TORONTO (Feb. 3) – Yes, of course I remember where I was 35 years ago last night.
Where else, but Maple Leaf Gardens, a place in which I spent countless hours as a teenager watching the Leafs of Darryl Sittler, Lanny McDonald, Borje Salming, Dave (Tiger) Williams and… Ian Turnbull, who set a National Hockey League record that remains in the book to this day; in fact, it’s right there, in the middle of page 171: "MOST GOALS BY A DEFENSEMAN, ONE GAME... 5, Ian Turnbull, Toronto Maple Leafs, February 2, 1977, Detroit 1 at Toronto 9."
On that incredible night, almost one year after an even-more astonishing effort – Sittler’s 10-point game against the Boston Bruins (Feb. 7, 1976) – Turnbull accomplished a feat that has trumpeted several of the greatest names in hockey history. Neither Bobby Orr before him nor such Hall-of-Famers as Denis Potvin, Paul Coffey, Raymond Bourque and Al MacInnis in ensuing years were able to score five goals in one game. Turnbull was actually among a trio of players that came closest to matching the record; he erupted for four goals as a member of the Los Angeles Kings nearly half-a-decade after his big night with the Leafs (Coffey and Tom Bladon the others).
There is definitely something wacky about the opening week of February – Sam Gagner of the Edmonton Oilers joining Sittler and Turnbull with a detonation against Chicago last night: his eight scoring points (four goals and four assists) equalling the third-highest total in league history (Sittler briefly had nine points in his record game), while tying club marks held by Gretzky and Coffey.
Turnbull's record came as part of the most prolific season by a defenseman in Leaf annals: a 79-point effort on 22 goals and 57 assists. Salming was right behind with 78 points. The previous year – for 1975-76 – my dad bought a pair of Leafs season tickets in the blue mezzanine seats up behind the south-end goal. As such, I was able to attend Sittler’s record game against Boston; his record-tying five-goal playoff outburst against Philadelphia (Apr. 22, 1976) and Turnbull’s obliteration of the Red Wings, which occurred a night before my 18th birthday (yes, I turn 53 today, sharing the occasion with Tiger Williams, who is 58).
[Side note: Blue tickets at Maple Leaf Gardens in 1975 were $6.60 apiece, or $283.80 for all 43 games (x2 tickets= $576.60). The comparable seats we were provided when the Air Canada Centre opened in 1999 are now $110 each, meaning it costs more for three games today than an entire season back then]
I was making an exceptional effort to attend every Leafs home game of the 1976-77 season. Why? Certainly not to enhance my Grade 12 marks at William Lyon MacKenzie C.I. in North York. Instead, I was so grateful to be feeling healthy and vibrant once again, after a dreadful previous winter in which I contracted Crohn’s Disease; lost 25 pounds; couldn’t keep down a glass of juice; spent nearly seven weeks in Toronto General Hospital, and finally had my ascending-colon and two feet of small intestine surgically removed. After that, botching a Chemistry exam was hardly traumatic.
Turnbull and the Leafs victimized a veteran goaltending tandem in the 9-1 destruction of Detroit. Ed Giacomin, dealt to the Red Wings by the Rangers in a blatantly unpopular trade among New York hockey fans, started the match and was relieved in the second period by Jim Rutherford - current general manager of the Carolina Hurricanes. Having erupted for a hat-trick, there was no real indication that Turnbull would do further damage in the waning moments; it wasn’t like Sittler’s game, 361 nights earlier, when you just knew something would happen every time he stepped onto the ice. In fact, veteran forward Danny Grant scored for Detroit at 16:18 of the third period - cutting into the Leafs 7-0 lead – and ruining a shut-out bid by Toronto goalie Wayne Thomas (now vice-president and assistant GM of the San Jose Sharks).
But, Turnbull struck again 52 seconds later to tie the NHL mark for defensemen, previously accomplished more than 47 years earlier by Toronto forward Clarence (Hap) Day. A gorgeous pass by Salming sent Turnbull in alone to try and break the record, which he did by firing a snap-shot past Rutherford with 1:30 left on the clock.
Coincidentally – in fact, almost incredibly – Turnbull was on the cover of the Leafs program that night. I’ve kept it through the years and realized, upon retrieving it from a box of such items yesterday, that I defaced the magazine (by writing about the momentous occasion on the cover). I had done the same with the Sittler program a year earlier, clearly not understanding the “mint” value of hockey collectibles at that point in my life. Oh well. At least I was smart enough to bring my old Pentax camera to the game – the one with the eight-inch telephoto lens that required weight-training to properly deploy (the black-and-white photos I took that night are displayed as part of this blog on my website: BergerBytes.ca). They were developed as per the time: using water-based chemicals in a “dark room”, which I achieved by changing the standard light-bulb in the laundry room at home to a dim-yellow version, so as not to “expose” the film.
You’ll notice the images were not taken from the vantage-point of my season tickets behind the south goal. On nights in which I brought my camera, I would often scout out a pair of red seats on the west side of the Gardens that remained vacant through the first period. During the intermission, I’d go down – schlepping the hapless person that accompanied me to the game - and wait for the usher atop that section to be distracted. Then, we’d slip past him, unnoticed, and into the seats, praying the actual ticket-holders wouldn’t arrive after a nine-course dinner. This allowed me to snap photographs from a more conventional angle.
The memories of Ian Turnbull’s record night have lingered through three-and-a-half decades. Please enjoy them. And, yes, I did manage to attend every Leafs home game in 1976-77 – three in the pre-season; 40 in the regular schedule and four in the playoffs, as the Leafs knocked off Pittsburgh in a best-of-three preliminary round before coughing up a 2-0 series lead crafted on the road in Philadelphia and dropping out in six games during the Stanley Cup quarterfinals.
GAME SUMMARY
Wednesday, February 2, 1977
DETROIT 1 at TORONTO 9
First Period-
No Scoring.
Second Period-
1. Toronto, Turnbull 12 (McDonald, Salming) 1:55.
2. Toronto, Boutette 12 (Weir) 2:35.
3. Toronto, Ashby 14 (Thompson) 4:12.
4. Toronto, Williams 14 (Alexander, Glennie) 8:15.
5. Toronto, Turnbull 13 10:26.
Third Period-
6. Toronto, Turnbull 14 4:48.
7. Toronto, McDonald 33 (Ashby, Alexander) 8:13.
8. Detroit, Grant 2 (Hextall, Harper) 16:18.
9. Toronto, Turnbull 15 (Weir, Salming) 17:10.
10. Toronto, Turnbull 16 (Salming, Valiquette) 18:30.
SHOTS ON GOAL 1 2 3 T
Detroit 9 12 10 31
Toronto 5 18 14 37
Goalies- Giacomin, Rutherford Detroit; Thomas Toronto.
Attendance- 16,472.
FIVE YEARS AGO, TO COMMEMORATE THE 30th ANNIVERSARY OF TURNBULL’S ACHIEVEMENT, FORMER TORONTO SUN HOCKEY WRITER JOHN IABONI CONTACTED THE EX-DEFENSEMAN FOR A STORY IN THE LEAFS GAME PROGRAM, WHICH HE HAS PUBLISHED AND EDITED FOR MANY YEARS:
By John Iaboni
February 2, 2007
Taking a shine to California during his playing days with the Maple Leafs, Ian Turnbull and his family have resided in the Los Angeles area since 1981 when Toronto traded him to the Kings for Billy Harris and John Gibson.
Turnbull and his wife, Inge, live in the trendy Hollywood Riviera section of Torrance. Their children live nearby. Daughter, Thea, continues her career as a Grade 6 teacher while son, William, is studying to be a teacher at Cal State Dominguez Hills while working at “a pretty happening place” called Club Sushi at Hermosa Beach.
From the hockey-playing perspective, the man nicknamed “Bull” formed an excellent playing partnership with the guy called B.J. (Borje Salming) from 1973 until November 11, 1981.
But even back in those days, Turnbull’s life extended beyond the game. He opened a wine bar called Grapes for a time, not far from Maple Leaf Gardens.
“I was only 25 years ahead of the curve,” Turnbull says with a laugh. “It did okay, actually, but it was (laughs again) a little out there. Then, when I got traded I had the option on The Golden Griddle (across the street from the Gardens) but I couldn’t see running a business from California.”
Turnbull was in real estate until about five or six years ago. And now?
“Not doing too much actually,” he says. “I’ve just got an interest in a studio gallery down in San Pedro, California. I do a little painting but I mostly make picture frames and just do stuff in a shop. We have a nice wood shop in the back.”
Born in Montreal on December 22, 1953, Turnbull has no complaints about his health these days. He considers himself blessed to be able to lace up the skates a couple of times each week; he’s an active member of the Kings alumni and he follows the current squad at Staples Center while keeping up with the Leafs via the Internet.
Of the 628 NHL regular-season games Turnbull played, 580 came with the Leafs. He played 42 games for the Kings and six with the Pittsburgh Penguins before packing it in after back surgery.
Turnbull scored 112 goals, 302 assists and 414 points with the Leafs, then added 13 goals, 32 assists and 45 points in 55 career playoff games (all with the Leafs). In 1976-77, Turnbull set the Leafs record for defencemen with 22 goals and 79 points. That same season, Salming had 78 points.
And on February 2, 1977 at the Gardens, Turnbull established the NHL record for most goals in one game by a defenceman with five – triggering Toronto’s 9-1 win over Detroit with two goals on Eddie Giacomin and three on Jimmy Rutherford.
“It was one of those nights where things happened to click,” Turnbull says. “I think Sitt (Darryl Sittler) would say the same thing about his 10-point night. Things clicked that night and on other nights you’d be doing the same damn thing and you might hit somebody’s skate and it would go in the corner or it would hit the post and just didn’t go in. As a professional you just take it as it comes. That’s basically what happened. It was a combination of a little bit of luck although (laughing) a couple of the goals were pretty decent.
“We had a pretty good core group there that when we got cooking there weren’t very many better in the league, particularly on the power play. You see now the game has gone back to that sort of genre where special teams become very important.”
Another signature moment for Turnbull occurred in the 1978 playoffs after Salming sustained a serious eye injury against the Islanders. Turnbull was a force as the Leafs stormed back to win the bitterly fought quarterfinal series in seven games.
“Somebody had to step up and I think I just got out maybe a little from (the shadow of) Salming, and I don’t mean that in a detrimental way,” Turnbull says. “The only thing that really happened is that without him there my game sort of moved up to the forefront. Basically, a lot of the things I did against the Islanders were the same things I was doing every night. But there was more focus on me because Borje was not there, which never bothered me one way or the other because as far as I was concerned you were there for one reason and that was to win the Stanley Cup.”
Turnbull enjoyed his partnership with Salming.
“We had a very good chemistry,” Turnbull says. “He had a much more spectacular style than I did. He would be sliding all over the ice and blocking shots, doing all those sort of things. And I was a little calmer, less spectacular. I went about my business, sometimes to my detriment, I guess. It was said that I almost looked like I wasn’t trying but that’s not the truth at all. My style of play was very pretty slick. I didn’t waste too much effort. I made the game look a little easier than it really is.”
Courtesy of Leafs Game Day Program, Issue #3, 2006-07
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