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To the Magnuson family
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“It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better.
“The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”
—Theodore Roosevelt
“Citizenship in a Republic” speech, Paris, France, April 23, 1910
Contents
Foreword by Cliff Koroll
Preface
1. From Wadena to Saskatoon
2. A Pioneer in America
3. Rookie at the Madhouse
4. One Win Away
5. Life without the Jet
6. New Bullies
7. Transitions
8. Coach Maggie
9. “I Probably Won More than I Lost”
Epilogue
Appendix: Keith Magnuson’s Career Statistics
Acknowledgments
Sources
References
Photo Gallery
Foreword by Cliff Koroll
There isn’t a day that goes by when I don’t think of Keith Magnuson, but it might surprise you to know that my memories often don’t involve hockey.
Keith was my best friend. I met him when I was 10 years old, and we grew up together in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. We went to the University of Denver together, played college hockey together, played our whole pro career together, and then he became head coach while I was an assistant. When we started our Blackhawk Alumni Association, he was the president and I was the vice president. So we worked together, in one form or another, for 46 years.
Even as a kid, Keith was tenacious. We played on different teams—hockey, baseball, football, you name it—and competed against each other all through high school. He was like a fly—you’d swat him away, but he’d come right back at you. He was probably one of the most determined athletes I ever played with. Keith didn’t have all the ability in the world, but he sure made up for it with hard work and desire. He played tough and stood up for his teammates, and that’s why he became a fan favorite and one of the best-loved players in the dressing room.
We came out of college at a time when not many NHL players came from the collegiate ranks, so we were looked at a little differently. Keith proved himself by being a genuine person and a hard-working player. I think once he stood up for his teammates a few times, he gained the respect of the locker room and fit in really well.
Keith always had a bit of a mean streak. He didn’t fight much when we were kids or in college, because we weren’t allowed to. But when he got to the Hawks, he felt he was not going to make it on skill alone. He was a good defensive defenseman, but he didn’t contribute much offensively. He figured that he needed to find another way to make his mark.
When we were in school, he recognized the Blackhawks needed someone who could protect his teammates considering the stars they had at the time: Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, Pit Martin, Jim Pappin, and Dennis Hull. The Blackhawks needed some toughness on that team, and that’s what enabled Keith to make an impact.
In the first preseason game that he played, he went up to the toughest guy on the opposition and tried to start a fight. He got his butt kicked, but Keith just kept coming after him. That incident showed that he was going to stand up for his teammates no matter what.
With his level of dedication to the team and to the Blackhawks, it was really only a matter of time before Keith became captain, and he was great at that as well. He was vocal when the opportunity presented itself. He’d stand up and single people out if he needed a little extra from them, but on a day-to-day, game-to-game basis, he was pretty low key.
When Keith was done playing, he became the Blackhawks head coach and I joined his coaching staff. It was easy for both of us to work together because of the closeness that we shared. We were closer to each other than we were to our own brothers. I understood fully what my role was as an assistant coach, and what his was as the head coach. He was the enforcer and I was there to support him as much as possible.
Though it was easy for us to work together, it was a different situation in the locker room. One year we were playing with the guys, having a beer with them and socializing with them; the next year we were their bosses and telling them not to have a few beers. So that was an uncomfortable situation for both of us.
After Keith’s coaching days ended, he still wanted to be a part of the game, but his larger desire was to help people within the community. He probably had the biggest heart of any individual I’ve ever known. I very seldom saw him say no to a charity function. That’s something that was taught to us by Bobby and Stan. That’s the kind of thing you have to do as a professional hockey player in the city of Chicago, and Keith really embraced that. A lot of times, he would ask me to go with him to visit kids in the hospital; he continually did that.
He’s touched so many people. He was able to balance his work life, his charity work, and his family. I don’t know how he did as much as he did, but I think people remember him most for how much he gave back to the community.
But what I think Maggie would most want to be known for is the Blackhawk Alumni Association, which is his greatest lasting legacy with the team. Twenty-five years ago, there was a need to help players make the transition to life after hockey. Not all players were fortunate enough to have college degrees like we did, so our motto back then was “players helping players.”
There were eight of us at that first meeting, including Stan and Dennis, and we put the wheels in motion. We started raising money, and we decided that education was important because of what it did for Maggie and me. So we set up a scholarship program for high school hockey players in the state of Illinois. Keith was the president and he led the organization for the rest of his life. With the groundwork that the few of us laid, we have given out 78 scholarships and millions of dollars based on grades and community involvement, and that scholarship now bears Keith’s name.
That his number is now in the rafters at the United Center is a tribute to Maggie as a player, but even more so to him as a person. He wasn’t the greatest player ever to hit the ice, though he certainly served his purpose and showed his hard work and dedication. It’s the off-the-ice stuff—all the people he touched, from little kids to senior citizens—that’s the thing most people remember about him.
—Cliff Koroll
Preface
I have four distinct sports memories from my childhood.
As a four-year-old I heard Jack Buck’s voice describing a St. Louis Cardinals baseball game for the first time, as my family drove through southern Illinois on a steamy July night.
As a five-year-old I saw Soldier Field, the home of the Chicago Bears, for the first time passing it as my kindergarten’s bus was on its way to the circus at the International Amphitheatre.
As a six-year-old I saw Wrigley Field for the first time, coming up the stairs to the seating area from the concourse while seeing the famous placard attached to the wall, which alerted me to Watch out for Foul Balls!
And as a nine-year-old, riding through Chicago’s near west side on our way to a Blackhawks game, I saw Chic
ago Stadium for the first time.
As our car skidded on the slick exit ramp from the Kennedy Expressway and started to inch its way down Madison Street, there were no bright lights to lead the way, as there are in New York when one heads to a Rangers game. Instead, all I saw was the deep, lonely night of the late Chicago winter, with tired buildings and tired faces shuttered from the wind. As our vehicle moved along, just a few hearty souls were seen ducking in and out of the Palace Grill for hot coffee and sandwiches. The white radiance of snow draped around the endless string of the city’s ancient structures. To me, there was always a strange, solemn stillness with snow—whether in my little town outside of Chicago or in the chaos of the big city—as if the mounds of white powder combined with the cape of the early dusk to provide extra layers of tranquility, which was then muffling the urban traffic.
As our car crossed Ashland Avenue, the People’s Stadium Parking sign came into view, luring drivers with illuminated arrows as invitations.
And in the next instant, through the winter’s darkness and with no fanfare or warning, the stark, aging hulk of Chicago Stadium itself suddenly came into view.
Essentially miniature in comparison to today’s sports venues—yet at one time the largest indoor arena in the world—the Stadium may just as well have been the Roman Coliseum upon my first glimpse. While I had seen Soldier Field and Wrigley Field on television (and then in person), few sporting events were televised from the Stadium around the Chicago vicinity in that era. Thus, like a person attending a game in the days prior to television, my initial view of the building had an imposing effect. With tales of historic feats echoing from the very cracks in the Stadium’s foundation, we parked the car as I took my father’s hand, striding reverently toward the gate.
It was immediately clear to me that no ordinary men worked in this place.
“Playing there was like the gladiator movies,” former Hawks defenseman Chris Chelios confirmed when I described this memory to him years later. “Coming up the stairs from the locker room, it was the setting for a battle or a war.”
Once inside, the labyrinth of dark stairwells, cavelike concourses, peeling paint, dim lighting, and leaking pipes gave it the feel of a dungeon, as if any beast could be lurking around the corner near the popcorn machine.
Squeezing through the entrance tunnels that seemed constrictive even for my third-grade frame, we took our spots in the second balcony, in the old wooden chairs. The date was March 14, 1979.
Scratched that night from the Hawks lineup was a 32-year-old defenseman named Keith Magnuson, the team’s captain. Magnuson had been sidelined since December after an operation on his right knee, his third surgery on the joint since he entered the National Hockey League in 1969.
I was disappointed by his absence, as Magnuson’s facial expression always made me pause when I flipped through my stack of hockey cards back home; his fiery red hair and his determined countenance always struck me as magnificent. I asked my father about Magnuson, and he explained that the player was fighting through a variety of injuries and was temporarily unable to perform at his previous level of excellence. I was then immediately reminded of a moment five years earlier when, at the age of four, I saw my first Cardinals game. A “washed-up” old pitcher named Bob Gibson was on the mound that day. Like Magnuson at the time of my Stadium visit, it was Gibson’s second-to-last season of play. Gibson soon drew my toddler’s wrath because of his poor outing, permitting 14 hits and five runs in a loss to the San Francisco Giants. Over the course of the game, I apparently began complaining to a stranger sitting next to me. Before I embarrassed myself any further, my father then quickly and curtly informed me that Gibson had posted much better statistics in previous seasons, and, like Magnuson, was doing his best to hang on. Both Magnuson and Gibson, he added, fought through immense pain to help their teams in any manner they could.
But Magnuson, in fact, had already spent an entire decade fighting uphill battles with the Hawks. He first had to convince his coach and teammates that college players such as him and his buddy Cliff Koroll were NHL-worthy; he next had to deal with talented veterans leaving the team, which put the club in disarray; then with a never-ending litany of young players replacing the veterans in an attempt to rebuild; then with the Philadelphia Flyers becoming the league bullies; and then with the Montreal Canadiens and the New York Islanders dominating everyone.
And all the while, Magnuson was determined to ignore myriad injuries that were usually the result of his selfless sacrifice for the team. In addition to blocking shots with all parts of his body while others on the team assumed the glory of scoring goals, Magnuson would nightly “volunteer” to do battle with the aggressors of other teams, aggressors whom other Hawks were unwilling to confront. Like a wounded soldier helping a comrade along, Magnuson always did the small, nearly unnoticeable things that galvanized morale.
He carried this spirit and devotion into his great success off the ice as well—in business and in charity, but most of all to those with whom he came into personal contact each day. As far back as anyone could remember, Magnuson’s teammates, friends, family, and even strangers depended upon him 100,000 times—and 100,000 times, he came through. He was there if someone needed something, without any fanfare, applause, or payment required for his autograph. He was, in a word, dependable.
“Whether you win or lose,” Magnuson would often say, “it’s all about showing up.”
1. From Wadena to Saskatoon
“A person’s toughness must come from somewhere, and in my case I believe it came from where I was born. Gothic, I learned in school, was something stark and unadorned, medieval, perhaps even primitive. My rural beginnings were somewhat like this.”
—Keith Magnuson, 1973
The driving distance from Chicago, Illinois, to Wadena, Saskatchewan, is exactly 2,000 kilometers, or 1,243 miles, to the northwest. The path cuts across some of the most unforgiving landscapes in North America—a vast, endless expanse of prairie and plains, with each gaze at the horizon more barren than the last. Endlessly in front of the traveler is a true northern frontier, through which fewer and fewer will pass in going further north.
For generations, many of the greatest players in the sport of ice hockey have been carved out of this frontier, individuals crafted in a region where the frigid arctic air is whipped up in thick, hearty slices that oppress creatures in its way. With temperatures plummeting lower than 30 degrees below zero for weeks at a time, young hockey players in western Canada nonetheless are happy to scratch their skates across the countless frozen ponds and lakes, battling against the cold—and each other. These are not the climate-controlled, suburban indoor rinks that hide players and their parents from the wind. They are raw places of war, where a deep commitment to the game is a prime requisite for survival. Ill-fitting skates, passed down from one brother to another, serve as little defense against frost-bitten toes in these parts, toes which need to be thawed near a fire as darkness falls at the end of a day’s play. And with no “pro shop” nearby for proper equipment, curled-up magazines serve as shin guards and hunting trousers make do as hockey pants.
This has been the Canadian rite of passage for many decades. But still today, as they always have, the ponds and lakes around Wadena—like those in Parry Sound and Point Anne over in Ontario, and so many other Canadian villages like them—remain the frosted proving grounds for hockey’s future legends, similar to the sun-baked rural and urban sandlots in the United States that have traditionally produced baseball’s next superstars.
A small hamlet of about 500 people halfway between Edmonton and Winnipeg, Wadena is perhaps as honorably nondescript as any such place that one could examine. It was here where a red-haired boy named Keith Arlen Magnuson was born on April 27, 1947, the youngest of four children to Joe and Birdie Magnuson.
Joe ran a hardware store in town, a large asphalt building which stood distinctly on the one major stree
t in the community. That one major street was part of the scenery that made Wadena resemble something out of the Old West, a place where one could walk down to that street’s end and stare off into an eternity of open land, making one wonder what lay beyond. Fittingly known as “Big Swede” around Wadena (as he was a full-blooded Swede; Birdie was half Swedish and half Norwegian), the multiskilled Joe would compile a long list of occupations that including being a penitentiary guard in Alberta as well as a deacon at the local Baptist church. He was a strong man with “fists that resembled a bunch of bananas,” according to one who knew him.
As younger men, Joe and his brother Mac would stroll to a local gathering place, where they were known to challenge other men to arm-wrestling matches at any time; if an impromptu tournament was suddenly arranged, the two Magnusons usually wound up in the final round against one another after defeating everyone else.
Keith mentioned about his childhood in watching the scene from a safe distance down the street, “On Saturday nights there, I remember, they would go to a hotel lobby and set up a ring to see who was the strongest guy. They wouldn’t drink. None of that; they were too religious. It was just good, clean fun.”
The practice of religion was paramount in the Magnuson household. Smoking, drinking, or hanging out at the local pool hall were not acceptable activities for Keith and his siblings, but regular attendance at Sunday services certainly was. And in ad- dition to churchgoing, the Sabbath was expected to be a day of rest on which no activity whatsoever was permitted. This even in-cluded hockey—a true sacrifice on one out of every seven days for a boy like Keith.
“I loved morning Sunday school,” he admitted, “but I fell asleep in church. To stay awake, I’d write down on the church calendar the hockey routine that I’d practice on Monday. On Sunday nights, I wanted to play hockey instead of going to church, so I’d have to sneak out.”
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