Jacques Caron
You can purchase these cards, or any of my Missing Link creations, for $10 each postpaid, or $7.95 each for 3 or more. Email me at: [email protected], volume discounts available on larger orders.
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This post will feature a hodge-podge of NHL goalies, a batch of 1970-71 Canadiens and, last but not least, a few Finns that ventured to the NHL. Hope you enjoy, it will be a "No Bio" post, I'll let the reverse shots tell the story. Jacques Caron Ed Chadwick Jim Craig Jiri Crha Tony Esposito George Gardner Harry Lumley Seth Martin Phil Myre Marcel Paille Mike Palmateer Dennis Riggin Pat Riggin Bob Ring Terry Sawchuk Don Simmons Jim Stewart Ernie Wakely Chris Worthy Guy Charron Jude Drouin Dick Duff Ted Harris Fran Huck Larry Mickey Phil Myre Larry Pleau Claude Provost Phil Roberto Bobby Rousseau Olli Jokinen Markus Mattsson Petteri Nokelainen Pekka Rautakalleo Thanks to Darryl Babineau, Rick Vogel, Bob Fulton and many others for their requests !! Merry Xmas to all and a very Happy New Year in 2018.
You can purchase these cards, or any of my Missing Link creations, for $10 each postpaid, or $7.95 each for 3 or more. Email me at: [email protected], volume discounts available on larger orders.
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This post will be all over the spectrum, except for Philadelphia, with chess, baseball, football and hockey both NHL and WHA. Hope my faithful followers find something they like !! Had created some 1895 Old Judge Cigarette Cards style Chess Masters a while back, had a request to add a Bobby Fischer card to this group. Amazing story, child chess prodigy, perhaps the greatest ever who ruled the chess world only to walk away for 20 years. After that reclusive period he resurfaced to played a match against Boris Spassky which would get an arrest order issued for him by the U.S. Government and his U.S. passport rescinded. Lived balance of his life as an Icelandic resident after obtaining special citizenship from their government. Ted Williams wrapped 19 years of baseball with the Boston Red Sox around 2 tours of military duty with the U.S.A.F. Retired after hitting a home run in his very last at-bat on September 28, 1960. His career batting average is still the highest of any player who played his entire career in the live-ball era following 1920. Williams was a nineteen-time All-Star, a two-time recipient of the American League (AL) Most Valuable Player Award, a six-time AL batting champion, and a two-time Triple Crown winner. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1966, in his first year of eligibility. Client wanted a pair of custom cards done for 1959 and 1961. Charley Taylor was a wide receiver in the NFL for fourteen seasons, all with the Washington Redskins. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1984. Taylor was the third overall selection of the 1964 NFL draft and won the UPI rookie of the year award when his 53 receptions became a record for running backs at that time. He had a 1972 Topps card issued but it listed him as Charlie Taylor, client wanted a "corrected" custom. Robert Brazile, nicknamed "Dr. Doom", played from 1975 to 1984 for the Houston Oilers. He was taken by the Oilers with the sixth pick of the first round of the 1975 NFL Draft. Brazile found immediate success with the Oilers, winning the NFL's Defensive Rookie of the Year award for the 1975 season. He was named to the Pro Bowl seven straight seasons, was All-Pro five straight seasons (1976–80) and was selected to the NFL's All-Decade Team for the 1970s. His rookie card was part of the 1976 Topps set, client wanted a 1975 Topps custom. Randy Gradishar was a two-time consensus All-American for the Ohio State Buckeyes, before playing ten seasons for the NFL's Denver Broncos, where he was the centerpiece of the "Orange Crush Defense". He was drafted 14th overall in the 1974 NFL Draft by the Broncos and became a starter midway though his rookie season and was named to his first Pro Bowl after the 1975 season. His rookie card was also part of the 1976 Topps set, again client wanted a 1975 Topps custom. Ted Hendricks played 15 seasons for the Baltimore Colts , the Green Bay Packers and the Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders in the NFL. He was a member of four Super Bowl-winning teams, was a Pro Bowl selection eight times and was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1990. He is distinguished as being the first Guatemalan to play in the National Football League. Although he played with the Raiders from 1975 until he retired in 1983 he would not get a Raiders card issued, client wanted a 1975 Topps custom. Randy White attended the University of Maryland from 1971 to 1974, and played professionally for the Dallas Cowboys from 1975 to 1988. He was elected a member of both the College Football Hall of Fame and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1994. White was the Dallas Cowboys' first pick and the second player selected in the 1975 National Football League Draft. Once again hHis rookie card was part of the 1976 Topps set and client wanted a 1975 Topps custom. Tony Dorsett played professionally in the NFL for the Dallas Cowboys and Denver Broncos. From Western Pennsylvania, he attended the nearby University of Pittsburgh, where he led the Panthers to the national title as a senior in 1976 and won the Heisman Trophy. He was the first-round draft choice of the Cowboys in 1977 and the second overall selection. Dorsett was the NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year and played for the team for eleven seasons, through 1987. He played for Denver the following year, then retired because of injuries. He was elected as a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the College Football Hall of Fame in 1994. His rookie card was part of the 1978 Topps set, client wanted a 1977 Topps custom. Earl Leggett was an American football defensive lineman in the NFL for the Chicago Bears, Los Angeles Rams and the New Orleans Saints. He played his college football at Louisiana State University and was a first-round draft pick of the Bears in 1957. He was part of the famed "Monsters of the Midway" defense that led the Bears to the 1963 NFL championship. He was traded to the Los Angeles Rams in 1966, where he played in 10 regular season games. Toward the end of his career Leggett played 20 games in 1967 and 1968 for the expansion New Orleans Saints franchise. His only cards issued, 1967 and 1969, are both as a Saint. His son Brad Leggett played college football at the University of Southern California and was originally an 8th round pick, 219th overall, by the Denver Broncos in the 1990 NFL Draft. He played for the New Orleans Saints and the Detroit Lions before his career was derailed by back injuries, forcing him to retire. He contacted me with a request to turn some photos he had into cards of his Dad as a Chicago Bear. I also created 2 custom for his own career as he never had one issued. Herb Dickenson was born in Hamilton, Ontario and scored 51 goals in two seasons with the OHA's Guelph Biltmores. During the 1949-50 season he led the league with 18 goals in 24 playoff games as the club fell just short of reaching the Memorial Cup tournament. After a strong start to his pro career with the AHL's Cincinnati Mohawks, the gifted winger was recalled to New York. He adjusted quickly to the NHL and notched 14 goals in 37 games. The next year he had eight points in the first 11 games of the season before he was struck in the eye by an errant puck during the warm up prior to a game versus the Toronto Maple Leafs on November, 1952. The resulting injury brought an abrupt end to a promising big league career. He did have a rookie card issued in the 1952-53 Parkie set, client wanted a custom 1953-54 Parkie creation. George "Bud" Gardner grew up in Quebec and joined the Niagara Falls Flyers as an overage player in 1962-63. He helped the Flyers to the OHA championship and a berth in the Memorial Cup before he turned pro in 1963-64 with the Minneapolis Bruins of the CPHL. He played his first game in the NHL in 1965-66 with the Detroit Red Wings, earning a victory, and following year he was between the pipes for 11 Red Wings' games and 12 in 1967-68. After 2 seasons in WHL with Vancouver Canucks Gardner was back in the NHL with them in their inaugural season in 1970-71. Also made WHA stops with Los Angeles and Vancouver before retiring after the end of the 1973-74 season. His rookie card, as a Canuck was issued in the 1970-71 OPC set, here is his Red Wings custom rookie. Doug Harvey spent 14 seasons as a Montreal Canadien before he joined the New York Rangers as player-coach in 1961-62. After trying both jobs for one year, he went back to being strictly a player for two seasons before retiring from the NHL. He continued to play, chiefly in the AHL, and then made a two-game return with Detroit in 1966-67.Harvey began the 1967-68 schedule with the Kansas City Blues of the Central Hockey League before rejoining the NHL with expansion St. Louis for the playoffs. He aided the squad's drive to the Stanley Cup finals, where they were swept by his old team from Montreal. The following year he played all 70 regular-season games with the Blues before retiring for good. He had cards issued as a Hab, Ranger and Blue but none for his 2 game trip thru Detroit. Brian Smith grew up in a hockey family as his father Des Smith played with Montreal, Chicago and Boston in the late 1930s and early 1940s while younger brother Gary "Suitcase" Smith tended goal for seven NHL teams during a 16 year pro career. By the time he was 19 he was playing for the Brockville Canadiens, who advanced to the Memorial Cup playoffs in 1960. Smith played minor pro with Ottawa-Hull for several years but then refused to report to Springfield of the AHL after the Montreal Canadiens traded his rights and suspended for the entire 1963-64 season. Realizing he had few options from which to choose, Smith reported to Springfield where he played for three years. In 1967 the NHL expanded by six teams and the Los Angeles Kings needed to fill their roster heading into their first season and Smith made the grade, appearing in 58 games, scoring ten goals and 19 points. Smith was traded to Montreal in the summer of 1968, but never played a game for the Habs, being traded again in November to the Minnesota North Stars where he played nine games to round out his NHL career. He was out of hockey for two years but made a comeback in 1972-73 with the start of the WHA. Smith signed a contract with the Houston Aeros and played in 48 games, retiring at the end of the year at the age of 32. He would never get a hockey card issued, we have previously posted his North Stars and Aeros customs, here is his Kings rookie card.. Don Awrey played 16 NHL seasons with 6 teams spending the majority of his time in Boston. He also made stops in St. Louis, Montreal, Pittsburgh, New York and Colorado and had cards issued in every city. Client was "upgrading" his 1975-76 card collection and wanted a custom St. Louis card created, Henry Boucha was a fine scorer and penalty killer whose career was adversely affected by an eye injury. Boucha and his trademark headband made NHL stops in Detroit, Minnesota, Kansas City and Colorado, wrapped around a stop with the WHA Minnesota Fighting Saints. Client wanted a 1975-76 North Stars custom for his "upgrade". Jerry Butler was known one of the NHL's best defensive shadows during an 11 year career that made stops in New York, St. Louis, Toronto, Vancouver and Winnipeg. Client wanted a 1975-76 Rangers custom for his "upgrade". Bill Clement was selected by the Philadelphia Flyers in the second round of the 1970 NHL Amateur Draft, 18th overall. Played 4 seasons in Phillie, earning 2 Stanley Cups, followed by stops in Washington, Atlanta and Calgary before retiring after the 1981-82 season. Client wanted a 1975-76 Flyers custom for his "upgrade". Bill Collins had spent 4 seasons in the minors by the time NHL expansion hit and he signed a free-agent contract with the Minnesota North Stars for 1967-68. Over the next 10 NHL seasons he would see Montreal, Detroit, St. Louis, New York, Philadelphia and Washington before retiring after the 1977-78 NHL season. Client wanted a 1975-76 Blues custom for his "upgrade". Michel Dumas was a part-timer with the Chicago Black Hawks in the mid 70s. He was a top puck stopper in the QMJHL and the minors but was unable to gain a full time spot in the NHL. He made nine appearances for the Hawks in 1974-75 and 1976-77 before he suffered career-ending eye injury in game vs. Colorado, December 26, 1976. He would not get a card issued, client wanted a custom rookie card created for his 1975-76 set "upgrade". Bryan Hextall, Jr. first put blades to ice on the surface of Madison Square Gardens in New York where his father was nearing the end of his NHL career. Hextall played junior hockey for the Brandon Wheat Kings and got back to Madison Square when he had a 21-game run with the New York Rangers in 1962. But then he was dispatched to the minors for a seven-year period before he was to make it back to the NHL. In 1969, the Pittsburgh Penguins acquired Hextall and used him for five seasons followed by brief stints with Atlanta, Detroit and Minnesota before he retired from the NHL in 1976. Client wanted a custom 1975-76 Flames card for his "upgrade". Ted Irvine played 724 NHL games with four different teams during an eleven year career. Made his debut as a Bruin with a 1 game appearance in 1963-64 while still playing junior. His other 723 came in Los Angeles, New York and St. Louis before retiring in 1977-78 to serve as a scout for the Blues. Client's request was for a 1975-76 Rangers "upgrade". Pete LoPresti was the son of former NHL goalie, Sam Lopresti, and was a solid performer at the University of Denver for parts of two seasons. He was selected 42nd overall by the Minnesota North Stars in 1974 and played 35 games as a rookie back up to Cesare Maniago. Appeared in 138 more NHL games with Stars but after the merger with the Cleveland Barons in 1978, Lopresti lost his job to Gilles Meloche. He spent the rest of his pro days in the minors save for 2 appearances for the Edmonton Oilers and retired after the 1980-81 season. Client wanted a 1975-76 North Stars custom for his set. Billy MacMillan left his home in Prince Edward Island to play junior hockey at Toronto's St.Michael's College. MacMillan went to the Memorial Cup three times in his three full years of junior hockey competition. After graduating from the OHL, he played four years with the Canadian National Team. In 1970-71 he joined the Toronto Maple Leafs scoring 22 goals in his rookie season. After two seasons with the Leafs, MacMillan was claimed by the Atlanta Flames in the Expansion Draft. In 1973, he was traded to the New York Islanders, where he played for four seasons before finishing his playing career. Client wanted an Islanders custom card for his "upgrade"". Gerry Meehan played with the junior Marlboros and helped the club win the Memorial Cup in 1967. After scoring 31 goals for the CHL's Tulsa Oilers in 1967-68, he played 25 games for the Leafs the next year. In March 1969, he was sent to the Philadelphia Flyers playing 12 games before the Buffalo Sabres picked him in the 1970 Expansion Draft. Meehan scored 94 goals in four seasons with the club and was captain for three years. He began the 1974-75 season in Buffalo but eventually moved to the Vancouver Canucks and Atlanta Flames. In January 1976, the Flames traded him to the Washington Capitals. By the time he retired in 1979 he had earned the distinction of being the first player to score 100 points in a Caps uniform. Client requested a Vancouver Canucks 1975-76 "upgrade". Garry Monahan was selected as the first-ever draft choice in the NHL when the Montreal Canadiens picked him up in the league's first draft in 1963. Over 2 seasons with the organization he spent most of his time in the minors until heading to the Detroit Red Wings for a brief stop followed by a stint with the L.A. Kings in 1969-70. Next was a 4 and a half season stop in Toronto followed by a trade to Vancouver in 1974-75. After 3 and a half years he was back in Toronto for his final NHL stop before heading to Japan. There he played three additional seasons until his retirement in 1982. Client requested a Vancouver Canucks 1975-76 "upgrade" for him as well. Doug Palazzari was a graduate of Colorado College where he captured WCHA First Team All-Star honors and NCAA West First Team All-American honors in 1972 and again in 1974. He represented the U.S. in the 1973 and 1974 World Championships before signing as a free agent with the St. Louis Blues prior to the 1974-75 season. Over 8 seasons he would play 108 NHL games, all as a Blue, while spending most of his time in the CHL. Twice he led the league in scoring and twice he won the Tommy Ivan Trophy as the league's Most Valuable Player. After capturing his second consecutive CHL Championship in 1981 he called it a career at the end of the 1981-82 season. His rookie card was issued in the 1977-78 OPC set, client wanted a '75-76 custom. Jim Pappin played two seasons of junior hockey with the Toronto Marlboros from 1958 to 1960 then joined the minor pros for three years of seasoning. Played in NHL games with Toronto each year from 1963-68 and scored the Stanley Cup winning goal in 1967. Traded to Chicago in 1968 and spent 7 seasons there. In 1975, Pappin was traded to the California Golden Seals where he played in 31 contests before the club relocated to Cleveland. He hung in for one final campaign with the Barons and then retired in 1977-78. His 1975-76 cards showed him as a member of the Golden Seals, client wanted a Blackhawks custom. Craig Patrick played varsity hockey at Denver University winning NCAA championships in 1968 and '69. After he graduated he joined the U.S. National Team and played in both the 1970 and '71 World Championships. He signed with California in the NHL as a free agent at the start of the 1971-72 season and played three and a half years with the Seals. Between 1975 and 1979 he saw NHL stops in St. Louis, Kansas City and Washington. Along the way, Patrick played for Team USA at the 1976 Canada Cup, played briefly for the Minnesota Fighting Saints of the WHA, and captained the U.S. entry in the 1979 World Championships in Moscow. He retired as a player in 1979 and shortly thereafter was named assistant general manager and assistant coach for the USA entry at the 1980 Olympics in Lake Placid. His 1975-76 cards showed him as a member of the Kansas City Scouts, client wanted a Blues custom. Lynn Powis was the 7th choice, 68th overall selection of the Montreal Canadiens in the 1969 NHL Entry Draft but he joined the University of Denver Pioneers in 1967-68 and spent the next three seasons as a member of its varsity team. After 3 seasons in the minors he made his NHL debut with Chicago in 1973-74. Powis scored eight goals while adding 13 assists for 21 points before the Kansas City Scouts claimed him in the 1974 Expansion Draft. After a season in Kansas City his rights were traded to the St. Louis Blues prior to the 1975-76 season. Never played in St. Louis joining the WHA Calgary Cowboys, Indianapolis Racers and Winnipeg Jets before heading to Europe. Powis spent the next five seasons in Europe with stops in Germany and Italy before calling it a career following the 1982-83 season. He didn't get a 1975-76 card issued, client wanted a Scouts custom. Mike Robitaille played junior with the Kitchener Rangers of the OHA from 1964 to 1968. He was then sent for seasoning with the Omaha Knights of the CHL and after his second year with the club played four games with the New York Rangers. He was traded to the Detroit Red Wings in 1971 but played only 23 games and was then passed along to the Buffalo Sabres. In late 1974, he was traded to the Vancouver Canucks where he lasted another season and a half. Then back pain, treated with valium, led him down the road to addiction. Working to recover from the effects he continued to play until a blindside hit by the Pens' Dennis Owchar effectively ended his career. Client wanted an "upgrade" of his 1975-76 Canucks card. Leon Rochefort had a pro career that spanned 17 years, 4 leagues and 13 teams. His NHL summary shows stops in New York, Montreal, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Montreal (again), Detroit, Atlanta and Vancouver. He made his final NHL stop with the Vancouver Canucks playing a year and a half before he was demoted to the Tulsa Oilers of the CHL. He completed the 1975-76 campaign and then retired for good. Again client wanted an upgrade of 1975-76 Canucks card. Stan Weir was a junior star with the Medicine Hat Tigers notching 52 and 58 goals in his final 2 seasons. The Golden Seals selected him in the 2nd Round, 28th overall, of the 1972 NHL Amateur Draft. Unfortunately his scoring touch stayed in Medicine Hat and over the course of his first six years in the majors, three with the Seals and three with the Leafs, Weir had to reinvent himself as a special teams man. His lack of progress landed him in the minors with the Tulsa Oilers of the CHL but Weir jumped to the Edmonton Oilers of the WHA. However the next year the Oilers were an NHL team and he only lasted an additional year and a half before being traded to the Colorado Rockies. He completed the 1981-82 season and then joined the Detroit Red Wings for one final NHL campaign. He then descended to the minors with the Montana Magic and the Milwaukee Admirals and hung up his blades for good in 1985. His 1975-76 cards were issued as a Maple Leaf, client wanted a Seals custom. Duane Wylie was the sixth choice, 81st overall, of the New York Rangers in the 1970 NHL Amateur draft but never made Broadway. He joined the Flint Generals of the IHL where he spent two years before signing as a free agent with the Chicago Black Hawks in the fall of 1972. Wylie made his NHL debut with the Chicago Black Hawks during the 1974-75 season playing in six games and added 8 more in 1976-77. The rest of his pro career was spent with Dallas in the CHL where he retired after the 1977-78 season with a hockey card, client wanted a Blackhawks custom. I'll finish up this post with a batch of Vancouver Blazers of the WHA pics I found and turned into 1975-76 WHA customs, haven't completed the reverses yet but here are the fronts. Serge Beaudoin was drafted by the NHL Philadelphia Flyers in 1972 because of his fighting abilities but the majority of his career was spent in the WHA where he played for 4 teams over 6 years. After his stops with Vancover, Phoenix, Cincinnati and Birmingham the two leagues merged and he was out of a job. However the Atlanta Flames signed him as a free agent in 1979 and he played 3 NHL games before he was back in the minors, with Birmingham in the Central league, where he retired in 1981. Here is a custom Vancouver Blazers WHA card. Ron Chipperfield joined the World Hockey Association's Vancouver Blazers despite being a 2nd round draft pick of the NHL's California Seals. He spent a year with the Blazers before moving on the Calgary Cowboys for two seasons, then a three year run with the Edmonton Oilers. By his third season with the Oilers, the NHL and the WHA had merged, and he made his NHL debut in 1979 serving as the Oilers first NHL captain. In March of that season the Oilers traded him to the Quebec Nordiques but he played just four contests with the Nordiques the following year before he took his skills to Italy in 1981. That season he scored a league-leading 78 goals and 128 points in just 39 games. His final three seasons were spent there playing for HC Bolzano. Larry Israelson played 4 years of varsity with Notre Dame before turning pro. He had a pro career that consisted of 105 WHA games with the Blazers and Calgary Cowboys intertwined with stops in the CHL, AHL, SHL and NAHL over 3 seasons. He retired following the 1976-77 season. Jimmy Jones played two seasons plus a game for the Toronto Maple Leafs in the late 1970s but he started his major pro career with the Blazers. In 1973 he was selected 31st overall in the NHL Amateur Draft by the Boston Bruins and was claimed by the WHA's Vancouver Blazers in that league's draft. Jones played parts of two seasons for the Blazers then played two full years with the Rochester Americans of the AHL. John McKenzie first broke into the big leagues with the Chicago Blackhawks in 1958-59 and then embarked on a seven-year shuffle between Chicago, Detroit, New York and the minors. He made it to the Bruins in 1966 and stuck around long enough to claim his second Stanley Cup victory in 1972 before jumping to the WHA where he was hired to play and coach the Philadelphia Blazers. From Philly, he hopped around the league making stops in Vancouver, Minnesota and Cincinnati before settling for his final three seasons with the New England Whalers where, in the end his #19 was retired. Don O'Donoghue played 125 NHL games for the Oakland/California Seals but most of his pro career was spent in the WHA and the minors. He was chosen 29th overall by the Seals in 1969 and played 68 games as an NHL rookie in 1969-70. He split the next season between the Seals and the AHL's Providence Reds before he decided to join the WHA's Philadelphia Blazers where he scored 16 goals. The hard working forward remained with the franchise when it relocated to Vancouver then suited up briefly with the Cincinnati Stingers in 1975-76. O'Dongahue retired in 1978 after nearly three full years in the SHL and AHL with the Hampton Gulls. Pat Price was selected 11th overall by the New York Islanders in the 1975 Amateur Draft but opted instead to join the Vancouver Blazers of the WHA where he signed as an untested rookie for $1.3 million. After a single season he was with the Islanders and would play 726 NHL games with stops other in Edmonton, Pittsburgh, Quebec, New York as a Ranger and Minnesota. Duane Rupp had already played 374 NHL games over a 16 year pro career when the WHA came to town. In 1974, at age 36, Rupp left the NHL for good to join the the Vancouver Blazers and then a second stop with the Calgary Cowboys before he finished his pro career with the Rochester Americans of the AHL in 1977. Paul Terbenche played 189 NHL games in the 1960s and '70s but spent most of his pro time in the WHA and the minors. The Chicago Black Hawks prospect turned pro with the CHL's St. Louis Braves in 1966-67 and was solid as a rookie in 1967-68 but was relegated to the minors the next season. Terbenche was claimed by the Buffalo Sabres in the 1970 Expansion Draft and played most of two years with the Salt Lake Golden Eagles of the Western League. Beginning in 1972-73, he was a regular on the Sabres' blueline for two seasons before jumping to the WHA. The steady rearguard played four years in the league with five different franchises, including the 1979 Avco Cup champion Winnipeg Jets. He retired in 1981 after playing two years in the CHL with the Birmingham Bulls. Rob Walton was drafted 61st overall by the Minnesota North Stars in the 1969 NHL Entry Draft and is perhaps most famous for being the brother of Mike "Shakey" Walton. While Shakey won numerous trophies (including 2 Stanley Cups), Rob was a well travelled minor leaguer who also saw time in the WHA. After struggling in the CHL and AHL he moved to Seattle of the WHL, leading the league in scoring in his first and only season with 40 goals and 101. Rob signed with the Minnesota Fighting saints for the 1973-74 season but after 45 games was traded to the Vancouver Blazers. That was followed by a stop with the Calgary Cowboys, but he spent most of his final seasons buried in the NAHL - a minor league for the WHA.
Thanks to Andy Zamora, Rick Vogel, Roger Brownlee, Brad Leggett, Moe Quevillon and Jim Robben for their requests !! You can purchase these cards, or any of my Missing Link creations, for $10 each postpaid, or $7.95 each for 3 or more. Email me at: [email protected], volume discounts available on larger orders. |
AuthorI am a lifelong Maple Leaf fan, now retired, who started creating custom cards for myself of Toronto players who never had a card issued in the Maple Leaf uniform. From posting some of these on eBay it has become the proverbial "snowball down hill" !!! Archives
March 2024
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