Lethbridge Herald

LEAFS’ great dies

Johnny Bower, a twotime Vezina Trophy winner who helped the Toronto Maple Leafs win their last Stanley Cup championsh­ip in 1967, died on Tuesday

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Johnny Bower didn’t really want to come to Toronto. But the pint-sized goalie with the big heart went on to become part of Maple Leafs lore.

Bower, a two-time Vezina Trophy winner who helped the Leafs win their last Stanley Cup championsh­ip in 1967, died on Tuesday. A statement from his family said the 93-year-old died after a short battle with pneumonia.

Bower, who became known as the China Wall, was happily playing in the minors in Cleveland when he was picked up by Toronto almost 50 years ago. He said he only showed up to avoid being suspended for not reporting.

“They just wanted me for one year but I had a good team in front of me,” Bower recalled with a laugh in a November 2014 interview. “I was there for 13 years, so it turned out really nice for me.”

Years after retiring, Bower remained one of the most beloved ex-Leafs.

“I don’t know what it is,” he said of his popularity.

But Bower, whose age seemed flexible during a long hockey career that took a long while to come to a boil, always had time for his fans.

“I can’t say no to these kids. Because when I was a child during Depression time we had nothing at all. Like my dad said it costs you nothing for a smile. Just go ahead and work and do your job and be good to people and they’ll be good to you.”

Toronto honoured Bower on the occasion of his 90th birthday on Nov. 8, 2014, during a game against the New York Rangers, his first team. He was given a framed, autographe­d crest from each team and an enthusiast­ic rendition of “Happy Birthday” from the sellout crowd.

Bower’s career took off after the Leafs claimed him in a 1958 intra-league draft. Bower went on to play 475 regular-season games and win four Stanley Cups for the Leafs, plying his trade mostly without a mask.

“I got a couple hundred stitches in the face,” the fearless goaltender recalled during a 2005 interview. “You learn how to duck.”

Just five foot nine, Bower was named to the NHL’s first all-star team in 1961 and won the Vezina Trophy as best goalie that year, too.

He pioneered the pokecheck, diving head first at opposing players to knock the puck off their sticks. The move came with a cost — he suffered cuts and lost teeth by throwing himself into the action.

But he stopped pucks. And he got better with age — despite painful bouts with arthritis and eventually learning he was near-sighted.

Bower won the Vezina Trophy in 1961 and the Leafs hoisted the Stanley Cup in 1962, 1963, 1964, with Bower and Terry Sawchuk sharing the Vezina in 1965. In 1967, again sharing the job with Sawchuk, he helped Toronto win its last title at the age of 43.

He usually wore a mask for practices but didn’t use one in games until his second-last NHL season, 1968-69. That spring, he became the oldest goaltender to appear in a Stanley Cup playoff game at 44 years four months and 28 days.

“He was an inspiratio­n to us,” said George Armstrong, who captained the Leafs’ last championsh­ip team. “He shamed others into hard work.

“John gave everything he could during workouts and we weren’t going to let that old guy show us up.”

After retiring, he served as a scout and goalie coach for the Leafs.

He was the only boy among nine children in a rural Saskatchew­an family by the name of Kiszkan. He loved hockey and decided he wanted to be a goalie. He made leg pads from an old mattress, and he was on his way.

But there was a momentous detour: in 1940 at age 16 he lied about his age so he could enlist in the army and do his bit in the Second World War. He told authoritie­s his birth certificat­e had burned in a fire.

After training in Vernon, B.C., he was stationed in England but did not see action due to arthritis.

“It’s a good thing I didn’t because the Germans were right there waiting,” he said. “A lot of guys there were killed on the beaches. I know four or five good hockey players from Prince Albert who were killed. They never came back.”

Upon his return, he played junior hockey with his hometown Prince Albert Black Hawks.

Turning pro with the Cleveland Barons in 1945, he changed his name to Bower because he felt Kiszkan was too difficult to pronounce. He played eight seasons in the AHL before getting a chance in the NHL, earning league MVP honours three times.

Bower played all 70 games for the New York Rangers in 1953-54, but the team chose to go with Gump Worsley the next year and Bower was back in the minors for most of the next four years.

He played 64 games for the AHL Cleveland Barons in 195758 before being picked up by Toronto.

Bower went on to become a blue-and-white fixture. He finally retired after playing one game in the 1970-71 season — four months past his 45th birthday.

He played 552 regular-season NHL games with 250 wins, 195 losses and 90 ties. He posted 37 regular-season shutouts and had an against average of 2.52. Combining his AHL and NHL appearance­s, he was in a total of 1,207 regular-season games — a record no goalie will come close to.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Hockey Hall of Famer Johnny Bower walks to his seat as The Hockey Hall of Fame officially unveiled the "Esso Great Wall" as home to the Stanley Cup, all major NHL trophies and recognitio­n structures for individual­s elected into Honoured Membership in...
Canadian Press photo Hockey Hall of Famer Johnny Bower walks to his seat as The Hockey Hall of Fame officially unveiled the "Esso Great Wall" as home to the Stanley Cup, all major NHL trophies and recognitio­n structures for individual­s elected into Honoured Membership in...

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