Eddie Mio in the NAHL
Eddie Mio got his start in professional hockey with the Erie Blades
of the North American Hockey League. Mio played 17 regular season games with
the Blades during the 1976-77 season, the last year of the NAHL, recording a
3.27 goals against average. He also appeared in two Lockhart Cup playoff games
as the Blades lost out in the opening round to the Philadelphia
Firebirds, three games to one.
That season, Mio backed up Lynn Zimmerman, Erie’s main
goalie for 1975-76 and 1976-77. Zimmerman played pro from 1966-67 to 1977-78 in
a handful of leagues, including the EHL, AHL, CHL, WHL, NAHL and WHA. In the
World Hockey Association, Lynn played for the Denver Spurs, Ottawa Civics and
Houston Aeros.
Eddie Mio in Pro Hockey
During his four year stint at Colorado College from 1972-73
to 1975-76, both the WHA and National Hockey League came calling. Mio was taken
in the seventh round of the 1974 NHL Amateur Draft, 124th overall,
by the Chicago Black Hawks. That same year, he was also selected in the tenth
round of the WHA Amateur Draft by the Vancouver Blazers, 138th
overall.
Eddie played pro hockey from 1976-77 to 1985-86 on teams in
the NAHL, WHA, AHL, CHL and NHL. He played in the World Hockey Association in
1977-78 and 1978-79 with the Indianapolis Racers and Edmonton Oilers. He
followed the Oilers to the NHL after the demise of the WHA. Mio played in the
NHL from 1979-80 to 1985-86 with the Oilers, New York Rangers and Detroit Red
Wings.
Mio was the number one goalie with the Oilers in 1980-81 and
with the Rangers in 1982-83. In that 1980-81 season, Eddie was in the hunt for
the Art
Ross Trophy with five assists – not bad for a goalie. In both 1981-82 and
1982-83, Mio saw the bulk of his Stanley Cup playoff action, appearing in eight
games each year with the Rangers. Each year, New York made it out of the
preliminary round but in each year they fell to the powerhouse New York
Islanders in six games.
In a bit of useless hockey
trivia, The Rangers traded Eddie to the Red Wings, along with Ron Duguay
and Ed Johnstone for Mike Blaisdell, Willie Huber and Mark Osborne. In his
final year of pro hockey, 1985-86, Mio played 18 games for the Red Wings and
posted a dismal 6.32 goals against average.