Hoser
Registered User
- Aug 7, 2005
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Today I learned...that Grant Fuhr wore #1 early in his career.
#31 was Eddie Mio! Pretty sure Fuhr only wore #1 for his first season.
Today I learned...that Grant Fuhr wore #1 early in his career.
#31 was Eddie Mio! Pretty sure Fuhr only wore #1 for his first season.
Doug, you've got to caption your photos, man!
Grant Fuhr, Tom Barrasso, Roger Crozier, Tony Esposito, Glen Hanlon?, Greg Millen?, Mike Palmateer?, (other Leafs goalie...?), Jose Theodore, Gilles Villemure?, (Panthers goalie...?), Roman Turek?, Rick DiPietro.
You're right about Mio, although Fuhr wasn't there until Mio left for the Rangers. Fuhr wore #1 at least in 1981-82 and at the start of 1982-83, but was wearing #31 by the end of the year (I haven't tracked down exactly when he switched).
How would one explain that? Maybe right-handed gloves aren't available for young players.
Don Edwards?
Were all or most of these goalies left-handers in other respects, or is it just skewed slightly that way?
I know that I played goal with the stick in my right hand, probably because I was right-handed. Still, the decision was enforced by the fact that I used my first baseman's glove from baseball season, and that went on the left hand necessarily.
However, I could see an argument for catching with the dominant hand ... except that any right-handed kid brought up playing baseball would instinctively catch with the left hand when a choice was available. I'm assuming that Canadian kids played baseball as did their U.S. counterparts.
I wonder if you'd find more catches-right goalies (proportionately) in non-baseball cultures.
Interesting Trapper. Any idea what make?
Don Edwards?
There was a thread a few years back titled "Why Do Most Canadians Shoot Lefty?" which actually held that Americans tend to shoot right-handed precisely because they grow up playing baseball, and you hold a bat with your non-dominant hand at the bottom.
Different of course when you're talking goalies because you need to catch with one hand, and perhaps some ties to baseball are there, but mostly I'd chalk it up to kids (especially Canadians, apparently) simply learn to hold a hockey stick with their dominant hand at the top, hence if they play goal they tend to learn to catch left anyway. Baseball wouldn't be much of a factor in Canada.
For myself I am very, very right-hand dominant, and I caught with my right. I played with 'normal' gear on occasion too, and was markedly worse. I was always crap at baseball too, because I can't catch with my left very well and can't throw with my left at all. (I might as well have been one-armed.) I shoot right, bat right, golf right, write with my right.
Its been years since I have last played it, but catching with left was never a problem. Neither in pesäpallo or hockey. I guess it came more from the spine. More of reaction than function. Throwing the ball with left.. pitiful![]()
All of his equipment seems to be Koho at that point. Beside mask.
Here he is (against the Rangers - not the Flyers - I'm an idiot) on November 14, 1982:
And a few weeks later - December 7 - against the Blues:
There's about ten Oilers games in that span - if you like snipe hunts, I'd love to narrow down the exact day where he switched from #1 to #31, and back to the fitted mask.
Blocker is a Cooper, can't make out the trapper.