- Johnny Bower
Infobox Ice Hockey Player
image_size = 240px
position =Goaltender
played_for =New York Rangers Toronto Maple Leafs
shot =
height_ft =
height_in =
weight_lb =
nationality = CAN
birth_date = birth date and age|1924|11|8|mf=y
birth_place = Prince Albert, SK, CAN
career_start =1944/45
career_end = 1969/70
halloffame = 1976John William "Johnny" Bower (born
November 8 ,1924 ), nicknamed "The China Wall", is aHockey Hall of Fame goalie.Playing career
Born in
Prince Albert, Saskatchewan , Bower served with theCanadian Army duringWorld War II inEngland from 1940 to 1944 and was discharged due to rheumatoid arthritis. After the war, Bower returned to Prince Albert to play junior hockey with thePrince Albert Black Hawks (SJHL - 1944–1945) and in the AHL — largely for the Cleveland Barons — for eleven seasons in the late 1940s and 1950s, and proved himself the star goaltender of the circuit, winning numerous awards and leading his teams to threeCalder Cup championships.During his first professional year of hockey, he changed his name from John Kishkan to Bower, to make it easier for sports writers. [ [http://www.canadapost.ca/common/corporate/about/newsroom/pr/archive-e.asp?prid=974 Canada Post - Press Releases - Ice dreams : Fifth set of hockey All-Stars to be honoured with stamps Johnny Bower, Brad Park, Larry Robinson, Marcel Dionne, Ted Lindsay and Milt Schmidt selected for Canada Post's All-Star
list for 2004 ] ]He was finally picked up by the
New York Rangers of the NHL for the 1953–54 season, but was sent back down to the minor leagues the season following. Bower would toil in the minors four more years in Providence (Reds 1945–1946, 1955–1956 and 1956–1957), Vancouver (Canucks 1954–1955), Cleveland (Barons 1945–1953 and 1957–1958) and then again with the Rangers in 1954–1955, before being claimed by theToronto Maple Leafs in the 1958 Inter-League Draft. He would play eleven full seasons in all with the Leafs, the remainder of his career. [http://www.hockeygoalies.org/bio/bower.html Johnny Bower (1953-70) ] ]The height of his NHL career came during the Maple Leafs' three consecutive
Stanley Cup victories in the early 1960s — 1962, 1963 and 1964.After the 1962 victory, Bower complained about
Bobby Hull , Chicago Black HawksLeft Wing er and his hard slap shot, improved from that ofMontreal Canadiens left-wingBernie Geoffrion . Bower said, "He needs another shot like I need a hole in the head, which I may get."His career would be hampered by poor eyesight, but despite that he remained a top-tier goaltender. He was known for his hard-nosed, scrappy playing style and would win another Stanley Cup in 1967 by tandeming with another Hall of Famer (
Terry Sawchuk ). Bower claimed, "I wasn't all that glad to see the two-goalie system come in. I wanted to play as many games as I could." But Bower and Sawchuk shared theVezina Trophy as best NHL netminder in 1964–65. His last full season was 1968–69. In 1969, Johnny became the oldest goaltender to appear in a Stanley Cup playoff game, at 44 years, 4 months, and 28 days. He played a final game in the fall of 1969 and onMarch 19 , 1970, Johnny announced his official retirement - four months after his forty-fifth birthday. When asked, in light of his retirement, if he might reveal his true age, he replied "If you don't know by now, you never will".His Career statistics include: 552 games played, 250 wins, 195 losses, 90 ties, 37 shutouts, and a 2.51 GAA. In addition, he remains the AHL career shutout leader.
Bower was elected to the
Hockey Hall of Fame in 1976. In 1998, he was ranked number 87 on "The Hockey News list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players. He was assistant coach for the Leafs from 1976–1978. Bower is also a member of the Etobicoke Sports Hall of Fame"' since 1994. Bower is married to wife Nancy with a son, two daughters and six grandchildren and resides inMississauga, Ontario . In January 2004, Bower was featured on a postage stamp. As part of the NHL All-Stars Collection, Bower was immortalized along with five other All-Stars. [Canada's Stamp Details, January to March 2004, Volume XIII, No. 1] In 2005, theRoyal Canadian Mint featured Bower on a non-circulating fifty-cent coin, as part of its four-coin Legends of the Toronto Maple Leafs coin set. [The Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 61st Edition, p.209, W.K. Cross, Editor, 2007, The Charlton Press, Toronto, Ontario, ISBN 0–88968–315–8 ] In 2007, it was announced that Bower would receive a star onCanada's Walk of Fame .Awards
*
Hap Holmes Memorial Award (best AHL goaltender, 3 times)
*Vezina Trophy (2 times, at that time awarded for allowing the fewest goals throughout a season).
* NHL First Team All-Star in 1961.
*Les Cunningham Award as the AHL's Most Valuable Player three times consecutively, one of only four players in North American professional hockey history (Bobby Orr ,Wayne Gretzky andPaul Polillo being the others) to do so at any level of play.Career statistics
Regular season
Post-season record
ee also
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List of retired NHL players References
External links
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* [http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/sports/story.html?id=1ec520be-ed2c-4bfc-b2c5-5aea972b82e7&k=63213&p=2 Age never got in Bower's way]
* [http://www.ahlhalloffame.com/pagebank/index.html?id=29 AHL Hall of Fame bio]Persondata
NAME = Bower, John William
ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Johnny, The China Wall
SHORT DESCRIPTION = ice hockey player
DATE OF BIRTH =November 8 ,1924
PLACE OF BIRTH = Prince Albert, SK, CAN
DATE OF DEATH =
PLACE OF DEATH =
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