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Topic: Ted Lindsay


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NHL

  
  Hockey Heritage North - Kirkland Lake, Ontario - Hockey Players Bios
Ted Lindsay was born in 1925 in Renfrew, Ontario, a small town that once boasted one of the great teams of early professional hockey, the Renfrew Millionaires.
Ted moved to Kirkland Lake at age five, and was a standout in minor hockey in Kirkland Lake before moving to the St. Michaels College junior team in Toronto.
Lindsay politely declined to attend the ceremonial banquet since it was an all-male affair and he felt he owed a debt to his family for its support over his long career.
www.hockeyheritagenorth.ca /players/LINDSAY-Ted-Bio.html   (890 words)

  
  Encyclopedia :: encyclopedia : Ted Kennedy   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Ted Kennedy made what he claims to have been a wrong turn, onto an unlit road that led to Dike Bridge (also spelled Dyke Bridge), a wooden bridge angled obliquely to the road.
Ted Kennedy was a strong supporter of the 1965 Hart-Celler Act which dramatically changed US immigration policy.
Ted Kennedy has maintained a strong record in favor of alternative energy sources as seen in his voting record as a senator.
www.hallencyclopedia.com /Ted_Kennedy   (4970 words)

  
 Ted Lindsay - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Blake Theodore "Ted" Lindsay (born July 29, 1925, in Renfrew, Ontario, Canada) is a former professional ice hockey forward who played for the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks.
Ted Lindsay worked doggedly for the union, and many of his fellow players who supported the union were benched or sent to obscurity in the minor leagues.
Lindsay, one of the league’s top players was traded to the perpetual last place team, the Chicago Black Hawks.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ted_Lindsay   (671 words)

  
 Detroit Red Wings   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Ted Lindsay arrived to the NHL wars in 1944 with a single-minded goal.
Lindsay was NHL scoring champ in 1949-50 and the loop’s penalty-minute leader in 1958-59.
Lindsay proved to also be a pretty fair left-winger off the ice and in 1956, helped to organize the first NHL Players’ Union, a fact which didn’t sit well with Wings GM Jack Adams.
detroitredwings.com /history/wol/wol-tedlindsay.jsp   (543 words)

  
 Ted Lindsay at Thoughtful House
Ted Lindsay is a Hockey Hall of Famer and a former Detroit Red Wings Team Captain.
Ted was named General Manager of the struggling Red Wings in 1977; he turned the team around, and was voted the NHL's executive of the year.
The Ted Lindsay Foundation is a non-profit organization established by Ted to assist research programs that focus on the diagnosis, treatment, and cure for autism.
www.thoughtfulhouse.org /bio_tlindsay.htm   (174 words)

  
 Change{Season 3 of Queer As Folk}   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Ted and Emmett explore the possibilities of a relationship, and the fate of Michael and Justin's comic book is up in the air.
Ted is out on bail and begs Brian to talk to Stockwell on his behalf.
Lindsay is blossoming in her new job at the gallery.
code09.org /qaf3/season3.php?summaries   (447 words)

  
 Bert Lindsay   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The father of hockey legend Ted Lindsay, Bert Lindsay was a star in his own right.
Lindsay was recruited to play goal for the Edmonton team that challenged the Montreal Wanderers for the Stanley Cup in December of 1908.
Following the unsuccessful Stanley Cup challenge, Lindsay spent the 1908-09 season in Renfrew and was the goalie for the Millionaires when M.J. and Ambrose O' Brien of Renfrew created the National Hockey Association for the 1909-10 season.
www.hockeyresearch.com /jwood/bios/bert_lindsay.htm   (268 words)

  
 Hockey Hall of Fame - Stanley Cup Journals: 19
The Stanley Cup was taken to the beautiful cottage belonging to Lindsay's daughter Lynn and her husband Lou in Cheboygan, a community of 5,000 on Mullet Lake in Northern Michigan.
Ted's immense popularity forced the signing to continue half an hour past its scheduled conclusion, but by 12:30, the Stanley Cup was accompanying Ted back to his daughter's cottage.
Ted Lindsay celebrated his eightieth birthday with the Stanley Cup this summer, but it was the fiery winger who gave hockey one of its greatest gifts.
www.hhof.com /html/exSCJ05_19.shtml   (1929 words)

  
 Red Wings Ted Lindsay
Ted joined the Detroit Red Wings later that year and at the age of 19 quickly established himself as a leader.
Lindsay loved the game of hockey and didn't want to sit on the bench or be sent to a farm team so he told Adams that the only way he would play for the team was with a guarantee of not sitting the bench or being sent to the minors.
Even though Adams was tough to deal with, he was smart enough to know what he had in Ted and signed the left winger to a two-year contract with a clause that stated that he wouldn't be sent to the minors and that he would receive a regular shift.
www.redwingalumni.com /legendLindsay.html   (926 words)

  
 NHL-hockey - ishockey och spelare » Ted Lindsay
Lindsay skapade efter segern i Stanley Cup 1955 traditionen att hålla pokalen över huvudet, något som lagkaptenerna har gjort sedan dess.
Lindsay satsade sedan på civil karriär men tränade på skoj med Red Wings och blev inför säsongen 1965 tillfrågad av sin gamle lagkamrat Sid Abel som hade tagit över som coach om han vill hoppa med igen.
Ted Lindsay (1944-65) Matcher Mål Assist Poäng PIM Tot 1068 379 472 851 1808
www.nhlhockey.se /ted-lindsay   (413 words)

  
 Lansing Building Products | What You Want, When You Want It   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Ted was involved in selling, and as President, the overall management of the company.
In 1979, Ted was diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig's Disease).
In March of 1980, Ted died at the age of 57.
www.tedlansing.com /about.asp   (270 words)

  
 Detroit Red Wings - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
By his second season, Howe was paired with Sid Abel and Ted Lindsay to form what would become one of the great lines in NHL history – the "Production line." Lindsay's 33 goals propelled the Wings to the Stanley Cup Finals, where they were swept by the Maple Leafs.
Detroit and Montreal once again met in the 1956 finals, but this time the Canadiens won the cup, their first of five in a row.
In 1957 Ted Lindsay, who scored 30 goals and led the league in assists, helped start the NHLPA and was promptly traded.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Detroit_Red_Wings   (3537 words)

  
 The Hockey News: Headlines: Lindsay says Wings will never be able to have a rivalry like in Original Six days
Lindsay said Tuesday that NHL commissioner Gary Bettman is to blame if attendance numbers are down in Detroit because fans in Hockeytown are sick of seeing teams like Columbus and Nashville so often every year.
Ted Lindsay's comments attributing the Wing's attendance problems to scheduling are clearly the point of view of a former player.
Ted would never acknowledge player salaries are to high, yet buying tickets, parking, and paying $8.00 for a beer and $5.00 for a hot dog will drive away the marginal blue collar Joe who just saw his $25.00/hr job reduced to $18.00/hr.
www.thehockeynews.com /articles/11609-Lindsay-says-Wings-will-never-be-able-to-have-a-rivalry-like-in-Original-Six-days.html   (983 words)

  
 Detroit Red Wings - History - History
Ted Lindsay arrived to the NHL wars in 1944 with a single-minded goal.
Lindsay was NHL scoring champ in 1949-50 and the loop's penalty-minute leader in 1958-59.
Lindsay proved to also be a pretty fair left-winger off the ice and in 1956, helped to organize the first NHL Players' Union, a fact which didn't sit well with Wings GM Jack Adams.
redwings.nhl.com /team/app?service=page&page=NHLPage&bcid=his_wol_wol-tedlindsay   (509 words)

  
 Teddie Neeley Four dedication to Kimberly Zerbus Jacome   (Site not responding. Last check: )
I met Kimberly Zerbus Jacome in April, 1996 and she, along with Ted, were major players in my life from then on.
She shared her love of Ted with me at this time but I will admit a part of me was 'elsewhere' thinking about seeing Ted again myself.
Ted is reading the t-shirt we all signed for him.
www.teddieneeleyfour.com /kim.htm   (1294 words)

  
 Detroit Red Wings Legends: Ted Lindsay
The son of NHL goaltender Bert Lindsay, Ted Lindsay broke into the league in 1944 making the big jump to the NHL at age 19.
Lindsay was a celebrated junior player with the St. Michael's Majors in Toronto, but somehow escaped the talent scouts of the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Lindsay then re-retired and was inducted into the Hall of Fame a year later.
redwingslegends.blogspot.com /2007/10/ted-lindsay.html   (811 words)

  
 Schickel's : Episodes - Season Two
Ted's favorite author, Howard Bellweather, is in town to protest Brian's award while collecting his own.
Brian, Michael, Justin, Emmett, Ted, Lindsay, Melanie and Debbie all overcome various obstacles to show their PRIDE in Pittsburgh’s annual parade.
Lindsay and Melanie struggle to get money for their wedding from Lindsay's parents.
www.wk.net /hanginggardens/qaf/seasontwo.htm   (762 words)

  
 Ted Lindsay: Konstantinov was 'greatest hockey player in the world'
DETROIT -- Hockey great Ted Lindsay testified today that Vladimir Konstantinov was the greatest hockey player in the world at the time of his devastating injury in a 1997 limousine crash and possibly the greatest defenseman of all time.
Lindsay, 82, who won four Stanley Cups with the Red Wings, told a civil trial in U. District Court that Konstantinov would have led the Wings to two more Stanley Cups following their 1997 victory and possibly more if he had not been injured.
Lindsay said he understood the chauffeur had been unable to keep the limousine on the road.
www.detnews.com /apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080512/METRO/805120407   (803 words)

  
 [No title]
In Lindsay's day, NHL players held a second job in the off-season to make ends meet, and elliptical cross-training regimens were decades away from common use.
Lindsay, one of the toughest players of all time, received a 10-minute misconduct penalty in the second period for fighting with Tim Horton.
Lindsay later returned to the Wings as the general manager and briefly was their interim coach in the late 1970s.
www.wzzm13.com /printfullstory.aspx?storyid=45342   (1657 words)

  
 Legends of Hockey - Spotlight - One on One with Ted Lindsay
Ted Lindsay (pictured top row, third from the right) celebrates a Memorial Cup championship with his Oshawa General teammates including Father David Bauer (who had yet to enter the priesthood - kneeling front left) in 1944.
Although having a professional hockey player for a father proved terrific for the athletic genes Ted inherited, as he was growing up, he had ample opportunity to play hockey on the rinks that dotted the area around the Lindsay home.
Mortson and Lindsay, of course, went on to fine NHL careers, but Bauer joined the seminary, and as Father David Bauer, coached St. Mike's to a Memorial Cup championship in 1961 and is now an Honoured Member as a Builder in the Hockey Hall of Fame.
www.legendsofhockey.net /html/spot_oneononep196607.htm   (2590 words)

  
 Queer as Folk Episode Guide - Queer as Folk Season Episodes - TV.com
After consulting Ted about her financial situation, Melanie offers Lindsay the chance to take a year off from work to be a stay-at-home mom for Gus, but the two are still beginning to drift apart.
Emmett tells Michael and Ted that he resisted the temptation that was Zack O'Tool, and that he must distance himself from them if he wants to continue seeing the "true light." Ryder informs Brian that Kip is suing him and the company for sexual harassment.
Ted refuses Dale's proposal to be his "slave." Michael thinks Hank hates visiting his father because he's gay, but it's really because of David's itineraries and over-planning.
www.tv.com /queer-as-folk/show/3177/episode_guide.html&season=3   (3683 words)

  
 Ex-Wing helps unite players - 2/17/05
Ted Lindsay was villified by owners as a troublemaker for his unionization efforts, and the Red Wings shipped him to Chicago.
Lindsay was vilified by owners as a troublemaker, and the Red Wings, an NHL power, shipped him to hockey's Original Six hinterland, Chicago.
Lindsay is concerned that the changing dynamic will continue to take the NHL, and hockey in general, down an ill-advised path.
www.detnews.com /2005/wings/0502/17/F07-92041.htm   (1295 words)

  
 Ted Lindsay Foundation: About Us
Ted Lindsay Foundation: About Us Header graphic goes here...
Because I have always believed in a good fight, in 2001, I established the non-profit Ted Lindsay Foundation with my friend John Czarnecki, whose son, Dominic, is a child with autism.
The members of our small Board of Directors, Advisory Board, and Ted Lindsay Foundation Committee are all volunteers, and I am grateful to them for their hard work..
www.tedlindsay.com /about.html   (311 words)

  
 CBC.ca | Hockey: A People's History - Episode 5: A National Obsession
Never one to back down from a fight on the ice, Ted Lindsay waged his most important battle in hockey's corridors of power.
Lindsay scored 379 goals in his 17 NHL seasons, earning first-team all-star honours eight times, and his 78 points in 1949-50 won him the Art Ross Trophy as the league's top scorer.
Though he came up short in his quest to unite his contemporaries, Lindsay planted a seed of solidarity that blossomed into the modern NHL Players Association, whose members today harvest riches not dreamed of in the time of Terrible Ted.
www.cbc.ca /hockeyhistory/episodesummary/05/post/biographies.html   (347 words)

  
 Topic list: Terrible Ted Lindsay vs Wild Bill Ezinicki - Fried Chicken's Hockey Fight Site
Lindsay and Ezinicki had been warring as far back as their junior hockey days in the OHA league.
Lindsay took 5 stiches on the forehead and the knuckles on his right punching hand were badly bruised.
Lindsay dressed himself and went to the first-aid room where Ezinicki was receiving his stiches.
www.hockey-fights.com /forum/showtopic.php?tid/510251/fbb_session_id/fe176185517e9908c3595d4903e5b76296d154b3be272394d1e98f848a94c404   (1227 words)

  
 Ted Lindsay on Vladimir Konstantinov - HFBoards
The difference here is that Terrible Ted was under oath in court so it's a reasonable assumption that these are his true thoughts and not the usual fluff from athletes.
Hockey great Ted Lindsay testified today that Vladimir Konstantinov was the greatest hockey player in the world at the time of his devastating injury in a 1997 limousine crash and possibly the greatest defenseman of all time.
Lindsay has good reason to exaggerate, but fold all the evidence together and, yeah, I can buy that this is Lindsay's honest opinion.
hfboards.com /showthread.php?p=14111092#post14111092   (1862 words)

  
 USATODAY.com - One strike and we're out
Ted Montgomery writes an exclusive column for USATODAY.com — biweekly during the regular season and weekly during the playoffs.
Lindsay was traded chiefly because of his efforts to organize a players union, and the Red Wings curmudgeonly general manager, Jack Adams, was having none of that.
Today, Lindsay, a ubiquitous and popular presence in the Wings' dressing room even now, must be surveying the landscape that his germ of an idea engendered.
www.usatoday.com /sports/hockey/columnist/montgomery/2004-06-01-montgomery_x.htm   (1054 words)

  
 Ted Lindsay salutes Konstantinov in court - UPI.com
Ted Lindsay salutes Konstantinov in court - UPI.com
The 82-year-old Lindsay, a member of hockey's Hall of Fame, told a federal court jury in Detroit that the Red Wings star could have played another 10 years.
He was paralyzed from the waist down in 1997 when the driver fell asleep at the wheel.
www.upi.com /NewsTrack/Sports/2008/05/12/ted_lindsay_salutes_konstantinov_in_court   (335 words)

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