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This was e-mailed to me from a former minor league hockey player who lives in the area. It was sent to him by a pal and former player who lives in the Chicago area.
Check it out. It’s a must read:

In the middle of a grueling six game road trip where a very young hockey team is away from home, the third game of the trip ends late on a cold Canadian Saturday night.
This is the only break on the trip and the three days between games allow them the only break to get back home in their own beds for a couple of days before going back on the road. A scheduled commercial flight waits for them at Toronto ‘s International Airport for the short flight home; they could be home by midnight. This plane departs on schedule, but without a single member of the hockey team.
Back in the locker room a vote is taken after the game was complete, and a unanimous decision is made by this young team to skip this flight and stay one more day. They make arrangements to check back in the hotel and on a frozen Sunday morning charter two buses that have no heat and begin a journey two hours straight north into a sparsely inhabited Canada , but where hockey is its passion.
They arrive at their destination to the surprise of the teams general manager who is there attending his fathers wake.

After a few emotional hours, this team boards the buses and heads back for a two-hour trip back to Toronto . On the way they ask the drivers to stop in a tiny Canadian town because they are hungry. To the shock of the patrons and workers at this small hockey town McDonald’s, a professional team walks out of two rickety buses and into the restaurant, which just happens to have pictures of two members of this team on its wall.
The patrons know every single one of these players by sight being Fanatic fans of hockey in these parts. One can only imagine their amazement of the locals seeing and the entire professional hockey team sit down and have a meal in their tiny little town in the middle of a hockey season. After a while they board the buses and catch their same flight 24 hours later, giving one day to their general manager.

Have I made this up, is this an excerpt from some fictional book? No.

This a true story of the Blackhawks last Saturday night and they decided to attend Dale Tallon’s fathers funeral. It’s amazing that such a good story can be found nowhere on the internet, and not even mentioned in the Chicago papers.
Had one of the Blackhawks got into a fight and punched some drunken loser in a Toronto bar it would be plastered all over papers and the television. This being said, its hard to imagine any professional football, basketball or baseball team doing this, but the members of the Blackhawks claim any “hockey” team would have done this. This is one reason I continue to be a big hockey fan, and another reason I am excited about this Chicago team. I thought I would share as this story appears to have gone unnoticed.

  • John

    Hockey Players….Egos are left at the door.

    This was a good read, a little upset that the Chicago Papers don’t cover stories like this, but then again there are other interesting things happening in Chicago these days.

  • bocatennis

    hockey players are the nicest of all the pro athletes. i just wish they got paid like it because they deserve it!!!!!!!

  • tom

    The NHL is made up mostly of Canadians. I think that a large part of the ethos of selflessness and “team first” comes from, well, being Canadian. The Canadians, players and fans alike, have a deep respect for the game and the people involved in it. That tradition has been passed down from generation to generation.

    The fact that the NHL has never really been in the spotlight like basketball, baseball and football has helped the league remain humble and hardworking. NHLers know that their fans are the mostly blue collar hard-working folks ( despite the ticket prices at the “Boston Garden” these days). Many players come from small towns and don’t get contaminated with delusional notions of glory like NBA players for example.

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