The Telegram (St. John's)

Four decades ago, Washington’s NHL home was White’s house

Grand Falls-windsor native skated with Capitals in their infancy, when they didn’t look anything like Cup contenders

- BY ROBIN SHORT TELEGRAM SPORTS EDITOR

“I loved playing hockey, and I wanted to play in the NHL… That said, the losing was tough to take. Even though I was 21, with lots of energy, constantly losing like that is not a great thing to go through.” Tony White

Washington might be swept up in the excitement surroundin­g the Capitals’ quest for their first Stanley Cup, but one of the players dating back to D.C.’S dog days of hockey isn’t making any special plans to watch what could be a championsh­ipclinchin­g game tonight.

“I don’t watch a lot of hockey,” says Tony White. “Maybe a little every now and again.”

It’s not that White, the former NHLER from Grand Falls-windsor, loathes the game, but it’s changed since he last played in the 70s, and he’s not a big fan of today’s product.

“It’s a bit of a track meet now,” White said. “You flip the puck in and out and you chase it down. The guys today are so fast.

“But that’s the evolution of the game. Everything now is 100 miles per hour, and if it’s not that fast, it doesn’t work.”

White, a Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Hockey Hall of Famer, was the fourth player from this province to play in the NHL (behind Alex Faulkner, Joe Lundrigan and Doug Grant), appearing in five games for the Caps during their inaugural 1974-75 season.

Lundrigan made three starts for the Caps that season, marking the first time two Newfoundla­nders played for the same NHL team in the same season.

And what a year that was. Washington managed only eight wins that season, setting the standard for fewest victories in a single NHL season.

White secured full-time NHL employment the next year, appearing in all 80 games for Washington and enjoying a banner season with 25 goals and 42 points. Those totals stood as the best single-season NHL performanc­e by a player from this province until Michael Ryder came along and tallied 25 goals and 63 points as a Montreal Canadiens’ rookie in 2003-04.

But it was otherwise another frustratin­g season for the Capitals, who could muster only 11 victories, fewest in the league. The equally hapless Kansas City Scouts had 12 wins that year.

“I loved playing hockey, and I wanted to play in the NHL,” says White, now 64 and long retired as a firefighte­r in Vancouver, where he’s lived for over 30 years. “And you’re expected to do your job to the best of your ability, just like any other job.

“That said, the losing was tough to take. With the first 25 games of the season, you’re just trying to get your feet under you. The next 25 kind of determines what your year will be like. And when you’re still losing 25 games after that, well, it can wear on you.

“Even though I was 21, with lots of energy, constantly losing like that is not a great thing to go through.”

White played virtually all of 1976-77 in Washington as well, but his production dropped off to 12 goals and 21 points in 72 games.

He spent the next year in the American Hockey League, with the Hershey Bears, with one game in Washington, and all of 1978-79 with Springfiel­d of the AHL.

A free agent, White hoped for a new start when he signed with the Minnesota North Stars. But the Stars had just merged with the Cleveland Barons, and any available jobs in Minny evaporated.

He would appear in six games with Minnesota, spent two seasons with Oklahoma City of the Central Hockey League before winding up his career with a couple of seasons in Germany.

After the Herder, the Cataracts picked up Alex and Jack Faulkner and Les Calder for their Allan Cup series against the Barrie Flyers.

“Pichette was going to sit me because I think, being 17, they might have thought I’d be overwhelme­d going up against veteran guys, many of whom had played pro,” White said of the Flyers.

“But Pichette threw me in there the second game. I didn’t set the world on fire, but I must have shown something because I played the rest of the tournament.

“Next thing you know, I got a phone call saying Kitchener had picked me in the overage draft.”

Watching the Allan Cup series

was Mike Penny, scouting for the Ontario Hockey Associatio­n’s Kitchener Rangers (Penny, by the way, would go on to become assistant general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs, and general manager of the AHL’S St. John’s Maple Leafs).

White played two years in Kitchener, putting together back-to-back 53-point seasons. Following his second year in Kitchener, he was drafted in the 10th round, 161st overall, by Washington.

White would play only one year in the minors before cracking Washington’s roster as a full-time forward.

Following his profession­al career, White returned to Newfoundla­nd and played the 198283 senior league season with the Cataracts. The next year, he suited up for the Corner Brook Royals, and tied for third place in league scoring with Port aux Basques Mariners import John Linseman.

His final year of hockey came in 1984-85, and he helped the Royals win the Herder and advance through the first two rounds of the Allan Cup held in Corner Brook.

However, White was unavailabl­e for the Allan Cup final after learning he had been accepted into the Vancouver Fire Department.

After losing the first three games of the series at Humber Gardens, the Thunder Bay Twins rallied from a 3-0 deficit, stunning the hometown Royals 5-4 in Game 7 of the Canadian senior hockey championsh­ip final.

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 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Tony White played two full seasons and parts of two others with the Washington Capitals in the mid1970s, beginning with their inaugural NHL campaign. In 1975-76, he was third on the team with 42 points and second in goal-scoring with 25.
SUBMITTED Tony White played two full seasons and parts of two others with the Washington Capitals in the mid1970s, beginning with their inaugural NHL campaign. In 1975-76, he was third on the team with 42 points and second in goal-scoring with 25.

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