Lethbridge Herald

Hockey Hall of Fame comes calling for mask

GORDON HUNTER TO DONATE HOCKEY MASK OF HIS YOUTH TO HALL

- Dave Sulz LETHBRIDGE HERALD

When Gordon Hunter was playing goal during his youth hockey days, he never imagined he would one day make the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Well, to be exact, that his hockey mask would make the Hall of Fame.

The mask, “an old Jacques Plante-type,” says Hunter, came to the attention of the Hockey Hall of Fame through his younger son Robb, who serves as director of corporate partnershi­ps with the Medicine Hat Tigers. Robb attended a hockey event at which he ran into Craig Campbell, Resource Centre and Archives manager with the Hall of Fame, based in Toronto. Robb took with him a selection of his dad’s hockey books, including “The Older I Get The Better I Was,” which featured a cover photo of Gordon sporting the mask.

Campbell asked Robb if his dad still had the mask, which he did. Campbell got in touch with Hunter to see if he would be willing to eventually donate his mask to the hall’s collection.

Flattered by the offer, Hunter, a retired University of Lethbridge professor, decided “I’m going to send it now so I can brag to people that I’m in the Hockey Hall of Fame.”

The hall has also expressed interest in a few other hockey equipment items of Hunter’s, including a goalie glove and an old pair of skates that date back to the 1960s. While he was usually a goaltender, he recalls at one time playing defence in an intramural league in university.

“I still have the puck from the goal I scored,” he notes in a selfdeprec­ating hint at his offensive prowess.

Hunter has had a long love affair with Canada’s national pastime. Growing up in Saskatoon, he played pee wee and midget hockey, sharing the ice with several future National Hockey League players, among them Keith Magnuson, Cliff

Koroll and Gerry Pinder, all three eventual Chicago Blackhawks.

“I was always the goalie,” Hunter says.

For his book “The Older I Get The Better I Was,” released in 2015, Hunter sought a grass-roots view of hockey, so he collected stories from people with a southern Alberta connection about their personal experience­s with hockey while growing up. The book included reminiscen­ces by Mayor Chris Spearman, former mayor Rajko Dodic, former MLA Clint Dunford and U of L President Mike Mahon.

For the book’s title, Hunter says he stole a line from golfing great Lee Trevino.

 ?? Submitted photo ?? Local hockey writer Gordon Hunter will be donating his old-time hockey mask to the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto.
Submitted photo Local hockey writer Gordon Hunter will be donating his old-time hockey mask to the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto.

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