No helmets?


Just something minor leagues do? I'm used to seeing helmets all around during games.

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When I was a kid, hardly any hockey players wore helmets. It was a sign of weakness. I grew up in Indianapolis, and we had a WHA team, the Racers. They had goalie named Andy Brown who played goal with no helmet, no mask.

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The NHL didn't mandate them until 1978. Even then players were grandfathered in.

-"It's in the net! They score! They score! The 'Hawks win the Stanley Cup!" - John Wiedeman WGN 720

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Craig MacTavish was the last NHL player to play without a helmet well into the 90s. I remember him playing for New York in the 1994 Stanley Cup final with no helmet, it was a strange sight to see by that time.

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Goalies didn't even start wearing masks until the 1960s.

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thanks for clearing this up

for a moment i thought it was done to see the actors better :)

(there are even a few players with glasses on....wow )

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On the subject of goalies not wearings masks. Glenn "Mr. Goalie" Hall had his ironman streak of consecutive starts in goal without a mask. He also invented the Butterfly without wearing one (which of course exposed his face to some real potential damage.)

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Gump Worsley didn't wear a mask until very late in his career. As mentioned, Andy Brown didn't wear one ever. I remember him with the Penguins. The full face masks like the one's in the movie started dying out after Bernie Parent got a stick in the eye which ended his spectacular career. The first player I remember wearing the cage style mask was Billy Smith of the Islanders. Tony Esposito put a cage around the eyes of his trademark mask. As for players wearing helmets, as a Flyers fan, I only remember a few players wearing them like Andre Dupont, Jimmy Watson, Ross Lonsberry, and Orest Kindrachuk.

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Off topic, but Billy Smith was psychotic.......which wasn't necessarily a negative trait for the era he played in.

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Yeah, Billy Smith was one disturbed individual.

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First was Jaques Plante in 1959, then Gerry Cheevers in the early mid 60's. Cheevers trademark was drawing stitches on the mask where a puck had hit. By the end of his career it was almost all stitches! Glenn Hall started using the mask when he was traded to St. Louis, I think.

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Bill Masterton of the Minnesota North Stars was long believed to have died as a result of an on-ice collision with the boards during a game in January 1968. Although he had worn a helmet during his college career at the University of Denver, when he joined the NHL’s North Stars, it wasn’t considered acceptable for any player to wear a helmet. http://www.thestar.com/content/dam/thestar/sports/hockey/2011/05/28/star_investigation_what_really_killed_nhls_bill_masterton/mastertonpic.jpeg

There’s some question as to whether Masterton’s death was directly related to that collision or to an earlier concussion he had suffered; but his death often was considered a reason why more players began wearing helmets even before the NHL made helmets mandatory.
http://www.thestar.com/sports/hockey/2011/05/28/star_investigation_what_really_killed_nhls_bill_masterton.html

If it is what it is, what is it?

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