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Encyclopedia > Builder (hockey)

A builder of hockey is a person who works to "manage" or build the game. It does not include forwards, defencemen nor goalies. The Hockey Hall of Fame has a section specifically for builders. Ice hockey, known simply as hockey in areas where it is more common than field hockey, is a team sport played on ice. ... Forward is a hockey player position on the ice whose responsibility is primarily offence. ... The words defense or defence can refer to any of the following: For defense of a doctoral dissertation see thesis committee For the military term see defense (military) Civil defense measures and emergency preparedness In politics, defense may be a euphemism for war For legal defense see defense (legal) For... Patrick Roy, an ice hockey goaltender The goaltender, or goalie, in ice hockey is a player who defends the goal net from shots. ... The Hockey Hall of Fame is in Toronto, Ontario, Canada; it is devoted to ice hockey rather than the field variety of the game. ...


Hockey Hall of Fame Builders:

Name - Election Year

  • Charles F. Adams 1960
  • Weston W. Adams 1972
  • Frank Aheam 1962
  • Bunny Ahearne 1977
  • Al Arbour 1996
  • Sir Montagu Allan 1945
  • Keith Allen 1992
  • Harold Ballard 1977
  • Father David Bauer 1989
  • J.P. Bickell 1978
  • Scotty Bowman 1991
  • George V. Brown 1961
  • Walter A. Brown 1962
  • Frank Buckland 1975
  • Jack Butterfield 1980
  • Frank Calder 1947
  • Angus Campbell 1964
  • Joseph Cattarinich 1966
  • Leo Dandurand 1977
  • Frank Dilio 1964
  • George Dudley 1958
  • Jimmy Dunn 1968
  • Alan Eagleson 1989
  • Emile Francis 1982
  • Jack Gibson 1976
  • Tommy Gorman 1963
  • Frank Griffiths 1993
  • Bill Hanley 1986
  • Charles Hay 1974
  • Jim Hendy 1968
  • Foster Hewitt 1965
  • William Hewitt 1947
  • Fred Hume 1962
  • Punch Imlach 1984
  • Tommy Ivan 1974
  • Bill Jennings 1975
  • Bob Johnson 1992
  • Gordon Juckes 1979
  • General Kilpatrick 1960
  • Seymour Knox III 1993
  • Al Leader 1969
  • Bob LeBel 1970
  • Tommy Lockhart 1965
  • Paul Loicq 1961
  • John Mariucci 1985
  • Frank Mathers 1992
  • Fredrick McLaughlin 1963
  • Jake Milford 1984
  • Hartland Molson 1973
  • Francis Nelson 1947
  • Bruce Norris 1969
  • James Norris 1958
  • James D. Norris 1962
  • William Northey 1947
  • J. Ambrose O'Brien 1962
  • Brian O'Neil 1994
  • Fred Page 1993
  • Frank Patrick 1958
  • Allan Pickard 1958
  • Rudy Pilous 1985
  • Bud Polie 1990
  • Sam Pollock 1978
  • Senator Donat Raymond 1958
  • John Ross Robertson 1947
  • Claude Robinson 1947
  • Philip Ross 1976
  • Dr. Gunther Sebetzki 1995
  • Frank J. Selke 1960
  • Harry Sinden 1983
  • Frank Smith 1962
  • Conn Smythe 1958
  • Ed Snider 1988
  • Lord Stanley 1945
  • James Sutherland 1947
  • Anatoli Tarasov 1974
  • Bill Torrey 1995
  • Lloyd Turner 1958
  • Thayer Tutt 1978
  • Carl Voss 1974
  • Fred Waghorne 1961
  • Arthur Wirtz 1971
  • Bill Wirtz 1976
  • John Ziegler 1987

  Results from FactBites:
 
Builder (hockey) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (76 words)
A builder of hockey is a person who works to "manage" or build the game.
The Hockey Hall of Fame has a section specifically for builders.
Eagleson resigned in 1998 after being found guilty of fraud.
Seattle Hockey Hall of Fame - Al Leader (614 words)
While Frank and Lester Patrick first brought hockey out west in 1911 and helped create a foundation for the sport in the area, it was another man who took the game to the next level in the region, giving it stability and financial success.
By 1932 he was an officer in the league, serving as secretary-treasurer, and he also acted as an off-ice official and timekeeper for the professional Pacific Coast Hockey League in the middle part of the decade.
In 1944 it was renamed the Pacific Coast Hockey League and included teams along the entire west coast and as far south as San Diego.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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