The Korea Times

Scuba diver finds HOF ring of former AHL star Dick Gamble

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PITTSFORD (AP) — Former American Hockey League star Dick Gamble ordered a replacemen­t for his Hall of Fame ring when it disappeare­d a few years ago.

Soon, he’ll have one for each ring finger.

A scuba-diving treasure hunter found Gamble’s lost ring in Canandaigu­a (pronounced kan-un-DAY’-gwuh) Lake, one of the Finger Lakes in upstate New York, while searching with his metal detector on Fourth of July weekend.

“I was coming back to the boat and get a signal in my headphones and there it was, a ring, looks like a pretty good ring,” Gary Gavurnik told Rochester’s WHEC-TV .

“I bring it up to the surface with my buddy and show it to him and we say: ‘Holy cow! This is more than just a ring, this is sentimenta­l to somebody who lost it. It’s a Hall of Fame ring.”’

The Canadian-born Gamble, now 88, did not answer several calls to his residence in the Rochester suburb of Pittsford.

Gavurnik plans to return the ring.

Gamble, who starred for the AHL’s Rochester Americans, retired early in the 1969-70 season.

He was inducted as an original member of the Amerks Hall of Fame in 1986 and was enshrined in the AHL Hall of Fame in 2007.

Officials at the American Hockey League said Thursday that Gamble’s son, Craig, ordered the replacemen­t ring. Gamble’s name is inscribed on both.

In parts of eight NHL seasons with the Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, and Chicago Blackhawks, Gamble had 41 goals and 41 assists in 195 games.

The 6-foot, 180-pound left wing also appeared in an NHL All-Star Game and was a member of the Canadiens’ Stanley Cup championsh­ip team in 1953.

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