Don Cherry (hockey)

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Don Cherry

Don Cherry (born February 5, 1934, nickname Grapes) is a well-known ice hockey coach and commentator in both the United States and Canada. A native of Kingston, Ontario, Canada, Cherry had a lackluster playing career in the American Hockey League and played one game for the NHL's Boston Bruins in 1955.


Coaching career

Besides his outspoken behaviour and dress, the rags-to-riches story of how Don Cherry made it to NHL coach was one of the aspects that made Cherry enduring to his fans. After Cherry's retirement from playing hockey, he had not finished high school and worked unsuccessfully as a Cadilac saleman and construction worker. In the middle of the 1971-1972 season, Cherry became the coach of the AHL's Rochester Americans. After a successful three-year stint in Rochester, he was promoted to the NHL to coach the Bruins. He quickly developed a reputation for being an eccentric, flamboyant coach who pressured his players to get physical. It has been alleged he modeled the Bruins' playing style after that of his dog, Blue. The approach worked as the Bruins were one of the NHL's best teams during the latter half of the 1970s, although they did not win a Stanley Cup under his leadership, loosing the finals to their Montreal Canadiens archrivals in 1977 and 1978. Cherry won the Jack Adams Award as NHL coach of the year in 1976.

Cherry who had an uneasy relationship with Bruins General Manager Harry Siden was fired by the Bruins after a critical coaching mistake during a 1979 playoff series against the Montreal Canadiens. Up by a goal with less than two minutes left in the seventh game, he let too many men on the ice while making a line change. The Canadiens scored the tying goal on the subsequent power play and won in overtime. Many Bruin players from that game would not reveal the extra man on the ice that cost the team a penalty.

Cherry went on to coach the Colorado Rockies the following season, but was unceremoniously dumped after one year after feuding with the Rockies General Manger. Many were convinced that Cherry's presence would have kept the Rockies in place but his efforts were hampered by poor moves and trades by the GM

Cherry was formerly the part-owner and coach of the Mississauga IceDogs, in the junior Ontario Hockey League. At first, he demanded that only North Americans be allowed to play on the team.


Broadcasting

After the left the Rockies, Cherry turned his eyes to broadcasting, landing a job as a commentator on Hockey Night In Canada on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Since the mid-1980s he has regularly appeared in a segment in the first intermission titled "Coach's Corner", with his sidekick, Ron MacLean. This segment is the highest rated part of HNIC. For several years he also had his own half-hour interview show, "Don Cherry's Grapevine".

He has become well known for his unique clothing choices (pinstripe or plaid suits, unusually tall collars and brightly-coloured ties), his dislike of the European style of hockey, catchphrases like "You kids out there..." and overall political incorrectness.

Cherry is generally regarded as being an outspoken conservative on many issues, making him often at odds with the overall tone of CBC programming, which is generally characterized as liberal-leaning. In 2003 Cherry made controversial comments on his CBC segment in support of the 2003 invasion of Iraq. On an American radio program the following week, he lashed out at CBC management for being too anti-American.

In January 2004 Cherry once again was at the centre of a controversy, this time over comments he made about use of visors by NHL players. His statement that the majority of people that wear them were "Europeans and French guys" triggered an investigation by the federal Official Languages Commissioner, and protests by French-Canadians. CBC consequently imposed a seven second delay on the live program Hockey Night In Canada. He was somewhat vindicated when a study was published that showed the majority of visor users in the NHL were indeed French-Canadians and Europeans.

Cherry returned to the news in May 2004 amid rumours that CBC may terminate his contract for HNIC. However, he re-signed with the network in July.

Branching out from his Hockey Night In Canada duties, in 1989 Cherry began to release a series of videos called Don Cherry's Rock'em Sock'em Hockey. The 15th anniversary video was released in 2003.

In October 2004, the CBC program The Greatest Canadian revealed that its 'top ten' viewer-selected great Canadians included Cherry. He joined such greats as John A. Macdonald, Frederick Banting and Terry Fox. Cherry himself remarked that he was inclined to vote for Macdonald. Don Cherry finished in seventh to the horror of Quebeckers and ironically beating MacDonald.


External links


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Preceded by:
Bob Pulford
Winner of the Jack Adams Award
1976
Followed by:
Scotty Bowman


Preceded by:
Bep Guidolin
Head Coaches of the Boston Bruins
1974–1979
Succeeded by:
Fred Creighton
Preceded by:
Aldo Guidolin
Head Coaches of the Colorado Rockies
1979–1980
Succeeded by:
Bill MacMillan

Template:End box

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