Boston Herald

Bill Torrey, Isles GM in Stanley Cup years

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Bill Torrey, the jovial bow-tie wearing Hall of Famer who was the general manager of the New York Islanders when they won four consecutiv­e Stanley Cups in the 1980s and eventually became the first president of the Florida Panthers, has died.

Mr. Torrey died at his home in South Florida on Wednesday night, the NHL said. He was 83.

No cause was immediatel­y revealed, though he was not known to be in poor health. Mr. Torrey, who spent the last several years as an adviser to Florida general manager Dale Tallon and also serving as the franchise’s alternate governor, was at work like usual in his Panthers’ office earlier this week.

“Bill was a giant of our game,” Tallon said. “He was the architect of a dynasty, a Hockey Hall of Famer and most importantl­y, a committed family man. I’m heartbroke­n by the news of his passing. Bill was a mentor and a dear friend who was instrument­al in bringing me to South Florida to work alongside him. He was a wonderful person who never lost his passion for the game and loved being at the rink.”

Mr. Torrey left an indelible impact on hockey, particular­ly the Islanders and the Panthers.

He was the first employee in Islanders history when the franchise was born in 1972, and the team raised a banner in his honor years ago calling him “The Architect.” Mr. Torrey then became Florida’s first president, and the Panthers gave him a banner in 2010 with the number “93” — a nod to 1993, when the team played its first game.

Florida reached the Stanley Cup final in 1996 under Mr. Torrey, falling to Colorado. Earlier that season, Mr. Torrey went into the Hall of Fame as a builder who specialize­d in taking expansion teams and turning them into quick winners.

NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman called Mr. Torrey “a true legend of our game.”

Brian Burke, a longtime hockey executive, asked Mr. Torrey for some advice in the early 1990s and remembered getting about a four-sentence answer on how to build a club.

Burke never forgot any of those words, and they became the guide that he’s used ever since — even when putting together the 2010 U.S. Olympic Team.

And what Mr. Torrey did, Burke said, will never be matched.

“Bill Torrey won four consecutiv­e Stanley Cups with the Islanders,” Burke said in 2011. “It’ll never be done again. In a salary cap system I think you’re lucky to win two Cups in 10 years. But you’ll never win four in a row again with this format.”

William A. Torrey was born June 23, 1934, in Montreal. He attended St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y., studying business and psychology. His first hockey front-office job was with the AHL’s Pittsburgh Hornets in the 1960s, and his NHL career started in 1967 when he was hired as executive vice president of the California Seals — another expansion club.

He went to the Islanders in 1972, then to the Panthers in 1993 and never left.

“An original Panther and the forefather of our franchise, Mr. Torrey had a champion’s spirit and lived for the game,” Panthers owner Vincent Viola said.

Mr. Torrey is survived by four sons, a brother, a sister and 10 grandchild­ren. Funeral arrangemen­ts have not been revealed.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? BILL TORREY
AP FILE PHOTO BILL TORREY

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