NHL.com’s Stan Fischler engaged in a Q and A with Red Wings alumnus Doug Barkley, and among the questions and answers are the following:
When did [your NHL] break come? “I almost quit hockey to take a job with a Calgary oil company, but my Calgary coach, Alf Pike, gave me all the confidence I needed. He played me between 50 and 55 minutes a game and just let me go out there and do my thing. I was only 25 at the time. You could say that I had become a minor league star with 74 points in 70 games and MVP in the All-Star Game, but my real break came when Chicago traded me to Detroit for Len Lunde and John McKenzie (on June 5, 1962), and I wound up at the Red Wings’ training camp.”
What was it like? “Wonderful. I was with very friendly players like Gordie Howe, Alex Delvecchio and Marcel Pronovost. Right off the bat, they asked me to golf with them, but I didn’t have any clubs, shoes or anything. Gordie, who had been hurt, made me feel right at home and gave me all his golf stuff. On top of that Sid Abel was a wonderful coach, easy to talk to and he gave me plenty of ice time. I finally felt I had made the NHL. I played 70 games and scored three goals and 24 assists for 27 points. Despite all the previous hardships, at last I felt I belonged.”
How sure were you? “I missed rookie of the year by a point to Toronto’s Kent Douglas. A year later I had 115 penalty minutes and 32 points and became the best scorer of Detroit’s defenders. I really was going strong well into the 1965-66 season with 20 points in 43 games and a ton of ice time. There were moments when I’d be dead-tired, but Sid would say, OK, Alex, Gordie, (Bill) Gadsby and Doug get on the ice.’ I’d go out there — and I pushed myself — mostly because I figured if Gordie could make it, I could do it.”