Hockey Night in Canada

Last of the NHL broadcast play-by-play legends: Bob Cole’s microphone goes silent


If you were to ask how one might become a legend in Canada, you could do worse than answer by having a storied, long-running career as a National Hockey League play-by-play man, first on radio, later in television.  Think Foster Hewitt, Danny Gallivan, Dick Irwin, and Bob Cole, who signs off the air tonight, and who will be quite likely the last in a line of legendary Canadian play-by-play men hockey broadcasters. Actually, there was Foster Hewitt and then everyone else who came after him in the puck-chasing pantheon. Unlike their often colourful colour commentator cousins, the play-by-play men are the workhorses of the immediate as the longer game unfolds.

Bob Cole called his first NHL game on CBC Radio on April 24, 1969, a game that saw the Montreal Canadiens’ double-overtime Game 6 Stanley Cup playoff semi-final elimination of the Boston Bruins, on Capt. Jean Beliveau’s only career overtime goal. Cole switched from the radio to television side in 1973. “Painting the picture is more important on radio, I think,” Cole told NHL.com columnist Dave Stubbs for a story that appeared online April 4. “On TV, you don’t want to get in the way. There’s the danger of getting in the way by talking too much. There’s no point in my lecturing a viewer when he’s watching the game I’m calling, when my eyes are focused on someone coming down the left side. You have to capture and feel that. A person watching on TV can flow with you. If we’re all talking too much, we’re ignoring what we’re looking at.”

Cole calls his final play-by-play of his half-century career when the Toronto Maple Leafs visit the Montreal Canadiens at Bell Centre tonight at 7 p.m. EDT in a nationally televised NHL hockey broadcast. He is now 85 and lives in St. John’s.

If you want a bit of context to think about just how long Bob Cole has been on air since that first CBC Radio broadcast on April 24, 1969, think of it this way.

The world of April 1969 was largely a world without ATMs (they wouldn’t become commonplace until the early 1980s, although the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) unveiled its first Canadian automated teller machine called a “24 hour cash dispenser,” on Dec. 1, 1969, just 4½ months after the Apollo 11 moon mission, and less than eight months after Cole’s broadcast.

The quartz watch was introduced in 1969 and was considered a revolutionary improvement in watch technology because instead of a balance wheel, which oscillated at five beats per second, it used a quartz crystal resonator which vibrated at 8,192 Hz, driven by a battery powered oscillator circuit.

And, of course, the first message transmitted over the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET), the military forerunner to today’s civilian Internet, was sent by UCLA student programmer Charley Kline from an SDS Sigma 7 a computer the size of a one-bedroom apartment to Bill Duvall, at the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, California Oct. 29, 1969.

The Thursday night of Bob Cole’s first NHL radio hockey broadcast, if you were doing a bit of double duty with an ear on the radio and eyes on the television set, you were perhaps watching Ironside on NBC, The Jim Nabors Hour on CBS or Bewitched on ABC.

That’s how long Bob Cole has been an NHL broadcast play-by-play man.

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Christmas, Toys

Zoomer Dino-Boomer, Kidizoom Smartwatch and The LEGO® Movie Benny’s Spaceship: Top Christmas Toys for 2014 have more computer power than Apollo 11 moon mission in 1969, expert says

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Toad Hall Toys photo courtesy of Jeanette Kimball

The Dream Toys Top 12 list compiled annually by the Gainsborough-based Toy Retailers Association (TRA), representing toy retailers in the United Kingdom and Ireland, considered one of the most accurate indicators of what will feature on most children’s Christmas wish lists, was released in London Nov. 5 and the association says “early indications suggest that 2014 is set to be the biggest for toy sales since 2010.” In the United States, toy sales have stagnated for years at $22 billion annually, according to Anne D’Innocenzio, the long-time national retail writer for The Associated Press in New York City.

But if the UK Toy Retailers Association and London-based NPD Group are right in their overall analysis, expect three of the toys you are going to be hearing a lot about this Christmas to be  Zoomer Dino-Boomer, Kidizoom Smartwatch  and The LEGO® Movie Benny’s Spaceship.

Right in the forefront this year with Zoomer Dino-Boomer is the Canadian toy company Spin Master Ltd., located on Front Street West in Toronto. Spin Master was founded in 1994 in a Toronto garage by  college friends, Ronnen Harary, Anton Rabie and Ben Varadi, who had $10,000 between them. You know the type of entrepreneurial story. Twenty years later, Spin Master is an all-encompassing global entertainment, robotics, toy and digital gaming company, with a design lab in Los Angeles.  It is currently the Number 3 manufacturer in the games category in North America, with double digit growth.

Kids can play with Zoomer Dino-Boomer from Spin Master in autonomous mode via the sensors in his nose, or pick up the control pod to send him on an attack. He shows his moods through his color-changing eyes and can even bust a move. With a price tag before taxes of  $99.97 at Wal-Mart in Canada, Zoomer Dino-Boomer is the most expensive toy on the Dream Toys Top 12 list, but also perhaps the coolest in action. Just remember, cool has a price.

Clive Shelton, owner of Clive Shelton Associates in Bromley, is a chemist and toy safety expert who advises the Toy Retailers Association. He says “there is more computer power in some of these toys than was used in the first mission to the moon. That is the age we live in. They prepare children for their future lives with technology.”

With the Kidizoom Smartwatch “wearable” from Chicago-based VTech, which can store up to 900 pictures, 15 minutes of video and boasts analog and digital clocks, built in games, an alarm and a stopwatch, kids can take photos and videos and use the touchscreen to get creative with photo effects, frames and filters. It includes an alarm, a voice recorder and four learning games.

The LEGO® Movie Benny’s Spaceship is among only three of the Dream Toys Top 12 that are not battery-powered. The name ‘LEGO’ is an abbreviation of the two Danish words “leg godt,” meaning “play well.” The privately held LEGO Group in Billund, Denmark was founded in 1932 by Ole Kirk Kristiansen. The company has passed from father to son and is now owned by Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, a grandchild of the founder.  The LEGO brick, its most important product, was twice named “Toy of the Century.” The brick in its present form was launched in 1958. The interlocking principle with its tubes makes it unique, and offers unlimited building possibilities.

Benny may have spent too much time in space with a lack of oxygen, but, hey, he’s also a master builder. Kids can help him construct the spaceship of his dreams out of Lego, then use the control room to open the cockpit, shoot lasers and fire missiles in a bid to evade the Robo Police.

While updated versions of classic board games such as Parker Brothers’ Monopoly, the real estate game invented by Charles Darrow, an out-of-work heating contractor, which Parker Brothers’ began marketing on Nov. 5, 1935, and Mouse Trap, designed by Colorado’s Harvey “Hank” Kramer for the Ideal Toy Company in 1963, continue to do well year after year, experts said that they are more likely to be considered “family entertainment” and purchased as such.

There is much to be said for the charm of board games and train sets, and, indeed, toys –  wood, metal and even plastic – from an older largely forgotten world now.  I made my first visit to Toad Hall Toys on Arthur Street in the heart of Winnipeg’s Exchange District on a Saturday afternoon last Dec. 21 –  just four days before Christmas, and it was simply, in a word, magical.  And by no means forgotten by its loyal patrons.

Toad Hall Toys was established in 1977 by Ray and Ann England and is Manitoba’s largest and oldest independent toy retailer, priding itself, it says, “on our unique selection, old world charm, and friendly and knowledgeable staff. ”

The store, or course, takes its name from Kenneth Grahame’s classic children’s book, The Wind in the Willows. Today, the store is run by Ray and Ann’s daughter Kari. “We  offer a vast array of products from over 50 different countries. Our mandate is to provide a unique experience that stimulates the imagination, rather than rotate through the latest mass market trend or fad.”

Indeed so.

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