ELBOWING OFFICIAL NHL BOARDING
Tapping either el- REFEREE SIGNALS Pounding the
bow with tHe op- closed fist of one
posite hand. INTERFERENCE HOOKING DEL AYED hand into t.he open
CALLIN G OF palm of the other
HOLDING Crossed arms sta - A series of tu9ging hand.
Clasping either tionary in front of motions with both ( (Ci PENALTY
wrist with the other chest. arms, as if pulling MISCONDUCT
hand well in front spmething toward Referee extends Placing of both
of the chest. the stomach. arm and points hands on hips sev-
once to penalized eral times and
player. pointing to penali-
zed player.
CROSS-CHECKING
TRIPPING
A series of forward Extending right leg
and backward mo- forward, clear of
t ions with both the ice, and strik-
fists clenched ex- ing it with right
tending from the hcind below the
chest. knee .
HIGH-STICKING Shared by @STLBlueshistorySLASHING CHARGING
Holding both fists, A se ri es of chop- Rotating clenched
clenched, one im- ping motions with fists around one
mediately above the edge of one another in front of
the other, at the ttand across the op- chest.
height of the fore- posite forearm.
head.
ICING SLOW WHISTLE (WASH-OUT]
Arms folded across the chest. Arm, in which Both arms swung
When the puck is shot or de- whistle is not held, laterally across the
flected in such a manner as to e·xtended above body with palms
produce a possible icing of the head. If play re - down:
puck the rea r Linesman wil l turns to Neutral
signal to his partner by raising Zone wit~out stop- 1. When used by
either arm over his head (same page, arm is drawn the Refer ee it
as in Slow Whistle). Immed- down the instant means goal dis ·
iately the conditions r~quired the puck crosses a11owed.
to establish [icing the puck] the line.
have occu rred t.he forward 2. When used by
Linesman w ill respond with Linesmen it means
the same Slow Whistle signal there is no icing
and the rea'r Linesnian ·w ill or no off-side.
blow his whistle to stop the
play and both will give the
proper [Icing] sigral.
<
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1882
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every field . .. a champion!
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49
MacLEAN (From Page 15)
The 1960 All Star game seemed almost unreal. It
was played without Maurice Richard, who had an-
nounced his retirement only three weeks earlier. The All Defendin·g Stariley Cup Chcsmps,
the Montreal Canadien.s s~ore in
Stars took heart and with Montreal without its inspira- 1967 Classic Despite lunge by ·All~
tional leader and driving force, the League representa- Star's Glenri Hall in Goal. . Number
tives won 2~1. Andy Hebenton of the Rangers took a pass 1S is Can.adiens' BobJ,y · Rousseau
from his teammate Red Sullivan and won the game at and Number 22 is Frarik Mahovlich
of The All-Stqrs. · · · · ·· · .
15:51 of the second period.
Howe popped back into the spotlight when he and
Fats Delvecchio, his teammate on Detroit each scored a
goal and an assists in a 3-1 All Star success over the Chi-
cago Black Hawks who had finally stopped Montreal's
Stanley Cup success in the Spring of 1961. The 1961
game was played in Chicago Stadium, the second time who had returned to the throne room the previous
that the Windy City was the locale. Spring. Gordie scored his eighth and ninth all star goals
In 1962 Toronto Maple Leafs ran the All Stars right while playing with Normie Ullman, then with Detroit
Shared by @STLBlueshistory
out of Maple Leafs Gardens in the first period with four and Robert Marvin Hull. Beliveau and Jacques Laper-
quick goals from the sticks of Mahovlich, Duff, Pulford riere got the Montreal goals. It might be noted here that
and Eddie Shack. Plante, now in the All Star goal, was Howe eventually got the better of Richard in All Star
the victim. Howe did score a late goal for the Stars to competition for the same reason as he overcame him in
avoid a shutout and make the count 4~1. regular play - longevity anq a 'desire t() continue play-
1963 was the year of the Big M, as Mahovlich scored ing at a late age. • ,.
two goals and an assist in a 3-3 deadlock between To- In January 1967, the big switch to January and .~
ronto and the Stars. Marcel Pronovost, the light scoring mid season date was made with the site again .peing the'
defenseman tied it for the Stars in the third period after Montreal Forum. Canadiens won a ·dull 3-0 contest with
Henri Richard scoring one C;muck go~l and John Bowie
Eddie Litzenberger had put the Leafs ahead on a pass
from Big Frank. · Ferguson the other two. · .
Beliveau, Howe and Hull played together on the The 1968 Classic was played under a cloud 9aused
same li11e in 1964 and combined for the goal which gave by the tragic death of Minnesota North Star center Bill
the Stars a 3-2 win over the Leafs. In 1965 Howe broke Masterton who died the day before the game from a
Richard's All Star mark of seven goals by potting two head injury received in an Oakland-Minnesota gaine the
previous weekend. The Cup champion Mapl~ Leafs \\'On
markers in the All Star's 5-2 success over the Canadiens
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50
4-3 on goals by Allan Stanley and Peter Stemowski in
the second period. Toward the end of this g[tme, the
Stars pulled Glenn Hall from their net and inserted
Bobby Orr of the Bruins in a gallant attempt to tie the
score but the Leafs held on for the win.
Last January's game was a moral triumph for Bow-
man and his dedicated Westerners. With eight Blues in
the West lineup, Bowman adopted the close checking
style which has proven to be such a success for St. Louis
in regular season play: He got goals from Red Berenson
in the first period and Jim Roberts in the second and
actually led 2-1 at the end of the second stanza. Mahov-
lich tied it with his second marker at 3:11 of the third
and New York's Bob Nevin got the "winner" at 7:20,
only to have Larose retie the game late in the stanza. It
was a big thing for the West, which .on paper, at least,
Shared by @STLBlueshistory
did not stand a chance. The East ha(l super hu~an~ on
skates with names like R. Hull, D. Hull, Orr,. Beliveau,
Howe, Phil Esposito, Stan Mikita, etc., etc. ' . .
Berenson told it like it is, "They still put their skates
on the same as we do and they have to beat l1S ori the
ice," said Red in the happy We~t dressing room.
The East-West rivalry promises to make the All.,
Star contest as a spectacle. The West has something tO '
prove, jtist as the American Football League had· in the
Super Bowl and the National League pad in baseball
after the American League won twelve of the first six-
teen baseball classics. This competition augers well for
the game you wil1 watch tonight and for the future of
the National Hockey League All Star Game. Undoubted-
ly, it asures that the fans will be the re~l winners of the
mid season Classic. '·
The Difference in Painting BEFORE BLUES GAMES----
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Shared by @STLBlueshistory
Tonight take someone to dinner with The New Money*
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It's your mother's birthday and you want to take h andling charge, is put on your stateinent. For details,
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