciding game of
the series was a 1-0 win by the Jets. Trottier finished the year with a
respectable 36 goals and 22 assists for 58 points over 56 regular season games.
Trottier played pro from 1963-64 to 1975-76, appearing in
five different leagues, the IHL, AHL, NHL, WHA and NAHL. At the highest level,
Guy played 115 games in the National Hockey League between 1968-69 and 1971-72
with the New York Rangers and Toronto Maple Leafs. His World Hockey Association
career lasted 174 games from 1972-73 to 1974-75 with the Ottawa Nationals,
Toronto Toros and Michigan Stags.
In just his second year of pro hockey, Trottier tied for
fourth place in the IHL with 46 goals as a member of the Dayton Gems. The
following year, the numbers improved greatly with Guy placing third with 68
goals and tied for second with 132 points, just one off the leader. In 1966-67,
He scored a career high 71 goals with the Gems to lead the IHL, 19 goals more
than the second place finisher. His 135 point placed his second, four behind
Len Thornson of the Fort Wayne Komets.
Trottier led the American Hockey League in goal scoring for
the 1968-69 and 1969-70 seasons with the Buffalo Bisons. In the first year, he
scored 45 goals and in 1969-70, the final year of existence for the Bisons, Guy
scored 55.
Only two mainstream hockey cards were ever produced
featuring Trottier. His 1971-72 O-Pee-Chee rookie card is valued as a common. The
card had him in a Toronto Maple Leafs jersey. His 1972-73 O-Pee-Chee card is
valued at a whopping $8 as it’s part of the first set of WHA hockey cards that
came at the back end of the 1972-73 NHL set. Guy is on the card as a member of
the Ottawa Nationals.
Season | Team | Lge | GP | G | A | Pts | PIM |
1957-58 | Trois Rivieres Lions | QHL | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1963-64 | Phila-.Greensboro | EHL | 27 | 14 | 16 | 30 | 38 |
1963-64 | Port Huron Flags | IHL | 42 | 19 | 15 | 34 | 52 |
1964-65 | Dayton Gems | IHL | 68 | 46 | 42 | 88 | 56 |
1965-66 | Dayton Gems | IHL | 66 | 68 | 64 | 132 | 16 |
1966-67 | Dayton Gems | IHL | 67 | 71 | 64 | 135 | 23 |
1967-68 | Buffalo Bisons | AHL | 41 | 16 | 19 | 35 | 6 |
1968-69 | New York Rangers | NHL | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1968-69 | Buffalo Bisons | AHL | 72 | 45 | 37 | 82 | 21 |
1969-70 | Buffalo Bisons | AHL | 71 | 55 | 33 | 88 | 8 |
1970-71 | Toronto Maple Leafs | NHL | 61 | 19 | 5 | 24 | 21 |
1971-72 | Toronto Maple Leafs | NHL | 52 | 9 | 12 | 21 | 16 |
1972-73 | Ottawa Nationals | WHA | 72 | 26 | 32 | 58 | 25 |
1973-74 | Toronto Toros | WHA | 71 | 27 | 35 | 62 | 58 |
1974-75 | Dayton Gems | IHL | 20 | 12 | 5 | 17 | 6 |
1974-75 | Toronto Toros | WHA | 14 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 4 |
1974-75 | Michigan Stags/Baltimore Blades | WHA | 17 | 5 | 4 | 9 | 2 |
1975-76 | Buffalo Norsemen | NAHL | 56 | 36 | 22 | 58 | 59 |
NHL Totals | 115 | 28 | 17 | 45 | 37 | ||
WHA Totals | 174 | 62 | 75 | 137 | 89 |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)