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Some personal thoughts on Freddie "The Fog" Shero as he joins the HHoF.

July 9, 2013, 5:29 PM ET [21 Comments]
Scoop Cooper
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Congratulations to the late, great Freddie "The Fog" Shero for being elected today almost 23 years after his passing to the 2013 class of the Hockey Hall of Fame in the Builders Category ... a long overdue honor for one of the greatest modern innovators of our game. I had many interesting conversations with Freddie during his seven years coaching the Flyers and in the years that followed, and while the "Fog" sometimes confused me with what he said I also always learned something from him as well!

Prior to his leading the Philadelphia Flyers to consecutive Stanley Cup titles in 1974 and 1975, Freddie had won four other professional hockey crowns as a coach in three different leagues -- twice with the IHL St. Paul Saints (1960 and 1961), and once each with the AHL Buffalo Bisons (1970) and CHL Omaha Knights (1971). Including his pair of Stanley Cup titles, Freddie won six championships overall in twenty years behind the bench following a 16-year pro playing career (1942-58) as a defenseman.


Freddie "The Fog" Shero -- Hockey Hall of Famer


This picture of Freddie above was taken on the opening day of the 1974-75 season Flyers training camp held at the Class of '23 Rink on the grounds of the University of Pennsylvania. Freddie at the time wore glasses with lenses so dark that the team's longtime photographer, the late Bernie Moser, asked him if he had another pair with clear lenses because it was hard to see his eyes. When Freddie said that he didn't Bernie asked me to lend him my glasses which had similar frames to Freddie's but much lighter lenses and that's what he is wearing in this photo -- my glasses!!

In Freddie's memory and honor on this great day here are five brief anecdotes about him (three of which were from conversations with me) that are among my favorites.

NBC televised the NHL on Sundays for a few years in the mid 1970s and had the Flyers at Boston Bruins on its schedule for Sunday, January 27, 1974. The Peacock Network had heavily promoted the game for several weeks as a showdown between Bobby Orr, Phil Esposito, and the powerhouse Bruins against the "Broad Street Bully" Flyers and their All Star goalie Bernie Parent who would go on to defeat the Bruins for the Stanley Cup the following May. Bernie started virtually every game for the Flyers that year ... his first back with the club since returning from his couple of years in exile with the Toronto Maple Leafs and in the WHA ... but when the teams came out for the warmup surprisingly it was the very seldom used backup Bobby Taylor who lead the Orange and Black on to the ice.

Veteran NBC producer Scotty Connell was apoplectic and instantly ran inside the old Boston Garden from the TV truck to find out why. There he found Freddie sitting in a corridor in the bowls of the ancient building calmly puffing on a cigarette. "Freddie what are you doing to me," Connell shouted, "where is Parent?" "Bernie has started the last 22 games," Freddie deadpanned back without looking up. "It's simply Taylor's turn."

This was not the first time that Freddie had given Taylor a surprise start in a big road game that resulted in his later answering a question with his special brand of logic. A year earlier in Montreal Freddie put Taylor in goal for the Flyers on February 17, 1973 as they took on the defending Cup champion Canadiens at the fabled Forum. The Canadiens would drop just ten games in the 1972-73 season on their way to another Cup title, and one of those losses came that night as Shero's Flyers surprisingly defeated Ken Dryden and the Habs, 7-6, as captain Bob Clarke scored the winning goal at 16:31 of the third period to complete a hat trick.

As the final siren blew to mark the end of the game a stunned pack of Montreal hockey scribes and broadcast reporters rushed down from the pressbox to seek Freddie's "explanation" of how he had managed to coach his upstart Flyers to such a shocking slap down victory over the vaunted Canadiens in their own barn. After a few minutes Freddie appeared before the massed Montreal media mob to provide his analysis of why this happened which he did with just seven concise and well chosen words: "They played one goal dumber than us."

After winning the Stanley Cup in 1974 Freddie went to Russia that summer to see the great Soviet hockey coach and Hockey Hall of Famer Anatoli V. Tarasov many of whose hockey ideas and theories Freddie tried to emulate in his own coaching. When I saw Freddie at the opening of training camp that Fall I asked him what he thought of Russia. "It's a remarkable place," Freddie said to me with great seriousness, "and the amazing thing is that there's no crime there!" Taken aback by this (I had spent a month in the USSR in 1964 and knew this wasn't true) I said to him "Really Freddie? Why is that?" Freddie smiled and replied, "It's not allowed."

After a decade with the Flyers as a low scoring "bull in a china shop" left winger, Bob "Hound" Kelly ended his playing career with the Washington Capitals scoring 26 goals -- a career record by a mile -- in 1980-81 for the then perennial last place Caps. I saw Freddie sitting in the lobby of the Flyers training camp in Vorhees, NJ, the following fall and mentioned this remarkable goal production to him which elicited a mild puzzled frown from Freddie. When I asked him why, The Fog replied with great seriousness, "Any coach who gets 26 goals out of Bob Kelly just isn't using him right!"

One of my most memorable chats I had with Freddie happened in 1984 when he was doing color for a season on the radio for the New Jersey Devils. My second book on hockey called "The Hockey Trivia Book" (which I co-authored with Gene Hart) had just been published and Freddie interviewed me about it between periods of a Devils' game against the Flyers at the Spectrum. It was a surrealistic experience that I will never forget as his questions were both foggy and penetrating. These seven minutes will live with me forever.

When Freddie passed in November, 1990, it seemed that the whole hockey world showed up for his funeral in Cherry Hill, NJ, where he still lived with his wife, Mariette. His son Ray, now GM of the Pittsburgh Penguins, gave a beautiful eulogy, and after taking him to his final resting place everybody repaired to a local restaurant which the Flyers had completely booked for the afternoon for all of us to gather together. The bar was open and the drinks were free (and free flowing) to help all of us mourners share our many stories with each other about Freddie "The Fog". By the time I left many hours later I had laughed so hard for hours that it hurt but I was feeling no pain and neither was anybody else anymore. It was a truly glorious sendoff for Freddie and none of us there assembled that day would have missed it for the world!

So congratulations, Freddie, for finally being given the official recognition of being an "Honoured Member" of the Hockey Hall of Fame. But to me and many others this is just giving you the due that you had earned decades ago ... for us you were always a "Hall of Famer"!!
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