One to Remember: Stories from 39 Members of the NHL's One Goal Club
From the national bestselling author of One Night Only come 39 new stories about what a big-league goal can mean to an NHLer

Including interviews with Billy Smith, Chris Mason, Damian Rhodes, Christian Thomas, and Slap Shot’s Dave Hanson.

This follow-up to Reid’s national bestseller One Night Only: Conversations with the NHL’s One-Game Wonders unearths the blood, sweat, tears, and laughs of the journey to and from a single big-league goal.

If you’ve ever picked up a hockey stick, chances are you’ve dreamed of scoring in the National Hockey League. Ken Reid interviews and profiles 39 men who did just that: they bulged the twine in the best hockey league in the world ... but only once. From minor league call-ups to season-long mainstays and even a Hall of Famer, One to Remember answers all the questions ...

What did that one tally mean? Was it enough to satisfy a lifelong ambition, or was it just the smallest taste of success? Is the achievement still cherished years later? Or is it bittersweet, a distant reminder of what could have been?
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One to Remember: Stories from 39 Members of the NHL's One Goal Club
From the national bestselling author of One Night Only come 39 new stories about what a big-league goal can mean to an NHLer

Including interviews with Billy Smith, Chris Mason, Damian Rhodes, Christian Thomas, and Slap Shot’s Dave Hanson.

This follow-up to Reid’s national bestseller One Night Only: Conversations with the NHL’s One-Game Wonders unearths the blood, sweat, tears, and laughs of the journey to and from a single big-league goal.

If you’ve ever picked up a hockey stick, chances are you’ve dreamed of scoring in the National Hockey League. Ken Reid interviews and profiles 39 men who did just that: they bulged the twine in the best hockey league in the world ... but only once. From minor league call-ups to season-long mainstays and even a Hall of Famer, One to Remember answers all the questions ...

What did that one tally mean? Was it enough to satisfy a lifelong ambition, or was it just the smallest taste of success? Is the achievement still cherished years later? Or is it bittersweet, a distant reminder of what could have been?
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One to Remember: Stories from 39 Members of the NHL's One Goal Club

One to Remember: Stories from 39 Members of the NHL's One Goal Club

One to Remember: Stories from 39 Members of the NHL's One Goal Club

One to Remember: Stories from 39 Members of the NHL's One Goal Club

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Overview

From the national bestselling author of One Night Only come 39 new stories about what a big-league goal can mean to an NHLer

Including interviews with Billy Smith, Chris Mason, Damian Rhodes, Christian Thomas, and Slap Shot’s Dave Hanson.

This follow-up to Reid’s national bestseller One Night Only: Conversations with the NHL’s One-Game Wonders unearths the blood, sweat, tears, and laughs of the journey to and from a single big-league goal.

If you’ve ever picked up a hockey stick, chances are you’ve dreamed of scoring in the National Hockey League. Ken Reid interviews and profiles 39 men who did just that: they bulged the twine in the best hockey league in the world ... but only once. From minor league call-ups to season-long mainstays and even a Hall of Famer, One to Remember answers all the questions ...

What did that one tally mean? Was it enough to satisfy a lifelong ambition, or was it just the smallest taste of success? Is the achievement still cherished years later? Or is it bittersweet, a distant reminder of what could have been?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781770415140
Publisher: ECW Press
Publication date: 09/22/2020
Edition description: No Edition
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 1,040,591
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Ken Reid is the co-anchor of the weeknight prime time edition of Sportsnet Central on Sportsnet. He has covered the Olympics, the Super Bowl, multiple Grey Cups, and has appeared on Hockey Night in Canada. He lives in Toronto with his wife and two sons.

Read an Excerpt

The first man to walk on the moon? Easy, no? The answer of course is Neil Armstrong. Now name the second. I bet you had to think for a while, if you got the answer right at all. When you’re the first man or woman to accomplish a significant feat, your name will live on forever. And that brings us to Billy Smith, the first goaltender to ever score a goal in the National Hockey League. “It’s in the record books,” says the Hockey Hall of Famer. “So, even with Hexy [Ron Hextall] scoring the second one, it’s kind of forgotten. It’s always who scored the first. So, in that way, the goal means something.”

Billy Smith didn’t try to score a goal against the Colorado Rockies on November 28, 1979. His very own perfect storm came 4:50 into the third period. The Islanders were trailing the lowly Colorado Rockies 4–3. Smith didn’t even get the start that night. He took over for Chico Resch after he gave up four goals on 21 shots. There was a delayed penalty call on the Islanders’ Mike Kaszycki. The Rockies, however, had possession of the puck. Their tender, Bill McKenzie, headed to the bench for an extra attacker. The puck worked its way to Rob Ramage, who let a shot go from the right side. Smith made the save. The puck quickly made its way back to Ramage in the right corner: “He grabbed it and fired the puck back to the point, but there was nobody there. It went all the way down the ice and into the net.”

Right away, Billy Smith knew he scored. “I knew I was the last guy to touch the puck, but they gave the goal to one of my teammates.” Smith didn’t make a big deal out of it because . . . frankly, it didn’t seem like much of a big deal at the time. “It’s more of a big deal now,” says Smith. “I mean, it was pretty neat. Back then it was like, well, we played the game, we lost, so really I wasn’t that interested.”

After the game, the goal was eventually rewarded to Smith. When you watch the video of the goal it is blatantly obvious that he was the last Islander to touch the puck. So give the NHL credit, they were quick to right their wrong. But it is kind of strange that none of Billy’s teammates picked up on the fact that the goal was his. The 7,112 fans in attendance didn’t seem to notice either. And like Billy said, he didn’t really seem to care either, it’s not like he made a beeline to grab the puck. He was the first goalie in the NHL to score a goal — but hey, no big deal. “They kept playing the game with the puck. It ended up going out of the rink. I guess the guy who got the puck ended up sending it to the Hall of Fame.”

At least one person in attendance at the McNichols Sports Arena seemed to care that history had just taken place. Over the next few seasons, Billy Smith didn’t care about scoring goals. He just cared about winning cups. He won his first of four straight Stanley Cups with the Islanders that spring. As his playing days went on, Smith saw his position evolve. Goalies got better and better at handling the puck. He knew the day was coming. He knew another goaltender would find the back of the net: “You knew just by being in the league and how well the guys could shoot the puck [that it would happen]. In my day nobody wanted the goalie to handle the puck. It was ‘Set it up at the side of the net and get out of the way, play your position, and we’ll take care of the rest.’ But then you got guys like Hexy who could really shoot the puck and it became, ‘Okay, if the puck is dumped in, we’ll hold the guys back and you grab the puck and fire it out.’”

That’s exactly what happened on December 8, 1987, in a Flyers/Bruins game. With the Boston goalie pulled, the Bruins dumped the puck into the Philly zone just to the left of Hextall. The Philly players held the Bruins’ forecheck back, Hextall picked up the puck, wristed it about 200 feet and into the empty cage. Voila. Ron Hextall joined Billy Smith as the only goalies in NHL history to score an NHL goal. Unlike when Smith scored, everyone in the arena that night, and everyone in the hockey world that night, knew Ron Hextall scored. The crowd went nuts. The Flyers bench emptied and everyone mobbed Hextall. It was a big deal. That just wasn’t the case for Billy Smith in 1979: “You know what? Nobody really said anything. We lost when we shouldn’t have lost. To be honest, nobody cared. Nobody ever said anything about it. It kind of rolled off our shoulders.”

For those of you wondering, Hextall is not in this book, because he scored another goal, on April 11, 1989. That one came in Billy Smith’s final NHL season. Again, it was a big deal. “It was funny because when Hexy scored the second one, he got a car and I just looked at our guys. I mean, I didn’t get diddly.”

Eventually Smith did get something, but it was still pretty much diddly. But at least it came right from the president of the Islanders: “Bill Torrey bought a miniature [toy] car for me.”

Table of Contents

Foreword Colby Armstrong ix

Introduction xiii

Chapter 1 The Unbelievable 1

John English 2

Chapter 2 Hall of Fame Help 7

Mike Forbes 8

Alain Nasreddine 13

Brad Moran 18

Mike Hurlbut 22

Shawn Evans 26

Dan Lucas 31

Chapter 3 Just in Time 36

Connor James 37

Ben Walter 40

Chapter 4 Family Ties 45

Dave Hanson 46

Richie Regehr 52

Christian Thomas 58

Christian Dube 63

Paul Houck 67

Chapter 5 The Goalies 72

Billy Smith 73

Chris Mason 76

Damian Rhodes 79

Chapter 6 The Wrong Era 83

Darren Haydar 84

Micki DuPont 89

Andrew McKim 92

Chapter 7 The Injury Bug 97

Brent Tremblay 98

Joey Hishon 103

Damian Surma 108

Lee Sweatt 113

Chapter 8 First-Round Expectations 119

Scott Metcalfe 120

Matt Higgins 123

Mike Brown 127

Chapter 9 Junior Stars 132

Kimbi Daniels 133

Jason Podollan 139

Chapter 10 A Different Path 146

Bob Warner 147

Steve Coates 152

Hank Lammens 158

Chapter 11 Higher Education 163

Shawn McCosh 164

Les Kozak 169

Stu McNeill 175

Chapter 12 Toughies 179

Dennis Bonvie 180

Rob SKRLAC 185

Chris McRae 193

Frank Beaton 198

Acknowledgements 205

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