1975 Entry Draft
The 1975 PHL entry draft was another strong one. Bruce
Gratton was the first selection, going to the Dallas Metros. Gratton led the
Western junior League’s Edmonton Drillers in scoring two years in a row,
leading them to a league title in 1975. Washington took center Jeff Leroy
second. Leroy is a big center from Manitoba who led the WJHL’s Red Deer Cowboys
to the league semifinals. Toronto took defenseman Doug Nichol third overall,
hoping he would anchor the Racer blue line along with Todd Beirness. Pittsburgh
selected speedy winger Dave Farris with the fourth pick. Farris is an American
kid who moved to Toronto at age 12 and played hockey for the first time at age
15. In only three years, Farris went from a beginner in house league, to a
dominant force in the Ontario Junior League. Vancouver finally got their
much-coveted goaltender in Chris Withrow to round out the top 5 picks. Other
interesting picks included Seattle’s Jake Fairbanks from Cornell University,
the highest pick ever from a US college, while Denver selected the first-ever
Finnish born player in PHL history, Jani Kaaleppi.
1.
Dallas – Bruce Gratton, F
2.
Washington – Jeff Leroy, F
3.
Toronto – Doug Nichol, D
4.
Pittsburgh – Dave Farris, F
5.
Vancouver – Chris Withrow, G
6.
Seattle – Jake Fairbanks, F
7.
Quebec – Etienne St. Laurent F
8.
St. Louis – Kevin Cummins F
9.
Winnipeg – Pascal Renaud G
10.
Boston – Casey Oaks F
11.
Calgary – Ron Borden F
12.
California – Jacques Lambert D
13.
Denver – Jani Kaaleppi F
14.
Detroit – Mike Rigby D
15.
Philadelphia – Kevin Whitmore F
16.
Nova Scotia – Darian Peeler D
17.
Montreal – Adam Olsen F
18.
Chicago – Rob Saskin F
19.
New York – Bryan Trask F
20.
LA – Trent Rawling D
21.
Ottawa – Rob Ashley F
22.
Minnesota – Doug Lindley F
Rule Changes:
The playoff format is expanded to 16 teams.
Retirements:
Doug West, D, Detroit, Winnipeg, Boston (1954-1975)
Doug West retires as one of the greatest defensemen of all
time. West spent the first 12 seasons of his career with Detroit alongside his
brother, Sam. Together, the West brothers helped lift the Mustangs from the
league basement to their first Lewis Cup victory in 1963. In 1966, both West
brothers left Detroit to join the expansion Winnipeg Pioneers. Doug was named
the Pioneers’ captain, leading them to a division title in 1970 before moving
on to Boston, where he helped the Bulldogs win the Lewis Cup in 1971. After
three seasons in Boston, West returned to Detroit just in time for the tail-end
of their dynasty, winning his third championship with the team he started with
in 1974. He had planned to retire but returned for one last season with the
Mustangs.
Bobby Cole, G, Detroit, 1960-1975
Bobby Cole’s career started slowly. He was recruited by the
Detroit Mustangs at age 17 in 1953, but did not crack the lineup until the
1960-61 season when he was 24. Cole immediately made history in his debut on
January 26, 1961 when he became the first goalie in PHL history to permanently
wear a mask, which he had been wearing in the minors since suffering a serious
concussion in 1958. Cole would win his debut and go on to backstop the Mustangs
to a Lewis Cup title two years later. By decade’s end, Cole had developed into
one of the best goaltenders ever to play the game. Between 1969 and 1974, Cole
played a key part of a Detroit dynasty that saw the Mustangs win four Cups in
six seasons.
Ben Williams, F, Quebec, 1955-1975
For two decades, Ben Williams was a fan-favorite in Quebec.
When the Sarnia, ON native arrived in Quebec in 1955, he was one of the only
non-Quebec born players on the Nationale roster. He soon won the fans over,
however, with his hard-nosed play and scoring touch. Williams would team up
with a young Gilbert Giroux during the early 1960s to lead Quebec to four Lewis
Cups in six seasons, including three straight from 1960 to ’62.
Transactions
Detroit trades F Bjorn Rasmussen to St. Louis in exchange
for F Dave Hughes.
Rasmussen joins his fourth team in his career to provide
leadership for a young, rebuilding team, while Hughes joins a rebuilding
Detroit team.
LA trades D Todd Clinton to Chicago in exchange for D Don
Sims.
LA beefs up their blue line with veteran Don Sims while
Chicago gets a solid young D-man in Hughes.
News
In the wake of Skippy Cleveland’s death, the New York Civics
and Calgary Wranglers both announced they would honor him by retiring his
number 3. The PHL however, had no plans to retire it league-wide, until Boston
veteran Don Greer announced that he was switching to number 33. Greer
encouraged every other number 3 in the league to change their number in honor
of Skippy. The players happily complied. I’m proud and happy to give up number
3 in honor of Skippy Cleveland.” Said LA forward Jack Carson, who switched to
number 6. “As far as I’m concerned, there’s only one number 3, and that’s
Skippy Cleveland.”
In July, Alan Garcia revealed some details about the World
Hockey Challenge. The tournament will take place in September, 1976 in Toronto
and feature six countries, Canada, USA, Soviet Union, Sweden, Finland, and
Norway. It will be a round-robin format with the top two teams facing each
other in the final. Rosters will be revealed at the conclusion of the 1975-76 PHL
regular season.