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 Classy Moments in Hockey History

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andyhack Posted - 10/15/2007 : 21:24:52
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83FzYJd_vYI

This is definitely one of the classy moments. What are some of your favorite classy moment stories? I thought I'd throw this topic out there as all the suspension stuff, though interesting, is a little bit on the dark and gloomy side of things.
14   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Greg Smith Posted - 10/27/2007 : 13:02:48
Well Andyhack, I just saw the replay. It did look like Savard was congradualting him on the nice save.

The "classiest" thing I've ever senn anybody in hockey do was done by Patrick roy in my last season in the NHL. Mike Gartner shot the puck. Patrick Roy jumped onto it and fell back with his glove in the net. the referees called it no goal. roy went over after the play and told the refs about what had happened. It was called a goal. That was the classiest, most sportsman-like thing I've ever seen in the NHL.

After playing in the NHL, it's hard to watch hockey games.
andyhack Posted - 10/27/2007 : 07:59:19
Greg - any interesting stories from your days in the NHL on this topic? My feeling is that, on the whole, hockey players are very good guys and that there probably are endless stories of some of the nice classy things they do, whether on the ice or off the ice.

Maybe even Bobby Clarke did a lot of classy things in his day. Going out and intentionally taking Kharlamov out of the '72 series wasn't one of them though!
fly4apuckguy Posted - 10/21/2007 : 18:48:41
I'm going with the time Bobby Clarke broke Valeri Kharlamov's ankle in the 1972 Summit Series.
andyhack Posted - 10/20/2007 : 19:28:35
Well, there was an interesting one tonight from an unlikely source (if the rumours about him are true), Marc Savard. Go to the Bruins highlights and watch the chance Savard had in the first period, just off to the right of Lundqvist. After being robbed, Savard actually sort of lay on his back in disbelief for a second, then got up, and unless I am mistaken, went over and tapped Lundqvist with his stick. I'm guessing that he said something to him like "nice save". It seems like that to me anyway. Is that what you guys see?

I'm watching the highlights on the official Boston Bruins webpage.

http://bruins.nhl.tv/team/console?hlg=20072008,2,102

I assume everyone has this site on their list of favorites!
nashvillepreds Posted - 10/18/2007 : 14:13:27
Actually what happened was that they gave Sundin an assist when he never even touched the puck or was anywhere near it on that shift. All leaf fans would have seen this beacause they showed that play on TSN the next day. It was better that he got the goal and point to pass sittler at the same time though anyways

GO PREDATORS GO
Guest2165 Posted - 10/18/2007 : 13:44:05
my favorite moment is hextall taking out chelios
PainTrain Posted - 10/17/2007 : 21:02:48
quote:
Originally posted by nashvillepreds

My favourite NHL moment that I have seen would have to have been just a couple of nights ago when Sundin recorded his leading goal and point as a maple leaf. It was cool to be back in Toronto that night at the game. I've never heard the crowd cheer that loudly before anywhere, not even in Montreal.

GO PREDATORS GO



You know what's interesting is that Sundin got an assist and the announcer said he is now the Leafs leading point getter but Sundin went to the Ref and said he didn't get the assist, witch he didn't. He later scored that game to actually pass it.

I think that's the true story correct me if I'm worong.

Eat,Sleep,Watch Hockey,Play Hockey
The Perfect Life!
nashvillepreds Posted - 10/17/2007 : 18:16:37
My favourite NHL moment that I have seen would have to have been just a couple of nights ago when Sundin recorded his leading goal and point as a maple leaf. It was cool to be back in Toronto that night at the game. I've never heard the crowd cheer that loudly before anywhere, not even in Montreal.

GO PREDATORS GO
Guest0942 Posted - 10/17/2007 : 09:11:09
Gretzky handing the 1987 Cup to Steve Smith first, one season after Smith scored on his own goal by banking a shot in off Fuhr, and thus bowing out of the 1986 playoffs. It was like Gretzky making a statement about how important Steve was to their win as a team, and that they had lost as a team the year before.
andyhack Posted - 10/17/2007 : 07:21:32
Okay, obviously I'm a HUGE Bourque fan, but this story too belongs here (copied from the Boston Globe after he retired):

"My single favorite #77 moment was not at a hockey game, but rather during "The Last Skate" at the old Garden, when all the then current and former Bruins stars took the ice for one final skate following their game against the Canadiens. Fallen star Norman Leveille tied up his skates, and courageously stood up off his wheelchair. Raymond Bourque took Norman's hands and wide contagious smile and the rest of his fragile body around for a lasting skate. The applause and cheers rivaled that of any championship moment the Garden had ever seen, with no dry eye in the crowd, and it showed what kind of fighter Norman is, and what supreme character of a person Raymond personafies."
andyhack Posted - 10/17/2007 : 03:54:04
Sakic immediately giving the Cup to Bourque was classy (though kind of the obvious thing to do I guess).

I also thought Orr showed a lot of class during all the Eagleson investigations. Noone had more of a right than him to come out and really trash Eagleson and yet he remained relatively quiet and in the background throughout all that. I've always felt there was a certain dignity to Orr, and it showed again there.

Another kind of strange one I have is, of all people, Harold Ballard! I think I read somewhere that he had all the phone operators at MLG answer the phones something like "Maple Leaf Gardens, home of Darryl Sittler" after he scored the '76 Canada Cup winning goal. That was kind of a nice thing to do actually. Too bad he went ballistic on Sittler a few years later, doing stuff that really soured things between them. They had a really wacko relationship, didn't they!
willus3 Posted - 10/16/2007 : 14:17:22
I thought it was pretty classy of Guy Carbonneau, after winning the cup in 93 with Montreal to hand it to Denis Savard first. Savard was injured and couldn't play in the last games of the series and helped Jacques Demers coach. Classy move on Carbonneau's part.

"You are not your desktop wallpaper"
Beans15 Posted - 10/16/2007 : 09:46:56
When Linden became Vancouver's all time leading scorer. After the goal, the refs were trying to get the game going, but the ovation was still going on. The linesman then skated to the boards and grabbed and waterbottle and started to fix a "phantom" problem with the ice so that Linden could get the curtain call he deserved. Then the other linesman came over to help. They kept fixing that phantom problem until the ovation was dying down.

(I was told this story by Ryan Walter in a motivational presentation I attended)

We forget about the refs and linesmen sometimes, but for the most part, they are a classy bunch!

If you are under the age of 15, please do some research before you make a post about anything pre-1997.
spade632 Posted - 10/16/2007 : 08:43:03
I like the ovation that Gretzky got for his last game in Canada. - April 16, 1999 vs. the Ottawa Senators (the game ended a 2-2 tie)

In the same vein, the ovation that Maurice Richard got when the Forum in Montreal closed in 1996. (More than 16 minutes)


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