Terry is the goalkeeper. Deaths and terrible injuries of goalkeepers in world football - Radić, Cech, Perkhun. The Greatness and Tragedy of Terry Savchuk

Terry Sawchuk played hockey in a time when wearing a face mask was cowardly.

Considered one of the best goalies in the history of hockey, his speed and reflexes were legendary. He won the Stanley Cup 4 times and received the prize for the best goalkeeper 4 times.

The photograph shows how many pucks he stopped at the cost of his own health, but in addition to this, he was knocked out shoulder joints, repeated fractures of the fingers, ruptured spinal discs and many other injuries. There were more than 400 scars on his body.


Due to constant back pain, he stood at the gate at an angle of almost 90 degrees. Other goalkeepers considered this his innovation, and adopted this position, without even knowing the real reason. But as it turned out, it’s really more convenient to react to throws this way.

Some will say that this is true courage, while others will call it recklessness. One way or another, the world will remember Terry as a great athlete, the last goalie who refused to play with a mask.

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Interesting

The guy stood in the center of the ring. What happened next defies description


Interesting

He is one of the best goalkeepers in the history of the NHL, he was distinguished by fantastic speed and reaction, he preferred to play without a protective mask, but after Hull’s shot the puck hit him in the head, since then he began to wear a mask. Entered the top 100 NHL players in its history.

He had a back problem that made it difficult for him to stand up straight. full height. Since spectators, experts and hockey players did not know about Terry's illness, they for a long time They thought it was some kind of new stand, but then Terry admitted it.

He died after a fight with New York Rangers teammate Ron Stewart, with whom he rented a house in the suburbs of New York.

Career

1949-1955 - Detroit Red Wings

1955-1957 - Boston Bruins

1957-1964 - Detroit Red Wings

1964-1967 - Toronto Maple Leafs

1967-1968 - Los Angeles Kings

1968-1969 - Detroit Red Wings

1969-1970 - New York Rangers

Awards and achievements

Winner of the Stanley Cup 1952, 1954, 1955, 1967, finalist of the Stanley Cup 1957, 1961, 1963, 1964. Winner of the NHL Calder Trophy (1951), Vezina Trophy (1952, 1953, 1955, 1965). In 1951-1953 he was a member of the first NHL all-star team, and in 1954, 1955, 1959 and 1963 - in the second team. In total he played 1034 matches. He won 447 victories in the regular championship, including a record 103 shutouts. This record was broken almost 40 years later by Martin Brodeur.

Records

Holder of the NHL record for the number of matches played in a draw - 172

Savchuk's record for the number of clean sheets (103) lasted 39 years, until Martin Brodeur broke it in 2009.

The Greatness and Tragedy of Terry Savchuk

The great Detroit Red Wings goalie Terry Sawchuk was a loner. A person who has not been a participant in spontaneous drinking. A man who hated signing autographs and being the center of public attention. A man who loved the game, but despised its decorative attributes. A man whose records will be broken, but who will forever remain unsurpassed in the assessment of those who knew and saw him...


"And the toughest opponent you've ever seen", says former Detroit Red Wings defenseman Doug Barkley. — I remember one game against Toronto. He usually wore a baseball glove as a catcher. They have a cutout on the back, no protection. He covered the puck, and some guy from Toronto skated right over it, cutting all the tendons. There was blood everywhere. I took his hand and helped him to the bench. I could actually see white tendons through the deep wound in his arm. But they sewed him up, and on next year he came back and played better than ever.”

Patrick Roy broke Savchuk's record (447 goalkeeper victories), we again remember today the capricious "star" of the "Red Wings", who died under tragic circumstances on May 31, 1970 at the end of his career with the Rangers. Undoubtedly, if he were alive today, Rua's achievements would make him feel uncomfortable.

A magical, tragic career. From the very beginning, Savchuk seemed to be surrounded by sadness. His brother died at 17, and Savchuk inherited his goalkeeper's equipment. “I accidentally stumbled upon the shields,”- he recalls. Lucky case. Because even in golden era goalie art of the NHL, when Glenn Hall and Jacques Plante played, he looked greatest goalkeeper of those days, and therefore of all times.


His career included nervous breakdowns, injuries (from facial fractures to ruptured spinal discs) and a string of unmatched achievements. “I wouldn’t take two Patrick Roys instead of one Terry Savchuk!— Jimmy Skinner swears, former coach The Red Wings, the team Savchuk helped win the Stanley Cup in 1955. — Simply the best goalkeeper I've ever seen, and I've seen Glenn Hall in the juniors and pros, I've seen Plant and Bill Durnan. But this guy, Savchuk, was the best.” Few would argue with this statement.

"People forget that he came into his first training camp weighing 210 pounds, but he was fast as a cat."- says Detroit star of the time Ted Lindsay. — Reaction. Rapidity. Impatience. Drive. He had it all. He was so talented. I mean, the year we won the Stanley Cup, we beat Toronto in four games and then Montreal. And we didn’t miss a single goal at home in all the series. This is something Mr. Rua can only dream of.”


"The Great and Terrible" of the Great Era. While it is foolish to compare different eras, it is clear that the great goalies of Savchuk's era are excellent from any point of view. And each of them had their own style, their own brand, their own habits. Hall, for example, had a habit of going to the bathroom before games to get rid of his anxiety (and breakfast). Plant knitted. Savchuk had a tenacious, fierce gaze. "Wonderful son of a bitch" says Lindsay.

"He was heavy person, there are no questions here, Skinner agrees. — An unfortunate guy in many ways. I think mainly because he lived hockey 24 hours a day. He took the game home with him. He went to bed with hockey. It ruined him. For him it was a career and he wanted to be the best. He was almost ruthless with himself. I think he loved hockey but didn't enjoy it, if you know what I mean. You could forgive him a lot because when the puck was in play, he was worth his weight in gold."
Barkley says Savchuk was "the most bad goalkeeper in training." Sometimes when he was in bad mood, he just walked out of the gate.

« Yuk (Savchuk) used to sit next to Marty Pavelich in the locker room. Marty smiled 365 days a year- Lindsay recalls. — Within a month, Marty would come in and say, “Hey, Yuk.” Yuk would say, “Hi, Marty.” For the next two months, he didn’t say anything back, not “hello” or “go to hell.” Nothing. Poor guy. If he had more common sense, he would still be alive today."


An argument with New York Rangers teammate Ron Stewart, who owed $92 in rent, began in a Long Island bar three decades ago on a May night. It flared up again on the lawn of their apartment building. Savchuk fell on Stewart, hitting his diaphragm on his knee during the fight. The injuries sustained as a result of the fall were fatal. After a month of illness and three surgeries to repair internal damage, Terry Sawchuk died of a heart attack. All he left behind were his records, which seemed unattainable. Still.
"I'm sure it's sad to see them beaten, says Barkley. — It was the same when Wayne (Gretzky) broke all of Gordie's (Howe) records. You can't compare eras. They are too different. No one will beat Terry's 103 clean sheets. This record is safe."
Rua played 120 fewer games to get closer to Savchuk's record, lost 60 fewer matches and played 5 fewer seasons. But as Barkley said, 103 clean sheets is out of reach. Rua trailed by 55 shutouts and was behind in All-Star selections (7 to 5) and Stanley Cups (4 to 3).
“For the first five years of his career, there was no goalie who played better than Terry Sawchuk,” Lindsay said. “And as far as I understand, for another thousand years it will not be possible to find someone similar...”

Interesting Facts
Legendary goalkeeper Terry Savchuk was reluctant to follow new trends, although he himself determined the development of hockey.
During his stellar career, Savchuk was noted as the first goalkeeper who began to stand in goal, slightly crouching and bending, and, of course, as the author of the record for the number of victories won, which lasted 30 years until it was broken by Patrick Roy.
But in the 1959-60 season, when Jacques Plante began using the mask, Savchuk told The Hockey News that this revolutionary piece of protective equipment was just a fad.
“Just because Jacques Plante wears a mask, some people think it helps a lot,”- said Savchuk, who then played in Detroit. — But Plant is a good goalkeeper not because of the mask. I've been a professional goalkeeper for over a dozen years and have never played with a mask. And I see no reason to start playing it now.”


Montrealer Plant, who had been experimenting with the mask, began playing with it after it caught a shot from Andy Bathgate that flew straight into Plant's face in a game against the Rangers.
Bostonian Don Simmons began wearing a mask a little later - in 1959/60.
Savchuk became only the third goalkeeper to wear a mask - in 1962/63.

Choirul Huda, 2017

Not to look nervous. Today there was a truly tragic episode for the entire world football. Indonesian Purcel goalkeeper Choirul Huda died in hospital after colliding with his teammate Ramon Rodriguez at the end of the first half of an Indonesian championship match. Immediately after the tragic episode, the 38-year-old goalkeeper was taken to the hospital, where he died. He was diagnosed serious injuries head and neck.

Alexander Yatan, 2009

A routine training session for the Romanian club Dunarea ended in tragedy. During the two-way game, a penalty was awarded against 19-year-old goalkeeper Alexander Yatan. The ball hit him in the solar plexus. The goalkeeper got up and continued the game, making several more saves, but at the end of the training session he lost consciousness. Yatan died on the way to the hospital.

Jose Marin, 1986

In December 1986, Malaga goalkeeper Jose Marin, playing on the way out, collided with Celta striker Baltazar. Already in the hospital he had an operation, but it did not help - for several weeks Jose Antonio was in a coma and died without regaining consciousness.

Eric Jongblad, 1984

The case of DSV goalkeeper Erik Jongblad has little to do with the goalkeeping profession. During the match, he was struck by lightning and the 21-year-old goalkeeper died on the spot. Eric's father, the famous goalkeeper Jan Jongblad, saw it all from the stadium stands.

10 Worst Injuries in Football History

Football is not only joys, but also sorrows. The worst thing on the field is serious injuries, sometimes costing players their careers and even their lives.

John Thomson, 1931

In the past, when football was more violent and collisions were much more common, deaths on the football field were not so uncommon. In the Scottish Championship match between Glasgow Rangers and Ibrox, 22-year-old goalkeeper Thomson was unlucky. Opposition striker Sam English flew into Thomson's head. The diagnosis was a skull fracture and a ruptured artery in the right temple. The goalkeeper was operated on, but his life could not be saved.

Jimmy Thorpe, 1936

The rule that the ball must not be touched after it has been tagged by the goalkeeper was introduced after this incident. Sunderland goalkeeper Jimmy Thorpe took the ball in his hands, but the attacking opponents tried their best to knock him out. The 22-year-old goalkeeper received multiple chest and head injuries, but played out the match to the end. However, four days later he died in hospital.

Christian Neamtu, 2002

The Universitati goalkeeper was considered one of the most promising in Romania. But his career ended at the age of 21 - during a training camp he received a knee to the head from a teammate, lay in a coma for six days, and then died.

Sergey Perkhun, 2001

The most tragic story Russian football. The career of CSKA goalkeeper Sergei Perkhun, who showed great promise, was cut short in the match against Anzhi. After leaving the gate, he collided head-on with the opposing striker Budun Budunov. On the way to the airport, Sergei fell into a coma, which resulted in clinical death. The doctors couldn't do anything.

Vladimir Gabulov, 2009

Three years earlier, Vladimir Gabulov received a similar injury - in a collision with Welliton, he suffered a fracture of the facial bone. Unable to continue the match, the bloodied Dynamo goalkeeper was forced to leave the field. Fortunately, .

Bert Trautmann, 1956

Let's dilute the list with foreign cases. In the FA Cup final between Manchester City and Birmingham, City goalkeeper Bert Trautmann almost said goodbye to his life. He received a serious neck injury in a collision with an opposing striker, but played until the end and even walked in the celebrations after winning the Cup. Only later, after an X-ray, did the doctors say that Trautmann stood at the gate for 25 minutes with a broken neck and miraculously escaped death.

Petr Cech, 2006

A terrible injury in a match with Reading almost ruined the career of one of strongest goalkeepers XXI century. Petr Cech went to intercept the ball and received a knee to the temple from the opposing forward, Stephen Hart, who did not have time to stop. Cech was incredibly lucky that after such a traumatic brain injury he retained not only his life, but also the ability to play. Since then, Peter has been wearing a rugby helmet.

The great goalie of the NHL is Terry Savchuk (Canadian of Ukrainian origin). He literally felt all the cruelty of the game.

Even after all hockey goalies began using masks, he continued to play without protection, and first put it on only in 1962. By that time, his entire face was covered with welts and scars, there were about four hundred of them.

His body was covered in bruises and cuts. The shoulder joints were knocked out. Repeatedly broken fingers, ruptured spinal discs. He suffered from arthritis. As a child, Terry broke his arm, but due to the fact that he sought help late, it did not heal correctly and was shorter than the other.

As it turned out much later, while standing at the goal, Terry took a position with an almost 90-degree tilt due to back pain. Looking at it, this was adopted by many other goalkeepers, since standing in goal this way actually turned out to be much more convenient.

Despite terrible injuries, Terry never gave up and always returned to the ice. Many were not even aware of his problems. He had incredible reflexes and courage, which obviously helped him become a four-time Stanley Cup winner and a four-time title winner. Best goalkeeper NHL.
In total, his career included 1034 matches, 447 championship victories and an absolute record of 103 clean sheets.

Even after all hockey goalies began to use masks, he continued to play without protection, and first put it on only in 1962. By that time, his entire face was covered with welts and scars, there were about four hundred of them.

His body was covered in bruises and cuts. The shoulder joints were knocked out. Repeatedly broken fingers, ruptured spinal discs. He suffered from arthritis. As a child, Terry broke his arm, but due to the fact that he sought help late, it did not heal correctly and was shorter than the other.

As it turned out much later, while standing at the goal, Terry took a position with an almost 90-degree tilt due to back pain. Looking at it, this was adopted by many other goalkeepers, since standing in goal this way actually turned out to be much more convenient.

Despite terrible injuries, Terry never gave up and always returned to the ice. Many were not even aware of his problems. He had incredible reflexes and courage, which obviously helped him become a four-time Stanley Cup winner and a four-time NHL Goaltender of the Year.

In total, his career included 1034 matches, 447 championship victories and an absolute record of 103 clean sheets.