Book Feature The California Golden Seals (by Steve Currier)

Steve Currier

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Jul 16, 2020
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The California Golden Seals: a Tale of White Skates and Red Ink, and One of the NHL’s Most Outlandish Teams covers the franchise’s entire history, from its championship years in the Western Hockey League, to its relocation to Oakland, to its excruciatingly slow death in Cleveland. Several people associated with the Seals, including Lyle Carter, Ted Hampson, Joey Johnston, Marshall Johnston, Wayne King, Larry Lund, Dennis Maruk, Howie Menard, Morris Mott, Larry Patey, Tim Ryan, Gary Simmons, Joe Starkey, Tom Thurlby, and the late Frank Selke Jr. shared their stories and impressions on the Seals. Other NHL players of the era, notably Bryan Campbell, Ron Lalonde, and Jack Lynch also provided great quotes, and several members of the Seals Booster Club shared their insight from a fan’s point of view.

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With the help of hundreds of newspaper articles from the era, the book highlights fantastic long-forgotten stories and quotes, and sheds light on several Seals tales that have been skewed over the years, including the identity of the famous 1974 streaker, the role original general manager Rudy Pilous played in the franchise's early days, and the person responsible for trading away the draft pick that would have brought Guy Lafleur to Oakland.

Purchase your own copy today at Amazon.ca or Amazon.com in either hardcover, paperback or Kindle versions.

For more information on the book, and for other Seals-related treats, head on over to GoldenSealsHockey.com where you can find rare articles, team facts, statistics, and humorous pieces from the one and only Hockey Hall of Shame.

Excerpt from The California Golden Seals: a Tale of White Skates and Red Ink, and One of the NHL’s Most Outlandish Teams:


The Seals were still holding onto third place in the West, but their position was tenuous due to a disastrous 1-7-6 record between February 2 and March 3. Hoping to rouse the Seals out of their slump, Young pulled off his biggest blockbuster deal. In late February [general manager Garry] Young traded Carol Vadnais and Don O’Donoghue to Boston for Reggie Leach, Rick Smith, and Bob Stewart. Having worked in the Bruins organization for years, Young knew exactly what he was getting in exchange for Vadnais. Leach was a natural goal scorer blessed with incredible speed. Seals Booster Club member Sandi Pantages believes that some of the young prospects in the organization “with better coaching . . . might have been more promising, and I think Reggie Leach might have been in that category. I think he had promise to be a very good player.” Her husband Dick chimed in that Leach “turned out to be a very good player later, after he was gone. He was very young when he was with us.” Smith had decent offensive skills, but he was brought in for his defensive attributes. “Rick Smith was a hard-nosed defenseman and was a pretty rough-and-tumble defense guy,” remembers Dick Pantages. Bobby Stewart would eventually become the Seals’ captain and all-time leader in games played (414) and penalty minutes (691). “Bobby was a good defenseman, tough, he didn’t put up with nothing,” said future teammate Wayne King. “He was a good checker and . . . a good leader too.” Joe Starkey believes that while he was broadcasting Seals games, Stewart was the toughest player on the team: “Good solid guy, good person,” he says, “but on the ice, don’t mess with him, He was a tough player, played it straight up. Didn’t look for fights but could definitely handle himself.” Young felt very proud of his newest acquisitions. “This trade will put us in the playoffs,” he happily exclaimed after the deal was made. “Reggie and these players are the future of this club.”

Even though Vadnais had become a bona fide NHL star in Oakland, he welcomed the chance to play elsewhere. In his final game with the Seals, a 4–4 tie against St. Louis, Vadnais scored his first career hat trick, but he did not even come out to salute the fans after being named the game’s first star. Did he believe the fans had taken his talents for granted? Once in Boston, the disgruntled ex-Seal was quoted as saying: “I didn’t mind Oakland, although . . . I was tired of losing. I was tired of being blamed for losing. I was sick and tired of being chewed up by everybody. Maybe they expected too much from me. I don’t know what they expected. But management was giving me more aggravation than I cared for.”

Seals Booster Club member Larry Schmidt remembers the tremendous pressure Vadnais was under in Oakland. “He was one of the first guys, when they didn’t have enough scoring,” he said, “they pulled him up to wing, and he scored a lot of goals, because he was such a great skater, but he just got tired of playing here because he had to do everything. He was unhappy.” After Vadnais’s departure, Bert Marshall, one of the few veteran players left on the roster, was named the new team captain.

The night of the trade Leach, Stewart, and Smith were in the lineup to face their old Boston teammates before 10,492 California fans. In the opening minutes of the contest it seemed as though everyone would walk out of the building smiling. The Seals scored early and often, humiliating the Bruins at every turn. The Seals looked like they were finally going to teach the Bruins a real lesson after having endured so many previous beatings.

Dick Redmond opened the scoring just 2:51 into the game and added a second just over ten minutes later. Boston’s Fred Stanfield cut the lead to 1 with a goal at 17:37, but Gary Croteau restored the Seals’ 2-goal lead at 19:52. Carleton, Croteau, and Patrick added goals before the game was half over, putting the Seals up 6–1. The Bruins were reeling and looked nothing like the team that had outscored the Seals 33–8 in six games the year before. Nothing went right for Boston until Mike Walton stole the puck from three Seals who were fiddling with the disk in front of goalie Gilles Meloche, and the Bruin got a good shot away, but the rookie goalie made a great save with his left pad. Walton then grabbed the puck again, this time dishing it off to Orr, but he too was stopped by Meloche. Wayne Cashman then skated into the Seals crease and batted the rebound over Meloche’s shoulder at 14:36 to make it 6–2, California.

Just over two minutes later, Bert Marshall tripped up Stanfield, and the Bruins were awarded a penalty shot. Stanfield skated in on Meloche and directed a high, hard wrist shot to the top left corner of the net, but the Seals’ young netminder stood tall like he had all season, making a brilliant glove save to preserve the 4-goal lead. The enthusiastic Oakland crowd roared its approval as the Seals’ bench flooded the ice to congratulate their unquestioned MVP.

When play resumed, Bobby Orr feathered a beautiful pass to Stanfield at the Seals’ blue line, and it was off to the races. Rick Smith tried in vain to stop Stanfield with a series of hooks, but the Bruin still managed to put the puck past a surprised Meloche, who weakly kicked out his left leg while still standing on his right. It didn’t really matter much since the Seals still led 6–3 going into the final period. There was no way the Bruins were going to score three more times in the third. Besides, the Seals had already beaten the Bruins twice that season. There was no reason to believe they couldn’t go for the trifecta.

Less than three minutes into the final frame, Orr blasted a shot from inside the blue line that beat a screened Meloche, making the score 6–4, but surely the Seals were good enough this season to hang on to a 2-goal lead for another seventeen minutes.

At the 5:59 mark, the seemingly possessed Fred Stanfield completed his hat trick after receiving yet another tape-to-tape, blue line–to–blue line pass courtesy of Orr. Stanfield took the puck into Seals territory all alone and deked out a helpless Meloche to his left, making the score 6–5, California. Now the score mattered.

The Seals hung on as best they could for almost nine more minutes when disaster struck in the name of Phil Esposito. Ed Westfall skated in along the boards to Meloche’s left, and directed a perfect flip pass to Esposito, who was coming in on Meloche’s right. Before the puck even settled onto the ice, Esposito picked it out of the air and sent it past the helpless goaltender to even the score at 6–6.

Less than three minutes later Esposito tipped in a weak shot from Wayne Cashman, who was standing on the lip of the face-off circle near the boards to the right of Meloche. Incredibly it was now 7–6, Bruins.

In the dying seconds of the game Vic Stasiuk pulled Meloche in favor of a sixth skater. Boston’s Derek Sanderson broke in on the Seals’ vacant net despite Reggie Leach’s persistent hooking and took a clear shot at the cage. Redmond valiantly stood in the way of the shot, making perhaps the best save of the night, but Sanderson picked up the rebound and scored. Redmond viciously swung out his right arm and slashed his stick against the post, angry that the Seals had blown what should have been an insurmountable 5-goal lead to the eventual Stanley Cup Champs. Final score: Boston 8, Seals 6.

When it came time for Stasiuk to face the media, the Seals’ bench boss said all the right things and calmly explained what he thought were the reasons for his young team’s collapse. “You really can’t blame our defense though,” he said. “They played their guts out. Our forwards just quit checking them in their zone, and Boston just came charging back. Nobody wanted to make the sacrifice of checking for us and they kept coming back like a tidal wave.”

Redmond was far less diplomatic in his choice of words. His disgust was evident on the ice, and after the game he was still seething. In a profanity-laced tirade, cleaned up for the newspapers, Redmond stated rather matter-of-factly that “Boston is good. . . . But to blow a five-goal lead?”

It was a critical loss and undoubtedly a traumatic experience for the young Seals. The club had been slumping badly the entire month of February, and Stasiuk knew very well that the way his players reacted to the disappointment would determine their fate. “It’s all up to the players,” he explained. “They either come back or they keep right on skidding, right out of the playoffs.”

To read another extract of the book courtesy of Amazon.ca, click here.
 

Theokritos

Global Moderator
Apr 6, 2010
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I was about to say, I think that book already has a few readers here.

First question to Steve: What made you pick that franchise as the topic? Were you a fan of them yourself back in the day?
 

Steve Currier

Registered User
Jul 16, 2020
22
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I was about to say, I think that book already has a few readers here.

First question to Steve: What made you pick that franchise as the topic? Were you a fan of them yourself back in the day?

I've always been fascinated by the Seals since I saw a photo of George Swarbrick in the May 1988 Hockey Illustrated, which had a feature on the 1967 expansion. I was also an avid card collector back then, and when I went to card shows, I loved looking for cards of players from the 1970s, and I loved those odd Seals uniforms. The NHL also sent me a photocopy of the team's 1975-76 media guide, which was so interesting to leaf through. I had asked them for information about the Seals, but maybe just to get me to go away, someone just copied a whole media guide. I still have it to this day, but also some real copies of a couple of guides.

I never actually got to see them play having been born in 1979, and since no one else had ever written anything about the Seals (this was before Brad Kurtzberg's excellent book), I thought it would be a great, original topic. Back in the 1980s and 1990s, there really weren't many great hockey books on obscure topics, but now you see great titles everywhere and they are so easy to find.
 

kaiser matias

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Mar 22, 2004
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Have the paperback on pre-order, looking forward to October (another book I've been long anticipating, non-hockey related, comes out then too).

How does the book compare to the other Seals' book, Brad Kurtzberg's Shorthanded: The Untold Story of the Seals: Hockey's Most Colorful Team (2006)? I haven't read this one yet either, but I know a few here have so am interested in how they work with each other.
 
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Habsfan18

The Hockey Library
May 13, 2003
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Have the paperback on pre-order, looking forward to October (another book I've been long anticipating, non-hockey related, comes out then too).

How does the book compare to the other Seals' book, Brad Kurtzberg's Shorthanded: The Untold Story of the Seals: Hockey's Most Colorful Team (2006)? I haven't read this one yet either, but I know a few here have so am interested in how they work with each other.

The Kurtzberg book was more of an oral history of the Seals. A lot of interviews with former players.

The Currier book is definitely more of a definitive in-depth history of the Seals.

If you can only choose one, go with this one, IMO.
 

kaiser matias

Registered User
Mar 22, 2004
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The Kurtzberg book was more of an oral history of the Seals. A lot of interviews with former players.

The Currier book is definitely more of a definitive in-depth history of the Seals.

If you can only choose one, go with this one, IMO.

Thanks. I do want to read both, as I think both styles have benefits, but I do prefer a more in-depth historical type book like this. I'm also somewhat apprehensive of self-published books: while I have no doubt they can be of a good quality, they just lack the authority that a more formally published book has, and that is a big thing from where I'm coming from. That Currier's book also comes from a university press also gives it legitimacy, as they tend to have standards to adhere to.
 
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Steve Currier

Registered User
Jul 16, 2020
22
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Have the paperback on pre-order, looking forward to October (another book I've been long anticipating, non-hockey related, comes out then too).

How does the book compare to the other Seals' book, Brad Kurtzberg's Shorthanded: The Untold Story of the Seals: Hockey's Most Colorful Team (2006)? I haven't read this one yet either, but I know a few here have so am interested in how they work with each other.

I personally really liked Brad Kurtzberg's book as it filled in a lot of holes I had in my own research. It contains a brief history of the team's ownership and management, which was very confusing, as you may know since the Seals had a new owner almost every year. The biggest section of the book is a series of biographies of each and every player and coach who was part of the team. Kurtzberg did tons of interviews for his book, so there are lots of never before heard stories and anecdotes from the players themselves.
 

kaiser matias

Registered User
Mar 22, 2004
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I personally really liked Brad Kurtzberg's book as it filled in a lot of holes I had in my own research. It contains a brief history of the team's ownership and management, which was very confusing, as you may know since the Seals had a new owner almost every year. The biggest section of the book is a series of biographies of each and every player and coach who was part of the team. Kurtzberg did tons of interviews for his book, so there are lots of never before heard stories and anecdotes from the players themselves.

Excellent, sounds like I may have to go and get it to, sounds like both books compliment each other then.
 

Theokritos

Global Moderator
Apr 6, 2010
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I've always been fascinated by the Seals since I saw a photo of George Swarbrick in the May 1988 Hockey Illustrated, which had a feature on the 1967 expansion. I was also an avid card collector back then, and when I went to card shows, I loved looking for cards of players from the 1970s, and I loved those odd Seals uniforms. The NHL also sent me a photocopy of the team's 1975-76 media guide, which was so interesting to leaf through. I had asked them for information about the Seals, but maybe just to get me to go away, someone just copied a whole media guide. I still have it to this day, but also some real copies of a couple of guides.

I never actually got to see them play having been born in 1979, and since no one else had ever written anything about the Seals (this was before Brad Kurtzberg's excellent book), I thought it would be a great, original topic. Back in the 1980s and 1990s, there really weren't many great hockey books on obscure topics, but now you see great titles everywhere and they are so easy to find.

Interesting. I imagine that when writing a book about a franchise that has disappeared, one would at times ask himself: Who am I actually writing this for? The two dozens of old Seals fans who are still around? Then again, the curiosity and originality factor is high and it's nice that a, shall we say, rather obscure topic (for the average fan, at least) can get some exposure and publicity today.
 
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Dan Kelly

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Sep 27, 2017
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I was about to say, I think that book already has a few readers here.

First question to Steve: What made you pick that franchise as the topic? Were you a fan of them yourself back in the day?

i was a fan back when i was a kid ! loved the Funky colored skates, the vomit colored home unis and the underdogness of the team in general !! :silly:
 

Sanf

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Sep 8, 2012
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Nice!

Especially interested about Tom Thurlby. He is as original Seals as it can be. Among the first five signings announced by San Fransico Seals and only original (from 1961) to move with the club to NHL if I remember correct.
 

Steve Currier

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Jul 16, 2020
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Nice!

Especially interested about Tom Thurlby. He is as original Seals as it can be. Among the first five signings announced by San Fransico Seals and only original (from 1961) to move with the club to NHL if I remember correct.

He was a big contributor for me because he was one of the few to not only play with both the WHL and NHL Seals, but he also played on the two championship teams, and he had some great stories about playing for Bert Olmstead. I had a very nice chat with Tom some five or six years ago. I think he still lives up in Kingston, Ontario. He also sent me a nice thank you note after he received a copy of my book. A great gentleman indeed!
 
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Theokritos

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Apr 6, 2010
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Steve, what would you say was the single biggest reason for the failure of the franchise? The instable ownership situation?
 

Steve Currier

Registered User
Jul 16, 2020
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Steve, what would you say was the single biggest reason for the failure of the franchise? The instable ownership situation?
Oh, that's hard to say because there was more than one reason for the team's failure, I think. Ownership was a problem, sure, especially since it was Finley who cheaped out in 1972 and let half the team go to the WHA, but I think if the team had drafted better in the expansion draft, the team would have been better and would have drawn more fans. Placing the arena in Oakland was a big mistake too since the hockey fans were in San Francisco (and now in San Jose). The people of San Francisco, from what I heard, don't like crossing into Oakland, so they were never going to come to games, and others probably felt slighted that their team was moving to another city. Most of all, though, letting all those first-round picks go was probably the biggest reason, because had they hung on to them, they could have drafted much better players, and then fans would have come to the arena. Just look at how attendance was rising at the end of 1971-72 when the team was contending for the playoffs. With a better team the next year, including a good first-round pick, and no players going to the WHA, the team probably would have improved and drawn enough fan support. Instead, it was just the start of a perpetual rebuild.
 
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Dan Kelly

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Sep 27, 2017
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yup, after the 71/72 season, the top 2 Seals point producers, Gerry Pinder and speedy Bobby Sheehan bolted for the WHA, as did Norm Ferguson, Wayne Carelton, Gary Jarrett, Tom Webster, d-man Paul Shmyr....a whole pile of their depth jumped leagues and really that was the eventual death knell for the Seals a few years later ! they never did recover ! o_O
 
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Theokritos

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Apr 6, 2010
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Most of all, though, letting all those first-round picks go was probably the biggest reason, because had they hung on to them, they could have drafted much better players, and then fans would have come to the arena.

Whose decision was that? Bert Olmstead was the GM, right?
 

Steve Currier

Registered User
Jul 16, 2020
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Frank Selke Jr. dealt most of those first-round picks before Charlie Finley came onboard. Finley actually disagreed with the idea of trading first-round picks, believe it or not.

When Olmstead was GM, the amateur draft was not seen as being all that important. It wasn't until about 1970 that the draft became important, when Perreault was the first pick and the year after when it was Lafleur and Dionne.
 
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Theokritos

Global Moderator
Apr 6, 2010
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And about the location, why was the move from the established place in Daly City/San Francisco to Oakland made in the first place?
 

Steve Currier

Registered User
Jul 16, 2020
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The Cow Palace was not considered NHL appropriate, since it had poor sight lines, and it smelled like cows. So the Oakland Coliseum was built to house the Seals, Warriors, A's and Raiders (I think all four teams played there). Big mistake to include just 12,000 seats though, since less than a decade later Mel Swig tried to build a new 17-18,000 seat arena in San Francisco, which ultimately never happened. The Seals really didn't have much chance of surviving in a rink that small, in my opinion. Even if they had sold out every seat, they wouldn't have been better than middle-of-the-pack in attendance.

Funny how the NHL hated the Cow Palace in 1967, but when the Sharks came around in 1991, the NHL thought the rink was just fine for their first few years in the league. Like a fine wine or scotch, the Cow Palace just got better with age, I guess.
 

saskriders

Can't Hold Leads
Sep 11, 2010
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I know it is a pipe dream, but I hope in my life that the NHL can right wrongs and bring back teams that folded, or relocated, through expansions. If the Bay Area can support two MLB teams and has supported two NFL teams then maybe one day they could support the Sharks and the Golden Seals.
 

Theokritos

Global Moderator
Apr 6, 2010
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The Cow Palace was not considered NHL appropriate, since it had poor sight lines, and it smelled like cows. So the Oakland Coliseum was built to house the Seals, Warriors, A's and Raiders (I think all four teams played there).

I understand the idea of multi-purpose arenas and arena-sharing, but four major pro clubs in the same place? That's awfully optimistic. Are there more examples of such a setup being viewed as viable back in the 1960s or early 1970s, or was it a unique experiment?
 

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