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#1
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Broad Street Bullies
I've often heard that memories formed in childhood tend to last a lifetime. This, for me, is a good thing.
I was born and raised in Philadelphia during an era when the city had four great sports teams. The Phillies were in the playoffs five times before my 12th birthday, winning the World Series when I was 8. The 76ers won the NBA title when I was 11. The Eagles were perennial contenders and made it to Super Bowl XV. And, of course, there were the Philadelphia Flyers. While I was a little too young to properly enjoy it, they won back-to-back Stanley Cup Finals when yours truly was a preschooler. They put a physically dominant, rough-and-tumble team on the ice for the better part of a decade. Their style of play was best described by coach Fred Shero, who told the Flyers to "take the shortest route to the puck and arrive in ill humor." Pictured here are some of my treasured cards of the 1970s Broad Street Bullies. I'll scan some more and post them in this thread eventually. In the meantime, show 'em if you got 'em.
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Eric Perry Currently collecting: T206 (132/524) 1956 Topps Baseball (190/342) "You can observe a lot by just watching." - Yogi Berra |
#2
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I can add these ones.
Like you, I was much too young to remember much from back in the Philly's hay days, but I do remember the name, The Broad Street Bully's, very well. They didn't have the most skilled players compared to some other teams, but through grit, determination and toughness, they got things done.
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52 Topps cards. https://www.flickr.com/photos/144160280@N05/ http://www.net54baseball.com/album.php?albumid=922 |
#3
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I am old enough to remember them. There were certainly two schools of thought with them. The 1976 Stanley Cup was almost about the bruising style of the Flyers vs. the skill of the Canadiens.
I am not passing judgement at all, but I do recall there were a lot of hockey fans who were cheering for the Canadiens who normally would not cheer for them. Dick Irvin tells that story quite well. here is a card from my collection as a kid, as I collected those years. 1968 Parent Front.jpg
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#4
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I remember the Broad Street Bullies too well.
They capitalized on flaws in the rule book to intimidate their opponents. They perfected the art of taking out their opponent's top players with their "lesser skilled" players. Anti-violence rules were put in place because of Flyers tactics (instigator penalties,elimination of bench clearing brawls). The main reason why their style worked was the man between the pipes. Bernie Parent. For 2 seasons, he was unbeatable. In the 1975 Finals the Sabres thoroughly outplayed the Flyers but the Sabres could get nothing behind Parent, meanwhile Sabre netminding was horrible. Shero called the Sabre goalies "a couple of basket cases". I was one of the ones that cheered when the Canadiens won in 1976. |
#5
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Clarke reminds me of Joe Montana: when you look at the stats they are not all time great but he got the job done, set the tone, and made his team into winners. Even internationally; he was the one who slashed Kharlamov in the Summit Series.
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Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... |
#6
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Tom, agreed, but we think you understate the case. '70s Flyers were the filthiest, cheap-shottingest
aggregation of goons ever to disgrace a major league rink. Too bad, because it worked, and they had enough talented, skilled guys to win without all the crap. We despised those Philly teams, but liked and respected guys like Crisp, Leech, and MacLeish. Parent was great -- we saw a lot of him previously with Toronto. He was excellent in the '75 Final, too, but we wouldn't say Sabres outplayed Philly -- overall, about even up, but Flyers mostly kept Buffalo to the perimeter, with Parent not having face enough tough chances in close. Shero knew how to say things to get under an opponent's skin, and yes, Desjardins was soft in the Sabre nets, but the aging Crozier was sharp even despite playing injured (which is why Desjardins got most of the starts). Adam, we can't call a guy a "winner" if in order to "win" he deliberately breaks the ankle of the best player on the opposing team (pretty much on orders from Sinden, another guy deserving of contempt).
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