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Garry Peters played for four teams in eight
National Hockey League seasons and, after serious knee injuries, settled
in Saskatoon where he coached and became active in Special Olympics and
Kid Sport programming
Garry was born in Regina. Hockey seemed to
be in the family future early and Garry went from backyard hockey to all
age classes in the Regina playground system, playing on five Regina city
championship teams.
Garry played junior hockey for the Regina
Pats for four years, was team captain twice, won the league scoring
title one season and the league's most valuable player award another
season.
He turned professional with the Omaha
Knights, won the rookie-of-the-year honors in the Central Pro League,
and by January in 1965, he was called up to the Montreal Canadiens. He
played on the Canadiens, who won the Stanley Cup in a 1965 series
against Chicago, was later traded to New York Rangers for a season and
then re-acquired by the Canadiens.
Garry went to the Philadelphia Flyers at the
start of the 1967-68 season, the first expansion year in the National
League. Garry wore No. 15 for the Flyers and he made his mark in the NHL
as a checking centre and penalty-killer.
Garry joined the Boston Bruins in 1971-72,
was the most valuable player at their American League farm team but was
called up near the end of the season. He injured his knee, missed the
playoffs but had his name inscribed on the Stanley Cup. He later played
two seasons in the World Hockey Association.
In Saskatoon, he played fastball with
Saskatoon College Lads, who won three provincial senior championships,
became coach of the Western Hockey League's Blades for part of the 1978
season and coached minor teams in the Flyers zone, winning five city
titles.
Garry played with the Saskatoon Old Pros and
also played with the Montreal Canadien Old timers in many of their
exhibition games for 20 years. With the Old timers, most of the proceeds
went to charity, like the Special Olympics, and he was also the key
organizer of a dinner in honor of former teammate Dave Balon, who
received a van from the Canadiens to help him cope with his muscular
sclerosis.
He has
been active with Kid Sport for seven years and with Sask Sport for two,
and it was a Sask Sport function where he was reunited with other NHL
veterans in Regina. |