At the March 16, 2013 Fargo Force game, there was a special appearance by
former NHL-er Henry Boucha, who was selling copies of his autobiography,
as well as signing autographs for the fans. Of course, being the
collector that I am, I had to get something signed, and brought along a
Minnesota North Stars puck.
While
I wasn't necessarily interested in the book, I still was able to send
some cash his way by purchasing this photograph of him with the
Minnesota North Stars, which he signed and personalized to me.
Considered
by many to be one of the greatest high school hockey players in
Minnesota's history, Boucha gained national recognition as a member of
Team USA at the 1972 Winter Olympics. He scored 2 goals and 4 assists in
6 games, and was drafted 16th overall by the Detroit Red Wings in the
1971 NHL Draft, and made his NHL debut after the '72 Olympics were over,
playing 16 games at the end of the 1971-72 season. He would eventually
play six seasons in the NHL with the Red Wings, Minnesota North Stars,
Kansas City Scouts, and Colorado Rockies, but an eye injury forced him
to end his career early in 1976.
A full-blooded Ojibwe,
Boucha hails from Warroad, MN, a small town known for its ability to
churn out Olympic hockey players. In addition to the
Silver-Medal-winning Boucha, there's also Gordon Christian (Silver,
1956), Bill Christian (Gold, 1960), Roger Christian (Gold, 1960), Dave
Christian (Gold, 1980), Gisele "Gigi" Marvin (Women's Silver, 2010 &
2014), and T.J. Oshie (2014). Boucha, as well as Dave, Bill, and Roger
Christian, are all members of the United States Hockey Hall of Fame.
We
don't usually get a lot of autograph opportunities up here in the
Fargo/Moorhead area, but when we do, it's nice to have that opportunity
with somebody so successful and highly regarded in his sport.
Very cool post! I am planning on doing a back checking post on him in the near future. Nice to see he is signing autographs for fans, I might the try getting him via TTM.
ReplyDeleteIf you go to his website (http://henryboucha.com/), his contact information is there. I'm sure he'd be happy to sign anything you send him.
ReplyDeletesweet!
ReplyDeleteIt really is amazing that small town has produced so much talent.
ReplyDelete