This Day In Hockey History (11/10)

There are sad times when hockey moments reflect an end of something was very special.  Today is one of those times.  The goaltender mentioned today had one nice long streak of sorts that unforunately had to be halted.  Our moment is from 49 years ago on this day in hockey history and oh do not worry, we have a video as well.

 

 

November 10, 1962


31-year-old Chicago goalie Glenn Hall was forced to sit out a game, due to a back injury, ending a streak of 503 consecutive games played. The streak spanned 7 years. Denis DeJordy took his place as the Black Hawks won 3-1 at Montreal.

 

About Chris Wassel

Simply I am a sports writer whose first loves will always be hockey and food. As we attempt to fix the site which has fallen into some disrepair (okay a lot), any and all help is always appreciated. For now, everything will channel through on a post by post basis. As always, let's have some fun!

This Day In Hockey History (11/10)

I am feeling a sense of production and accomplishment today but it could have more to do with the following moment that happened just 19 years ago today.  Moment time.

 

 

November 10, 1991

The Detroit Red Wings retired the numbers of left wing Ted Lindsay (#7) and center Alex Delvecchio (#10) in a pre-game ceremony at Joe Louis Arena. They then beat the St. Louis Blues 6-4 in the game that night.

 

About Chris Wassel

Simply I am a sports writer whose first loves will always be hockey and food. As we attempt to fix the site which has fallen into some disrepair (okay a lot), any and all help is always appreciated. For now, everything will channel through on a post by post basis. As always, let's have some fun!

This Day In Hockey History (11/10)

BallHype: hype it up!

Today we have a moment that I am surprised only happened once but I did a little research and it turns out it really only happened….just once. To think, this guy was known more as a fighter but here is the moment anyway.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1v9n_qzFhss&hl=en&fs=1&

Not Baba but Terry O……

November 10, 1977


Terry O’Reilly scored the only hat trick of his NHL career, and added an assist to lead the Bruins to a 5-2 win against Los Angeles in Boston.

About Chris Wassel

Simply I am a sports writer whose first loves will always be hockey and food. As we attempt to fix the site which has fallen into some disrepair (okay a lot), any and all help is always appreciated. For now, everything will channel through on a post by post basis. As always, let's have some fun!

Quantcast