Mon, Sep 24: Frank Mahovlich aka "The Big M" talks to reporters about his memories of the 1972 Summit Series and the games held in Russia. For more info, please go to www.globaltoron....
Пікірлер: 63
@frankspadafora3419 Жыл бұрын
Frank “Big M” was my first hockey idol. Remember #27 with the big shot.!!
@mckessa172 жыл бұрын
Good for you Frank, great guy.
@tommysoprano14414 жыл бұрын
I will never ever forget the 72 Series Ever
@hippy1002 Жыл бұрын
Same here. I saw so young, just 27
@Classicrocker61193 жыл бұрын
I started following hockey in early 1971 as a nine year old in Calgary. Frank was my first hockey hero not long after being traded from Detroit to Montreal. He scored 14 goals in the playoffs on a memorable ride to a Stanley Cup victory.
@NicolletIslandSlim9 жыл бұрын
One of my boyhood heroes.....The Big M!.....#27!......what a great, great player. Leafs were perennial losers in the six-team league until Frank came along. I believe they won the Cup in his third or fourth year! He was so great--but so underappreciated by Punch Imlach and the tight-fisted Leafs, that when the Leafs lowballed a contract offer, the Hawks were willing to pay the Leafs the unheard of sum of $1 million for Frank, and supposedly owner Harold Ballard was OK with it. Next day Leafs wisely upped their offer and #27 stayed with them. How I miss those golden days of hockey. But a player of Frank's caliber now would command $100-$150 million, easy.
@colkilgore1005 жыл бұрын
3 yrs later my friend...Frank would get something like Tavares bucks, 10 or 11 mil per. Remember that there's a salary cap all teams must abide by.
@us-Bahn2 жыл бұрын
M played great for Montreal in 71-72-73
@hippy1002 Жыл бұрын
Punch Imlach was a p.o.s. so was Ballard
@TheLitehart1Ай бұрын
@@hippy1002 I have wondered what Frank would have achieved without the Imlach albatross hanging round his neck. Most nights he was just too tired after the extreme workouts to give it his best.
@buddmannable3 жыл бұрын
The Big M! God he killed the Blackhawks in the 71 Finals!
@us-Bahn2 жыл бұрын
Agreed. He was devastating in that series. Always on the ice, always dangerous, always firing off quality shots. And always on the score sheet. Without Big M Blackhawks win that series in 5.
@theretiringbarber3 жыл бұрын
The greatest Leaf of all time .
@glen69459 жыл бұрын
THANKS FRANK
@renocool15582 жыл бұрын
time to have another summit series, now that we hate each other again😄
@hippy1002 Жыл бұрын
Putin standing near the Canadian bench.. Dunno how that would shake down
@jacksmith56927 жыл бұрын
What a hockey player with his power and speed and big shot. He was so great with Montreal.
@r.crompton22866 жыл бұрын
Agree ! He was a star with Toronto (won the Calder Trophy in '57 -- beating out Bobby Hull) and later played for Detroit on a line with Howe and Delvecchio. When he joined the Canadiens, he was well past 30 but played some of his best hockey for the Habs.
@justafanintexas79135 жыл бұрын
@@r.crompton2286 - Beating Hull for the Calder was a joke.
@r.crompton22865 жыл бұрын
@@justafanintexas7913 Mahovlich didn't rack up as many points as Hull did in their first season but his on-ice presence was strong and he did score 20 goals to Hull's 13. In those days, 3-1 and 3-2 hockey games were much the norm, so when you notched 20 for a season, you were considered "productive." Hull had more than double Mahovlich's assists (34) and probably should have won the Calder based on total points; but total points wasn't (and still isn't) the final determinant of the Calder or the Hart.
@justafanintexas79135 жыл бұрын
R. Compton - Hull also played on a U.S. based team and the NHL writers, the majority in those days who were Canadian, never gave a fair shake to those other than played in Toronto or Montreal. Toronto finished that season just ahead of Chicago. The protests over Mahovlich winning were historic for their time, not only in Chicago but all over the NHL.
@r.crompton22865 жыл бұрын
@@justafanintexas7913 I remember the ruckus over Mahovlich winning the Calder. But it wasn't because the sportswriters were mostly Canadian -- they weren't. Remember that there were only two Canadian teams in the six team league. The Detroit, Chicago, Boston and New York papers had a much larger circulation and far more sportswriters than the Toronto Star and the Montreal Gazette. Also, there was only one key hockey magazine in 1957, Hockey Pictorial, published out of Montreal but with a Board of associates consisting of 4 Americans and two Canadians (Ed Fitkin of Toronto and Camil Des Roches of Montreal.) The ratio of contributing sportswriters differed from year to year but it was generally five to three in favour of the Americans. I agree that Hull should have won the Calder that year but again, the result wasn't necessarily based on total points. Clearly, the American sportswriters could have given the Chicago star the nod since they had the majority of votes, but they didn't.
@claudebuysse74822 жыл бұрын
C'est toujours lui qui a le record de points en séries pour le CH...J'adorais son coup de patins...
@adiracquetball4 жыл бұрын
Big Frank was a dynamite player. Will never forget that series. Listened to a garbled radio feed for game 8. I will never forget we all thought Canada was going to walk over the Russians. We went over our friends house and we were all fired up. The only one in the house who thought Canada was in trouble was my dad. He said they have a bunch of all stars who are out of shape and don't play together. The Russians play together year round. They run passing attacks the Canadians have never seen and you know they will be in great shape. He said we would all be shocked. Canada jumps out 2-0 early. We lambasted him and enjoyed every minute of it. Well 20 minutes later you could have heard a pin drop. If Bobby Clarke hadn't done that hatchet job slash on Kharlamov I don't think Canada wins. One thing it did prove was that Phil Esposito was a beast. By far the Canadian player on the ice. Henderson was clutch.
@ocasap593 жыл бұрын
Why Canadians repeat the same Russians point of view about Kharlamov? What about true Russian’s team Leader Iakushev, with 7 scores(like Esposito) instead of 3 scores of Kharlamov? As far, as we know Iakushev reamained “alive” till the end of Summit?
@us-Bahn2 жыл бұрын
Disagree with you on Kharlamov. Canada neutralized him (esp Rob Ellis) after game 1. From game 2 all the way to his departure in game 6 Kharlamov scored just 1 goal. The guy was MIA after getting marked.
@TheLitehart1Ай бұрын
Your dad was right. The fact can't be overlooked that the Russians played as a team year-in, year-out. The Canadians had a bunch of elite players all thrown together for this one occasion. That gave the Russians a significant advantage.
@nthdegree126911 жыл бұрын
My God, his face is the same! I mean, he doesn't look like he was born in 1938. To think how far back he played. Amazing.
@hippy1002 Жыл бұрын
He was 74 in that interview
@colkilgore1005 жыл бұрын
There was a lady in the West Grays with seasons tickets during the 60's and 70's at the Gardens and every Leaf game she'd chant, all by herself..."C'mon Frankie-Baby...." drawing out the'e' sound. When I was a boy of 5 and a natural right-hand shot, I switched over to left because my hero, the Big 'M' shot left-handed. My uncle Dave (RIP) called him "The greatest thing that ever lived"... lol, not the greatest hockey player, or person, but the greatest thing that had ever been put on the planet! He stole my Mahovlich poster which I had over my head in my bedroom. The one from the gas station that my dad had got for me when Frank was in the deep blue home uniform. I found it 20 years later over his bar in his basement, and never forgave him. I'd been truly traumatized by it's disappearance.
@us-Bahn2 жыл бұрын
I’m totally with Uncle Dave on this one. If it were me I would have ransacked your toy box and cleaned out all the Big M hockey cards.
@TheLitehart1Ай бұрын
I can relate. I had Big M's pics all around the wall by my bed. If anyone had taken even one, they were dead.
@TheLitehart1Ай бұрын
Huge thanks for posting this, Global News!!! I've loved Frank since I was in grade school. He's the reason I've been a life-long hockey fan. And he radiates such warmth & friendliness. There are images that stay with you and my first look at the Big M powerfully striding down the ice 'like a freight train across the Prairies' has stayed with me and always will. He was a SUPERB player - with Imlach not dragging on him, who knows what he could have accomplished? You represent the very best of Canada, Frank!!! 💖💖💖
@JohnCee7549 жыл бұрын
Ah The Big M -- he was my favourite player on my favourite team (the Leafs) when I was growing up in southern Ontario (Chatham) -- and then, right after they won the Cup, the buggers traded him to my most hated team -- the Red Wings -- so I instantly became a Habs fan and I laid a "Babe Ruth Curse" on Toronto right there: "I hope you rotters never win another Stanley Cup!!"... and... well... so yes, it was me!
@MultiRivet7 жыл бұрын
JohnCee754 wow you'd think the Habs would of been your most hated team.
@colkilgore1005 жыл бұрын
All this time I was wondering who it could be...and now we find out...IT WAS YOU!!! why, you swine, out of my way everybo-dee! Lemme at 'em!
@bernardreed61613 жыл бұрын
John don't you wish you had that kind of power. I also thought the big M was the greatest. I went to Mimico high school in Etobicoke in those days and Frank came to our school. Our teacher talked to him in the hall outside of our room and never brought him in to meet us. Hated that teacher. Those were great times to be a Leaf fan. I've meet Bower, Baun and Shack over the years. Brewer was also a favourite. Great skater.
@TheLitehart1Ай бұрын
@@bernardreed6161 What kind of teacher from Hell wouldn't let his students meet Frank???
@jimmymalloy506 ай бұрын
Frank never went to Sweden - he skipped that - what the hell is he talking about? 😂
@Mo_Taser2 жыл бұрын
Pete Mahovlich should have let the Russian Army take Eagleson away.
@hippy1002 Жыл бұрын
Wrong. SO WRONG. Those bgst*ards showed their true character during that series.. although Eagleson was a crook. He DID put that whole thing together
@us-Bahn2 жыл бұрын
Would have loved to hear what the Big M jawed at Soviet head coach Babrov as he skated past the Soviet bench in game 1 (or 2).
@ТариелКасымалиев-ъ9й4 жыл бұрын
Переводите на русский кто нибудь🙏
@bobcohoon96153 жыл бұрын
When he gets rolling up the boards, get out of the way
@kurtenbach2511 жыл бұрын
what the hell is he talking about-he was so paranoid over there that he wanted to go home!!!! tell the real story Big M!!!!!!
@34Packardphaeton4 жыл бұрын
.. maybe..... but Croats and Czechs LOVE to score against the Rooskies!
@johnh23z3 жыл бұрын
Frank had the jitters and it showed. He played full shift gm 8. He never wanted to leave.
@us-Bahn2 жыл бұрын
@@johnh23zOk. Start again from the top. Frank had the jitters. Ok I guess. Where? What game? Why? He played full shift game 8. What are you saying? Don’t hockey players play a full shift many many times in a game? He never wanted to leave? Leave where? And when? And for what reason? Let’s work on our communication skills.
@jimmymalloy506 ай бұрын
Frank was benched in the 3rd period and replaced by his brother Pete … check the game out … he played one shift in that period … Espo wanted him OUT! (good thing too - Pete set up the early goal in the 3rd period!)
@jimmymalloy506 ай бұрын
Thars game 8 - I am talking about
@MapleSyrupPoet3 жыл бұрын
Men named Frank, are nice guys ...I know a few
@us-Bahn2 жыл бұрын
Frank the Tank (‘Old School’ are we not in the trust tree?)