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Opinion | Ken Dryden was more than a great Canadien. He was a great Canadian who helped the Leafs through troubled times

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4 min read
Ken Dryden Leafs

Hall of Fame goaltender Ken Dryden returned to the NHL in 1997 as president of the Maple Leafs, at a time of tumult in Leafland.


Dave Feschuk is a Toronto-based sports columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

Had he single-mindedly pursued a career as a goaltender and retired into obscurity, Ken Dryden would have been heartily eulogized around the hockey-loving world in the wake of his death on Friday at age 78 after a battle with cancer.

Dryden鈥檚 NHL career was as short as it was shockingly flawless. In a little more than seven seasons as the starting goaltender for the Montreal Canadiens, he won six Stanley Cups and five Vezina trophies as the league鈥檚 top netminder. Thrust into the Canadiens鈥 crease in the 1971 playoffs after playing just six regular-season games in the wake of a short minor-league apprenticeship, his backstopping of an underdog team to a championship and sustained excellence thereafter made him the only player in hockey history to win the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP before winning the Calder as rookie of the year. Not long after that, Dryden was in net for Canada when Paul Henderson scored the epochal goal to beat the Soviet Union in the 1972 Summit Series.

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Opinion articles are based on the author鈥檚 interpretations and judgments of facts, data and events. More details

Dave Feschuk

Dave Feschuk is a Toronto-based sports columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

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