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Around SBN: 2011 In Extreme Home Runs

Habs Robbed Bruins Of Dryden

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Robert L Note: This gem of a story comes in much part from an ancient article courtesy of Bertrand Raymond of Le Journal de Montreal. I've added translation and a good chunk of the content. Hope you enjoy it!)

Sam Pollock, considered a genuis in his domain as the Canadiens GM., was often recognized for his flair. If the Canadiens were able to maintain such standards of excellence under his watch, it might be because Pollock had a certain tunnel vision.

When speaking of Pollock, those attesting to his brilliance, often make mention of the robbery he committed at the hands of the California Golden Seals in 1970 that enabled him to land Guy Lafleur.

In the 1970 draft, the Seals came calling to Pollock for some help, as they were falling in the standings - and help them he did! Pollock sent a speedy forward named Ernie Hicke and the Habs first pick in the '70 draft, to the Seals in exchange for Francois Lacombe and California's first pick in 1971.

The pick turned out to be Lafleur. Had the Seals finished second to last overall, the consolation prize was Marcel Dionne. Shrewd!

Another Pollock tale with a twist occured under considerably less limelight involving Ken Dryden in 1964, and this time the Bruins were the unsuspecting victims. The trading of the involved parties, seemed quite inconsequential at the moment, though It would alter both teams fate's for years.

On the day of the 1964 Amateur Draft, Pollock made a deal that ought to go down in history as the most one-sided steal of all time.

A total of 24 players were chosen on that draft day, divided amongst the leagues six teams. Later in the day, the Bruins traded Dryden and Alex Campbell to Montreal for Guy Allen and Paul Reid.

Dryden went on to win 6 Stanley Cups in seven and a half years of play, is in the Hockey Hall Of Fame, and has had his jersey raised among the Canadiens immortals.

As for the other three, not a single game in the NHL between them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To be more precise, the 1964 draft consisted of players aged 16 or older who were not associated with an NHL club via C-Form drafting. Dryden at the time had just played one season with the Etobicoke Indians of the OHA, and was headed off to Cornell U with no thoughts of sacrificing his goals of a University degree.

The Bruins and others knew of Dryden's intentions, but the player Boston really had eyes on was Allen, taken two positions ahead by the Canadiens.

"It was a very private draft in those days", Dryden says. "I only found out about it one week later. The funniest part is that my junior B coach informed me that I had been taken by the Canadiens. It wasn't until 1974 that I found out otherwise."

During a passing conversation with Habs scouts Claude Ruel and Ron Caron, it was mentioned to him that he had in fact been a Bruins draft pick.

"I didn't know that I'd been traded for. They kept me in the dark about this for almost 10 years."

The scouts explained to him what happened on that fateful day, and how the Bruins desperately wanted Allen.

Dryden admits that since the day he found this out, the name Guy Allen has never left his consciousness, simply because this player, unknown and mysterious, drastically affected the outcome of his entire life.

Several years ago in Ottawa in the context of a gathering of Liberal party faithful, someone in the pack asked the former number 29 if the name Guy Allen had any significance to him.

Dryden bolted upright, "Well, of course, the man changed my life!"

Allen played his Junior A hockey with Niagara Falls and his playing days ended there. He reurned home to Timmons and became a fireman.

Four years ago, while on the Liberal campaign trail, Dryden finally met up with the man who altered his career. They had tons to talk about.

At the time, the Bruins were never close to winning the Stanley Cup. The Canadiens always had the habit of knocking them out of the playoffs should they get there. It's only logical to ask Dryden, how he feels his career would have unfolded, had he remained Bruins property.

"I don't even want to think about it", laughs Dryden.

Dryden makes a point to suggest that every detail of his career went perfectly. His life has never lacked spice and excitement, and that all his hockey dreams were fulfilled simply by landing with the Canadiens organization.

"When I get asked if there were ever regrets in my career, I always say, "Hold it right there!".

"Consider that an athlete has no choice in where he begins to play, and that careers for all intents are usually on average, quite short. I had the chance to belong to the Montreal Canadiens, to play in the Forum, and live in Quebec in the 1970's!"

"Who do you know that would have regrets, had their life unfolded this way? Myself, I never regretted a single minute. Never mind, what would have gone down had I gone to Boston instead. I'm just happy things went the way they did." 

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I have always loved Lafleur as a Hab yet I’ve often thought that Dionne would have been just as good. We still would have won the same number of Cups. It would have been a totally different story without Dryden. What good fortune on our part, both with Guy and Ken.

by 24 Cups on Aug 21, 2009 10:27 PM EDT reply actions  

Ah, we might have won a few with Rogie, considering the team in front of him!

Loved Dryden the long haired, bespectacled, hippie rebel, free thinking puck stopper. Not so much a fan of the author turned lawyer, turned Leafs president, turned politician, turned philanthropist. It all went downhill after “The Game”.

by Robert L on Aug 21, 2009 11:36 PM EDT up reply actions  

lol

yeah Robert, when he signed with as Leafs prez, it was a bit heartbreaking.

I had always read discrepancies that Dryden actually refused to report to Boston and was subsequently traded.

This story clarifies that. I think that report actually refers to his brother Dave during his days with the Blackhawks.

The other thing I loved about Dryden was his interviews after games. He sometimes bewildered the interviewers with his elaborations as opposed to the typical player responses.

by yathehabsrule on Aug 22, 2009 4:33 PM EDT up reply actions  

Pollock's genius

There is a second part in the machinations to draft Lafleur. In the 1970-71 season, the Seals "were in danger of " overtaking the LA Kings to climb out of the basement, which would have been disastrous (although Dionne would have been a good booby prize), so Pollock shipped Ralph Backstrom to the Kings late in the season to ensure that they would escape the basement. It was nip and tuck for a while , but in the end the ploy workd. And the rest, they say, is history.

by geezerfan on Aug 22, 2009 12:00 AM EDT reply actions  

Pure myth and totally coincidental. That’s the media spin on the Backstrom deal. It certainly didn’t hurt the Canadiens, but it was Backstrom who went to Pollock and threatened to retire if he was not traded to a team where he would receive substancial icetime. Pollock took him seriously, because Backstrom retired before the 1970-71 season to make his point. He unretired when Pollock promised a trade. When late in the season, a deal was not made, Backstrom reiterated his demands and the trade to the Kings was conceived. As Pollock wouldn’t trade Backstrom to a team in playoff contention, the options weren’t many.

by Robert L on Aug 23, 2009 10:39 PM EDT up reply actions  

If I recall correctly, Robert I believe that Backstrom wanted to be traded to a warm weather team, hence the deal to Los Angeles.

by T.C. on Aug 23, 2009 11:08 PM EDT up reply actions  

That is quite accurate, and rules out the Seals as well.

by Robert L on Aug 24, 2009 11:12 AM EDT up reply actions  

Myth ?

Ahh, but we all love the mythology surrounding the Habs, don’t we?? As to whether Pollock engineered the Backstrom trade to LA – or not, I believe that coincidence and good fortune befall those who know the situation and plan accordingly. Dealing from strength of assets and accrued personal respect never hurt anyone.

by fansince54 on Aug 24, 2009 1:01 PM EDT up reply actions  

So true… and it didn’t hurt either that Pollock thought of his players as livestock, in a sense. He sure did raise a few good crops along the way.

by Robert L on Aug 24, 2009 3:35 PM EDT up reply actions  

That’s a cute story and all but you left out the part about Dryden refusing to play for the Bruins.

by Stanley Cup of Chowder on Aug 22, 2009 4:50 PM EDT reply actions  

Read the Article

If Dryden wasn’t aware until 1974 that he had been drafted by the Bruins how could he have refused to play for them ten year’s earlier ??

by T.C. on Aug 22, 2009 10:08 PM EDT up reply actions  

Dryden never refused the Bruins. They were just intent on getting Guy Allen. The Bruins also were aware that Dryden was going to go the collegiate route, and likely lost their enthusiam. Either way, he was traded on the same day, mere hours after being drafted.

by Robert L on Aug 23, 2009 10:32 PM EDT up reply actions  

Sweet memories

A lolng time frequent lurker, I had to sign in after reading on HI/O about your piece on my all time Habs fave..

Ah, the mermories it brought back…

And as usual, excellent reading. Fél.icitations!

I will put in a link to your blog, on our small humble but friendly forum, just for that..

Lyse

Les Glorieux

by Lyse on Aug 23, 2009 9:21 AM EDT reply actions  

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