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Bruce MacGregor, RW/C
Position: Right Wing (predominantly)/Centre
HT/WT: 5'10", 180 lbs
Handedness: Right
Nickname(s): "The Redheaded Rocket", "Murdoch"
Born: April 26th, 1941 in Edmonton, AB
- 5th in 1967 RW All-Star Voting
- 6, 7, 8 and 14 in Lady Byng Voting
- killed 48% of his teams penalties 1968-74
- scored 213 goals and 257 assists for 470 points in 893 games, adding 217 penalty minutes.
- scored 19 goals and 28 assists for 47 points in 107 playoff games, adding 44 penalty minutes.
Top 10 Finishes:
Goals - 1x - (4)
Powerplay Goals - 1x - (3)
Shorthanded Goals - 4x - (3, 6, 7, 9)
Quotes
Greatest Hockey Legends
Legends of Hockey
Poor Power For New York - SI.com
The Evening Independent - Apr. 19, 1974
The Montreal Gazette - Apr. 7, 1966
Gettysburg Times - Feb. 5, 1971
The Vancouver Sun - Oct 1, 1974
New York Times - Oct. 21, 1971
Boston Bruins: Greatest Moments & Players
Detroit Red Wings: Greatest Moments and Players
Evidence of powerful physicality
Bonham Daily Favorite - Dec. 24, 1962
Position: Right Wing (predominantly)/Centre
HT/WT: 5'10", 180 lbs
Handedness: Right
Nickname(s): "The Redheaded Rocket", "Murdoch"
Born: April 26th, 1941 in Edmonton, AB
- 5th in 1967 RW All-Star Voting
- 6, 7, 8 and 14 in Lady Byng Voting
- killed 48% of his teams penalties 1968-74
- scored 213 goals and 257 assists for 470 points in 893 games, adding 217 penalty minutes.
- scored 19 goals and 28 assists for 47 points in 107 playoff games, adding 44 penalty minutes.
Top 10 Finishes:
Goals - 1x - (4)
Powerplay Goals - 1x - (3)
Shorthanded Goals - 4x - (3, 6, 7, 9)
Quotes
Emile Francis said:His goals were seldom spectacular, but he was a hard-working industrious type who rarely made a mistake on the ice.
Brad Park said:The surprise was Bruce MacGregor, who, until then, I hadn't considered a particular asset to the club. As we were both on the right side, I got a chance to observe his remarkably steady play, up and down the wing, and the job he does checking
Greatest Hockey Legends
In the 1960s and early 1970s speedy Bruce MacGregor was so fast he was nicknamed "The Redheaded Rocket."
MacGregor was a slick and speedy forward who was a coach's dream. He was never an outstanding scorer, topping 20 goals only three times in his 13 year career, but he would do anything the coaches needed him to do, and with great proficiency. Using his incredible acceleration and his equally impressive hockey sense, he was a great utility player, filling in admirably wherever and whenever the team asked him to. He was also a mainstay on the penalty kill unit.
overpass said:MacGregor scored 20 goals in three consecutive seasons for Detroit pre-expansion. In the first two of these seasons he played with various linemates, including veterans Ted Lindsay and Andy Bathgate, Paul Henderson, and various undrafted players. In 1966-67 he joined Henderson and Norm Ullman on the HUM line, and his 28 goals were good for fourth in the league. McGregor was in the top 10 for even strength goals in both 64-65 and 66-67. His scoring dropped off after this but remained consistent, as he scored at least 14 goals in the next seven seasons.
He was sixth in Lady Byng voting in 1964-65 - all other players in the top 10 have been drafted.
Legends of Hockey
A solid and reliable two-way player, MacGregor played all of the '60s with Detroit before moving to the Rangers and finishing his career in the WHA with the Edmonton Oilers. The centre was nicknamed the "Redheaded Rocket" for his hair colour and his speed. MacGregor set career highs in 1966-67 with 28 goals and 47 points.
Poor Power For New York - SI.com
It all started shortly before Game Four with a private meeting between XXX XXXXX, the scrappy chancellor of the Rangers' exchequer, and the man they call Murdoch. The 33-year-old MacGregor is a quiet redhead who has skated in obscurity through most of his 13 NHL seasons. As he suspected, XXX wanted to discuss Yvan Cournoyer, the Montreal Roadrunner, who had deflated the Rangers in Games Two and Three by scoring five goals.
"XXX said we had to contain Cournoyer, or else," MacGregor says. "He asked if I'd switch from right wing to left wing, forget all about my own offense and think only about shadowing Cournoyer. He told me that if I could keep Cournoyer off his game even a little bit, then things might fall into place for us."
While MacGregor admittedly cannot skate as fast as Cournoyer—who can?—he accepted the assignment. "I had never played head to head against Cournoyer," MacGregor says, "but I knew his game. He plays the percentages. He likes to sneak between or behind the defense and get a long lead pass from Jacques Lemaire or one of the defensemen. My job, as I saw it, was to stay between Cournoyer and [Ranger Goaltender] Eddie Giacomin. I had to be the middleman at all times. I knew if Cournoyer got between Giacomin and me on a breakaway, it probably would be curtains. There's no way I'd ever catch him in a race. It would be worse than the tortoise and the hare."
In three games MacGregor had out-shot Cournoyer nine to five and out-scored him four to nothing, leaving Bowman with a strange look on his face. "I didn't think New York had anyone who could slow Yvan down," he said. "I thought XXX XXX was the only New York player who could skate with him, and they traded XXX to Los Angeles. That MacGregor, he's pretty smart."
The Evening Independent - Apr. 19, 1974
The Rangers defeated Montreal for third straight game eliminating them from the opening round of the playoffs.
...
They did it because of an air-tight checking job on Yvan Cournoyer by Bruce MacGregor, who also pitched in with a series-high six goals.
The Montreal Gazette - Apr. 7, 1966
MacGregor Line To Check Bobby Hull
Abel said he plans to use MacGregor's line, including XXX XXXXXXXX and Paul Henderson to check Bobby Hull, Chicago's record-breaking goal-scorer.
Gettysburg Times - Feb. 5, 1971
The trade came as a great shock to the easy-going MacGregor, noted for his hustling play.
The Vancouver Sun - Oct 1, 1974
His main on-the-ice worry, aside from the Soviets, is the continuing illness of right winger Bruce MacGregor.
Checking. both fore and aft, is the main Canadian weapon against the Soviets, and Bruce was the most effective workman in that regard.
...
There's no adequate replacement in the reserves. While everyone worries about what could happen if Cheevers, Hull or Howe were to get sick, only now is the importance of MacGregor's indisposition dawning on many of the team followers.
Just how important his checking and penalty killing are may also have struck you as you watched game five on your television today.
New York Times - Oct. 21, 1971
Fairbairn and then Bruce MacGregor were used to check Hull, with Park backing them up. Hull got off one shot in the game.
Boston Bruins: Greatest Moments & Players
Orr blew away such fantasies with one sterling maneuver just past the 11-minute mark of the first period. Seemingly trapped at the right point by Rangers defensive forward Bruce MacGregor.
Detroit Red Wings: Greatest Moments and Players
As a diligent, productive Red Wing checking forward, MacGregor to this day stands out as a special Detroiter.
Evidence of powerful physicality
Bonham Daily Favorite - Dec. 24, 1962
Al MacNeil of Chicago is sent flying by Bruce MacGregor's vicious check as the Red Wings edge the Black Hawks, in rough game at the Detroit Olympia ...
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