- Red Storey
Roy Alvin "Red" Storey, CM (
March 5 1918 –March 15 2006 ) was aCanadian football player andNational Hockey League referee .Born in
Barrie, Ontario , Storey was working in a rail yard when he received an offer to play football with theToronto Argonauts . He was on the team for six seasons from 1936 to 1941, winning theGrey Cup in 1937 and 1938—scoring three touchdowns in the fourth quarter of the 1938 game to give the Argos the victory. He was forced to retire after suffering a knee injury.At the same time he was playing football, Storey was also playing competitive lacrosse. In the
Ontario Lacrosse Association , he played for Orillia and was an all-star with the Hamilton Tigers in 1941.As a defenceman, he played hockey in
New Jersey for theRivervale Skeeters in 1941. Storey then moved toMontreal and joined the Montreal Royals late in the 1941–42 season. He played lacrosse for Lachine in 1942 and 1943. He later joined the Montreal Canadiens lacrosse team, and was playing there in 1946.By the mid-1940s, Storey—in addition to his regular job—was officiating football, lacrosse, and hockey games. He officiated for 12 years in the precursor to the
Canadian Football League .Storey became an NHL referee in 1950 and worked in the league until 1959. On
April 4 ,1959 , he was officiating a playoff game between theMontreal Canadiens and the Chicago Black Hawks, which Montreal won—along with the series—scoring the winning goal with 88 seconds left in the sixth game. Chicago fans nearly rioted, and Black Hawks coachRudy Pilous accused Storey of choking by not calling penalties against the Canadiens late in the game. Storey was scheduled to referee the final game in the series between theToronto Maple Leafs and theBoston Bruins , but when an Ottawa newspaper reported that NHL presidentClarence Campbell said that Storey had "frozen" on two calls that should have been penalties against the Canadiens, Storey immediately resigned. He never returned to the NHL. His career included 480 regular season games and seven consecutiveStanley Cup finals from 1952 through 1958.He was popular with NHL players because he talked with them. Gump Worsley said of Storey in his autobiography "They Call Me Gump": "When Red Storey was refereeing in the NHL, I used to ask him where he was going to get a beer after the game. He usually told me, too."
Following his retirement from the NHL, Storey remained active in oldtimers' games, worked as a TV commentator, and was a popular raconteur.
Storey was inducted into the
Hockey Hall of Fame (1967) andCanada's Sports Hall of Fame (1986) and was made a Member of theOrder of Canada in 1991. He was 88 when he died inMontreal after a lengthy illness. His son, Bob Storey, was also a two-time Grey Cup winner (1967, 1970).External links
*Legendsmember|Official|O196701
* [http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/honours-desc.asp?lang=e&TypeID=orc&id=2988 Order of Canada Citation]
* [http://www.hockeyrefs.com/intheheadlines/03152006.htm Whistle sounds on Storey's life]
* [http://www.7thfloormedia.com/resources/canadiana/library/storey.html Red Storey: Fifteen Minutes of Fame]
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