Remembering Ted Lindsay on his 100th birthday

NHL.com’s Dave Stubbs is a real gem of a fellow, a passionate hockey historian and writer. This morning, Stubbs honors what would have been the 100th birthday of Red Wings legend Ted Lindsay, offering a set of vignettes symbolizing the life and legacy of “Terrible Ted”:

You won’t find Lindsay’s name on the Stanley Cup today. In 2010, the sterling and nickel-alloy band bearing the champions from 1953-54 to 1964-65 was retired to the vault of the Hockey Hall of Fame, the names of Howe, Maurice Richard, Glenn Hall (a friend packaged in his 1957 trade to Chicago), Bobby Hull and more than 300 others also removed.

“That’s part of history,” Lindsay said. “I’m fine with it. I know I won the Stanley Cup; I don’t need to see my name on it.”

He joked about the fact his name was misspelled “Lindsey” for the 1949-50 championship, saying “it didn’t bother me as long as we won the Cup.” And it was Lindsay who as captain of the Red Wings began the tradition of carrying the trophy around the ice for fans to have a better look.

“In those days (before shatterproof glass), everything was chicken wire at the end of the rink, from the faceoff dots and around behind the net,” he remembered. “Where the screen ended, the fans would lean on the boards, over the ice. They’d move back when the play came by.

“These were the people who paid my salary. When I saw the Cup sitting on a table after Clarence (Campbell, the NHL president) presented it to (Red Wings GM Jack) Adams, I guess I saw these people by the penalty box. So, I just picked it up. Adams was probably thinking, ‘What’s that idiot Lindsay going to do, throw it?’ The fans all wanted to see it.”

The small gesture was one of Lindsay’s many, part of his impressive, important legacy that is celebrated a century after his birth.

Today, the footprint on hockey of this small giant remains immeasurable. He is still larger than life, still heavier than the scale suggested, still taller than the tape measure read.

“I hope it’s good, what they would say,” he said of how he’d like to be remembered. “Maybe I didn’t always have a good night, but I never cheated them.”

Continued; you can find out more about Ted and his charitable endeavors for autism research at the Ted Lindsay Foundation’s webpage.

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George Malik

My name is George Malik, and I'm the Malik Report's editor/blogger/poster. I have been blogging about the Red Wings since 2006, and have worked with MLive and Kukla's Korner. Thank you for reading!