Showing posts with label birmingham bulls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birmingham bulls. Show all posts

Friday, February 13, 2015

NHL Retirees Who Coached In 1983-84 ACHL


rick ley toronto maple leafs 1969-70 opc rookie card
1983-84 was the third of six season that the Atlantic Coast Hockey League existed. The teams each played a 72 game regular season schedule. The Erie Golden Blades defeated the Carolina Thunderbirds to win the championship. The players in the six team league were forgettable but four of the teams were coached by quite recognizable names.

Rick Dudley – Carolina Thunderbirds


Rick Dudley coached the Carolina Thunderbirds for four years from 1982-83. The 1983-84 Thunderbirds finished first overall and had the most goals for and least goals against. In the playoffs, Carolina beat the Mohawk Valley Stars in the first round before their defeat at the hands of the Golden Blades in the finals.

Dudley played pro from 1969-70 to 1981-82. He played 309 regular season games in the National Hockey League with the Buffalo Sabres and Winnipeg Jets. He played in the World Hockey Association from 1975-76 to 1978-79, appearing in 270 games with the Cincinnati Stingers.

Rick was head coach of the Buffalo Sabres from 1989-90 to midway through the 1991-92 season. He was also interim head coach of the Florida Panthers for 40 games in 2003-04. In 1987-88, he was awarded the Commissioner’s Trophy in the IHL as coach of the year, leading the Flint Spirits to the finals.

Rick Ley – Mohawk Valley Stars


Rick Ley coached the Mohawk Valley Stars to a fourth overall finish in his only year of coaching in the ACHL. As mentioned earlier, the Stars fell to the Carolina Thunderbirds in the opening round of the playoffs.

Ley was a third round pick of the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1966 and played pro hockey from 1968-69 to 1980-81. In the NHL, Rick played in 310 regular season games with the Maple Leafs and Hartford Whalers. He was a member of the New England Whalers in the WHA for the duration of the league, 1972-73 to 1978-79, playing in 478 regular season games.

Rick coached pro hockey from 1981-82 to 2005-06. In the NHL, he was head coach of the Whalers for the 1989-90 and 1990-91 seasons and head coach of the Vancouver Canucks for 1994-95 and most of 1995-96.

Ley’s greatest coaching success came in the IHL with the Muskegon Lumberjacks. He took the team to the finals for three straight years from 1984-85 to 1986-87, winning in 1985-86. In 1984-85, he was awarded the Commissioner’s Trophy as coach of the year.

Don Luce – Pineridge Bucks


Don Luce coached part of the 1983-84 season with the Pineridge Bucks. The Bucks were a unique team that played out of Spruce Pine, North Carolina, a town of just 2,500 but with an arena that sat 4,000.

Luce was a third round pick of the New York Rangers in 1966. He played pro from 1968-69 to 1981-82 with the Rangers, Detroit Red Wings, Buffalo Sabres, Los Angeles Kings and Toronto Maple Leafs, appearing in 894 regular season games. Luce would only stand behind the bench in one other season, 1986-87 as the assistant coach for the Buffalo Sabres.

Dave Hanson – Birmingham Bulls


Dave Hanson, better known as Jack Hanson from the movie Slap Shot, has the distinction of winning 67% of all the pro games he coached. Unfortunately, this result comes from winning two of three as head coach of the Birmingham Bulls in 1983-84 before the team folded.

Hanson played pro hockey from 1974-75 to 1983-84. He appeared in 103 games in the WHA with the Minnesota Fighting Saints, New England Whalers and Birmingham Bulls. He dressed for 33 games in the NHL with the Detroit Red Wings and Minnesota North Stars.

Hanson is probably most famous for the two years he spent in the North American Hockey League with the Johnstown Jets. The Jets and the NAHL were the inspiration for the movie Slapshot starring Paul Newman.


Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Steve Durbano: PIM Champ In 4 Different Leagues


steve durbano st. louis blues 1972-73 o-pee-chee
The hockey ‘goon’ is considered by some as an untalented stain on the game. Yet, the physical conditioning and subsequent punishment these players go through is unbelievable. Everyone loves a hockey fight, as is evident by the standing ovation received each and every time, yet the actual fighters are not truly appreciated.

Steve Durbano was a hockey ‘goon’. He played 220 games in the National Hockey League, sitting 1,127 minutes in the penalty box during that time for an average of 5.1 minutes per game. Perhaps, just as well known for his antics off the ice as on, Durbano should at least be recognized for the fact that he led four different leagues in the penalty minute department.

Steve played three years of junior hockey with the Toronto Marlboros of the Ontario Hockey Association. He provided decent offense from the blue line with 32 points in 53 games in his second year and 39 points in 49 games in his second. In those final two seasons with the Marlboros, Durbano led the league in penalty minutes with 371 in 1969-70 and 324 in 1970-71.

The New York Rangers saw something they liked and drafted Durbano in the first round of the 1971 NHL Amateur Draft, 13th overall. In fact, Steve was taken seven positions ahead of Hockey Hall of Fame defenseman, Larry Robinson.

His first year of professional hockey was spent with the Omaha Knights of the Central Hockey League. Playing in 70 of the team’s 72 regular season games in 1971-72, Durbano sat out 402 minutes in penalties. He also finished with 41 points, sixth on the team.

Steve made his NHL debut the following season with the St. Louis Blues. However, it was in 1975-76 when he became a made the headlines. In a season split between the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Kansas City Scouts (today’s New Jersey Devils), Durbano totaled 370 PIM to lead the league.

With 1977-78, came a new league for Durbano to lead in the penalty minutes category. Skipping to the World Hockey Association after playing just 19 games in the NHL the season before, Steve led the league with 284 PIM in just 45 games. He was the leader of the WHA’s version of the Broad Street Bullies, the Birmingham Bulls. Birmingham had the top four penalty box sitters in the WHA on the roster.

Durbano played one more season of pro hockey in 1978-79, returning to the St. Louis Blues for 13 games and playing an additional 10 games with the Salt Lake Golden Eagles of the Central Hockey League. Steve passed away in 2002 after a bout with liver cancer. Sure, he’ll be remembered as a goon but the fact is: he made it. He played at a level of hockey so very few can even come close to. He didn’t just fight and sit in the penalty box. He played defense and even scored a few goals.



Season Team Lge GP G A Pts PIM
1968-69 Toronto Marlboros OHA 45 5 6 11 158
1969-70 Toronto Marlboros OHA 53 7 25 32 371
1970-71 Toronto Marlboros OHA 49 7 32 39 324
1971-72 Omaha Knights CHL 70 7 34 41 402
1972-73 St. Louis Blues NHL 49 3 18 21 231
1973-74 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 33 4 14 18 138
1973-74 St. Louis Blues NHL 36 4 5 9 146
1974-75 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 1 0 1 1 10
1975-76 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 32 0 8 8 161
1975-76 Kansas City Scouts NHL 37 1 11 12 209
1976-77 Colorado Rockies NHL 19 0 2 2 129
1976-77 Rhode Island Reds AHL 9 1 2 3 55
1977-78 Birmingham Bulls WHA 45 6 4 10 284
1978-79 Salt Lake Golden Eagles CHL 10 1 4 5 41
1978-79 St. Louis Blues NHL 13 1 1 2 103

NHL Totals
220 13 60 73 1127

WHA Totals
45 6 4 10 284