The 1970 Boston Bruins: Big, Bad and Bobby (2020)

2020 ж. 7 Қаз.
441 427 Рет қаралды

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  • To this day, Orr is the best most complete all around athlete in the history of North American team sports!

    @tommyrawlings3046@tommyrawlings3046 Жыл бұрын
    • Orr is a joke + Yes I remember the clowns, the Big Bad Losers. 2 Stanley cups, glory of a lifetime ... lol... While Montreal CH won 6 Stanley cups in the 70s + In 1976-77, the Habs lost only eight games during the 80-game season (60-8-12). A record that still stands. (Note: they lost 8 game because the incompetence of the coach S. Bowman. They should have lost only 4 or 5 games this season)

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
    • Totally agree Gretzky can't play Defense and OOR could skate around all of them

      @freedom357mag4@freedom357mag4 Жыл бұрын
    • That's when the Habs had a Monolpoly on the Draft

      @freedom357mag4@freedom357mag4 Жыл бұрын
    • @@freedom357mag4 ... Totally agree Gretzky & Orr can't play defense and Orr could skate alone around the rink all night long.

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
    • I would say he and Howe are the most complete hockey players. Orr is faster but Howe is tougher. But what about Michael Jordan? He didn’t have any weaknesses.

      @September2004@September2004 Жыл бұрын
  • STILL get chills watching that goal. Watched every game on a 10 inch black and white with a 'custom made' UHF antenna made from genuine coat hanger steel. Good ole TV38.

    @lynskyrd@lynskyrd10 ай бұрын
  • From a life-long Canucks fan…. this brought a literal tear to my eye. God love the Big Bad Bruins and Bobby Orr.

    @PollyTheWog@PollyTheWog Жыл бұрын
  • Even as a die-hard Blackhawks fan, there was something special about that 70s Bruins team. Just a unique bunch of players. And, of course, they had Bobby Orr.

    @americanexpat8792@americanexpat8792 Жыл бұрын
    • Dryden brought both the Bruins and the Hawks down

      @trevmac8362@trevmac8362 Жыл бұрын
    • @@trevmac8362 .. yes and he was a hell of a hunter !

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
    • you had Orr too

      @TiberiusMaximus@TiberiusMaximus Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@trevmac8362and the habs have been erelavant for over 30 years 🤡🤡 what's your point. Funny only thing habs fans can do is live in the past.

      @ChristianStokes-nv7mh@ChristianStokes-nv7mh6 ай бұрын
  • One of the greatest photos in sports history

    @mikekeeler6362@mikekeeler6362 Жыл бұрын
  • Best season ever 69-70 bruins , so great such cool players , and the greatest goal ever scored

    @MegaSmarterthanyou@MegaSmarterthanyou Жыл бұрын
  • I loved Montreal out of the womb in 1966. I can admit that Orr is the greatest all round player of our time.

    @PropositionJoe1966@PropositionJoe1966 Жыл бұрын
  • Still watch this about once a week....and still get emotional

    @captmodano@captmodano Жыл бұрын
  • When Larry bird was with the Celtics he would look up into the rafters during the national anthem, When a reporter asked him if he was looking at the Celtic championship banners he replied no I’m looking at the number 4 for Bobby Orr, I heard he was the greatest! Quite a compliment!

    @donaldleider7382@donaldleider73823 жыл бұрын
  • Over half a century later, I can still recognize every player by face or number. It's tough to explain now just how much the Bruins *dominated* New England back then ... how youth rinks would book ice time at 3 AM, how once a week the Boston Globe would have a special letter section curated by Phil Esposito (and it'd run at LEAST two whole pages, and I was the happiest kid in Plymouth County the week Phil answered MY letter!)

    @Altasren@Altasren Жыл бұрын
    • About 500 rinks were built in Great Boston between 70-74. No team owned Boston like that team.

      @garysullivan3144@garysullivan3144 Жыл бұрын
  • WSBK TV 38. Bruins fans of my generation will never forget watching these games. I watched on a B&W 13" TV.

    @douglasbrown3493@douglasbrown34937 күн бұрын
  • I was 15 and watched the 1970 game on T.V. in which they won and from that time on I was hooked on playing hockey. I played up to the age of 42 while stationed in Germany on inline skates. Watching this video brought back some good memories.. Thank you!!

    @jerrymontalvo5267@jerrymontalvo5267 Жыл бұрын
  • What a year…1970! My junior year in high school! My best friend’s aunt had season tickets to the Bruins, and rarely missed a game, even when they were at the bottom of the barrel. When she had to work late she would give Kathy the tickets, so I probably went to 5 or 6 games… my Dad and brothers were so jealous!! I watched Bobby Orr ‘fly’ past the net (after being tripped) with that Stanley Cup winning goal!!! New England went crazy!!! What an amazing time!! This is a great documentary of that time!! We 3v3ncamped out overnight to get tickets to the pre-season games in 1971! Happy times!!!

    @maureencoyle666@maureencoyle666 Жыл бұрын
  • Sending this to my father For Father's Day Sanderson was a beauty

    @franksessions4346@franksessions43462 жыл бұрын
  • Orr had only 5-6 un- injured seasons. Imagine if he was able to play nonstop into his mid 30’s or so. Would have put up incredible numbers

    @k-laus9435@k-laus94353 жыл бұрын
    • Sad. To think he came into the 1968-69 season at 18.

      @wesleybarton3871@wesleybarton38713 жыл бұрын
    • His all time plus minus is Plus 124. He won every major award short of the Vezina that Hockey has. That ALONE is staggering. Imagine if he had had Bourque's longevity? Holy Shit

      @rf396@rf3963 жыл бұрын
    • 1974-75 was his last great season

      @michaelleroy9281@michaelleroy92812 жыл бұрын
    • @@rf396 Or Gordie Howe’s longevity, whom BOBBY believes, was the best hockey player, EVER.

      @dotarsojat7725@dotarsojat7725 Жыл бұрын
    • I think Gordie Howe said it best: losing Bobby Orr was the worst thing that ever happened to the game. What might have been

      @jamemcca@jamemcca Жыл бұрын
  • Awesome day to wake up to Boston Bruins history!

    @donaldmoore4412@donaldmoore4412 Жыл бұрын
  • I remember watching this team in the early 70s. I am Habs fan and the Habs did very well against them.

    @merc340sr@merc340sr Жыл бұрын
  • 50 years later and i still get goosebumps watching it, every front door in the meighborhood opened up and we were all screaming our heads off!!

    @drjwbriand@drjwbriand3 жыл бұрын
    • Yes I remember the clowns, the Big Bad Losers. 2 Stanley cups, glory of a lifetime ... lol... While Montreal CH won 6 Stanley cups in the 70s + In 1976-77, the Habs lost only eight games during the 80-game season (60-8-12). A record that still stands. (Note: they lost 8 game because the incompetence of the coach S. Bowman. They should have lost only 4 or 5 games this season)

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
    • @@catholiccowboy8545 hey, i'll give it to ya that the habs are most likely the best team in history, and even though i was born in montreal and grew up in mass. i still think orr (a canadian of course) is the best defenseman in nhl history.

      @drjwbriand@drjwbriand Жыл бұрын
    • @@drjwbriand if you are searching for the best defenseman in NHL history, the only place you're going to find it it's of course with the Montreal CHC. Because what kind of strange Dman was B. Orr, if he ever was a defenseman ?? You mean he was great because he could start his shift or routine on his zone then move the puck by himself all over the rink, miss his shot to the net, pick up the puck back and skate back to his D. zone (with all the other team players on his tail), blocks some shots on his way, then done it over again (always by himself) all over, up side down the rink and wow he shoots he scores. No help wanted ! He should have tried the Ice Capades. He wasn't a defenseman he was defense/offense human-fly rocket. No wonder why Mtl won so many cups with a single man team like the Big Bad Bruins. Americans love so much any show off. ** Serge Savard was what a Dman should be (9 cups)

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
    • Ditto!

      @garysullivan3144@garysullivan3144 Жыл бұрын
  • Shaking Bobby's hand was one of the highlights of my life as a kid. I have that picture on a shelf in my office and every time I'm having a hard day, I look at to bring myself back and smile.

    @gnb3472@gnb3472 Жыл бұрын
  • i agree bobby orr is the goat,his timeless talent and brilliant creativity, made me the hockey player i was ,i had his poster in my bedroom where i laced my skates the same way he did and i loved the game like he did,what a privelidge to grow up watching the bruins, ps im from philly.

    @frederickmaher2513@frederickmaher25133 жыл бұрын
  • This brought tears to my eyes.

    @dennis3351@dennis33517 ай бұрын
  • Bobby Orr was such a unique talent. He not only changed the pace of the game but also brought great success to the Bruins when they had nothing for years!

    @ENGlishJELLo-yk7up@ENGlishJELLo-yk7up4 ай бұрын
  • Great years! I started playing hockey in 1971 so I was watching games on TV. My uncle lived in Mass and was a well respected hockey coach. He bought me a record album of some of the play by play of the 1972 series against the Russians that I used to play on my little victrola.

    @reidwhitton6248@reidwhitton62487 ай бұрын
  • Still have his first book "Orr On Ice"...given to me as a Christmas gift...think I was 9 or 10 and was the best gift that year above all the toys etc. This video bought me back to a wonderful time as a boy...sincerely, I thank you.

    @238839@238839 Жыл бұрын
  • I am a Bruins fan born in 76 so I never saw them play. But the reality is I can name more players from those teams than I can from Bruins teams I actually watched play.

    @DrFunk-rk6yl@DrFunk-rk6yl3 жыл бұрын
  • As an 11 year old kid was lucky enough to be in the Garden for the May 10th, Mother's Day game. This changed my life and the whole city of Boston. Still have the program, still have the mug.

    @douglasbrown3493@douglasbrown34937 күн бұрын
  • Summer of '69 was the year my family moved up to Boston. My folks gave me a pair of skates for Christmas and I immediately learned to play ice hockey AND became a fan of Bobby Orr and the Bruins. While I haven't lived in New England in 43 years I still consider the Bruins of 1970 to be my favorite sports team ever. And I consider myself most blessed to have been a fan of this the greatest sports team in history. With Orr the greatest athlete of all time. These men galvanized New England. They were probably at least as popular as the Beatles were in 1964.

    @jorgecallico9177@jorgecallico91772 жыл бұрын
    • Yes I remember the clowns, the Big Bad Losers. 2 Stanley cups, glory of a lifetime ... lol... While Montreal CH won 6 Stanley cups in the 70s + In 1976-77, the Habs lost only eight games during the 80-game season (60-8-12). A record that still stands. (Note: they lost 8 game because the incompetence of the coach S. Bowman. They should have lost only 4 or 5 games this season)

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
  • I was 11 years old in 1970 in NH and my dad would send me up onto the roof of our house to move the uhf antenna into a position where the game would come in. He would yell out of the den window right there, no go back,, for 20 minutes. You just could not miss even one game! It was absolutely incredible, and nothing has matched this era in Boston sports and I suspect never will. Thank you Bobby!

    @mikepowers3395@mikepowers33953 жыл бұрын
    • Sure your Dad wasn't trying to get you to fall off the roof for the insurance $$$? j/k - they were great times.

      @acousticshadow4032@acousticshadow40322 жыл бұрын
    • "The Crazy Things We Did in Order to Improve The Frequency For A Better Connection & Service in Order To Watch Our Boston Bruins!" "We Had To Go Through A Simular Process With Our Antennas in Order To Get A Good Reception!"

      @thomaspsanzi8947@thomaspsanzi89472 жыл бұрын
    • @@thomaspsanzi8947 I’m a Montrealer born in 61 and used to watch the Bruins Sunday nights on Channel 33 pbs (WHBH?) with a coat hanger for u UHF antenna lol. Bobby was my hero loved my black #4 Boston jersey. It really bugged my friends (who were all Habs fans) I like the Habs now but that Boston team was great. We had an old arena here that was cold and had the best ice and when ever I played there in my head I was in the Gardens. Thanks Boston thanks Bobby and all the rest.

      @johngore7744@johngore77442 жыл бұрын
    • WGBH

      @johngore7744@johngore77442 жыл бұрын
    • @@johngore7744 No, no, no...WGBH was/is a PBS station. They did college hockey at one time, but no pro stuff. It was WSBK for the Bruins. Otherwise, you backslider! How dare you utter the devil's name (Habs) in same sentence as our sacred Boston Bruins! You should be tossed into the Trough of Justice!

      @acousticshadow4032@acousticshadow40322 жыл бұрын
  • This kind of hockey was/is FAR more entertaining than what they are selling today.

    @joshuamervis@joshuamervis Жыл бұрын
  • This is great I’m a Montrealer born in 1961 and my older brother and me were huge Bruin fans at that time. All my friends hated my #4 black Boston jersey. Loved Cheevers mask. Sadly I’m now a fan of Les Canadiens. But that Bruins team always takes me back. 😎

    @johngore7744@johngore77442 жыл бұрын
    • Wheres montreal now

      @agtbruinsman7190@agtbruinsman7190 Жыл бұрын
    • @@agtbruinsman7190 nowhere lol

      @johngore7744@johngore7744 Жыл бұрын
  • As a Montreal fan for 50 years I love Bobby Orr as a player and person ! Boston vs Montreal was great entertainment ! Great memories !

    @riobabic8960@riobabic89603 жыл бұрын
    • Yes but the Habs lifted 8 cups during Orrs 12 years in the league showing you how weak the competition was back then. The Leafs and Habs missed the playoffs in 1970 pretty much giving the cup to the only single real team left🤷🏼. The Leafs had a line called The Over the Hill Line in the late 60’s. A young Orr was competing against old men🤣

      @ghytgb@ghytgb2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ghytgb tell me that you were kidding... Orrs 12 years were actually 8 as his 1st year before Espo & Co. was traded and he barely played his last 3 seasons (not a single playoff game). And the Leafs were nothing to compare to the Rangers or Black Hawks in early 70s (who knows what would happen if not poor playoff Giacomin goaltending and that 1971 accident goal against Tony).... But you melted my heart by having Dennis as your avatar

      @esb-ol6yd@esb-ol6yd2 жыл бұрын
    • Because Montreal cleaned their clocks every time they met right ?.....

      @mikemyros4142@mikemyros4142 Жыл бұрын
    • @@mikemyros4142 The worst thing for the 70's Bruins were the 70's Habs !

      @stephenp.6395@stephenp.6395 Жыл бұрын
    • Still the greatest arch rivalry in pro sports history bar none.

      @garyblanchard1084@garyblanchard1084 Жыл бұрын
  • We used to flatten a tennis ball and where out our hockey sticks playing street hockey all year. No net, no boards, just a couple of rocks for the goal crease. Two or three hours after school, and most of the day a lot of times during summer.

    @andrewmantle7627@andrewmantle76273 жыл бұрын
    • We did too and we were allowed to keep our sticks at the back of the classroom

      @Calers-gu1ib@Calers-gu1ib2 жыл бұрын
    • Used to have to get my runners from the lost and found at school ,I'd wear out a pair in less than a month.

      @rickszabo4312@rickszabo4312 Жыл бұрын
    • We used to use a plastic

      @mikekeeler6362@mikekeeler6362 Жыл бұрын
    • We used a rubber puck on snowy days

      @KevinJohnson-jc9ju@KevinJohnson-jc9ju Жыл бұрын
  • Those were the best years of my life, watching the B's on T.V. 38, and if I was lucky enough for my father to get tickets, I would look so forward to going and sitting at the old Boston Garden which was so small that you were so close to the ice.

    @stephendacey8761@stephendacey87613 жыл бұрын
    • fred cusick and johnny peirson, the best

      @TheTruthSeeker756@TheTruthSeeker7562 жыл бұрын
    • the old buildings were the best atmosphere

      @dennis3351@dennis3351 Жыл бұрын
    • With Don Earle doing play by play.

      @liraloo@liraloo Жыл бұрын
  • 44:24 Still gives me Full Body Goosebumps. The Standard for Boston Bruins Hockey. Then, Now and Forever. Long Live, "The Big Bad Bruins".

    @a.m.c.3181@a.m.c.31813 жыл бұрын
    • But they were all Canadian

      @danwhyte3524@danwhyte3524 Жыл бұрын
    • @@danwhyte3524 that's true but they were bostonians to us. what ever we were doing on game night the bruins came first.

      @steveperry1344@steveperry1344 Жыл бұрын
    • no bruins team or any nhl team since comes close to that group in my mind anyway.

      @steveperry1344@steveperry1344 Жыл бұрын
  • Only D man to win the scoring title...twice. greatest off all time.

    @mercuryman77@mercuryman774 ай бұрын
  • Wow just watched this again with my kids , boy do your eyes become teary, just amazing

    @staf1975@staf1975 Жыл бұрын
  • Back in the day , as a young kid on the major mud show 😂😂 there was nothing bigger for us kids, than street hockey , thanks to these great players, love you Bobby, Derick, pie eye and Esposito and all my idols growing up 👍👍👍😂😂✌️✌️Wow thanks for the memories, channel 38 that was an antenna balancing nightmare 😂😂 thank you for such great memories 👍👍👍

    @wakeupamericaandresist2413@wakeupamericaandresist24133 жыл бұрын
    • I was thinking about Chanel 38 while watching this. Our color TV downstairs didn’t have a UHF tuner . My mother had a small black and white TV that picked up UHF in her upstairs bedroom. You should’ve seen the antenna enhancements we did so we could get the signal. Like Howey Long and Dennis Leary said our faces were 2 ft. From the screen. And when SupORRman sored thru the air the whole neighborhood went off like 4th of July fireworks 💥

      @terrabull-shitty5832@terrabull-shitty58323 жыл бұрын
    • @@terrabull-shitty5832 Hello Terra, I had to come back and relive the memories 😂😂, it’s like a Christmas present 🎁🎁

      @wakeupamericaandresist2413@wakeupamericaandresist24132 жыл бұрын
  • I was there, there, there - 20 rows back of the goal - favorite day of my whole life - in between the third period and the start of overtime, every single person at the Garden turned to the person next to them and said, "Orr's gonna score."

    @neilroberts1171@neilroberts1171 Жыл бұрын
  • The greatest photograph in NHL history...Bobby doing the Superman after scoring the Cup winning goal.

    @ajaxmaintenance3894@ajaxmaintenance38943 жыл бұрын
    • to this day after all these years I have never ever seen a pro athlete of any sport doing an almost perfect super man leap on a hard floor, sweet Lord!

      @8kigana@8kigana3 жыл бұрын
    • he was actually tripped as the blues player put his stick in between his ice skate blade.

      @waynejohanson1083@waynejohanson10833 жыл бұрын
    • @@waynejohanson1083 hahaha, most celebrated trip of joy if there ever was one,😆

      @8kigana@8kigana3 жыл бұрын
    • Yes Orr flying through the air just after sweeping the St Loser Blues while outscoring the Blues old goalie Glenn Hall 24-6 with the Leafs and Habs out of the playoffs that year. Yes that statue is very well deserved 🤣

      @ghytgb@ghytgb2 жыл бұрын
    • @@waynejohanson1083 know who Tripped him ? Al Arbour !

      @richardmanginelli2624@richardmanginelli26242 жыл бұрын
  • I was a teen when this team won the Stanley Cup. They won two while I was in high school. Growing up in the Boston area until I was 9, then moved to Mississippi, where there is no hockey, no one else where I lived even understood hockey, so I celebrated alone. Since that time, I became a fan of wearing caps so naturally I looked for a Bruin cap. Never found one., for decades. I lived in Dallas and Florida in later years and still never found a Bruins cap. Christmas of 2010, I am living in Columbus Georgia and go into a hat store in the local mall and there it is. My Bruins cap. And they had TWO!! I spent my last 25 bucks for it, I had looked for one for 35 years or so. Now I had one. And wouldnt you know it? The year I find my cap, the Bruins win another Stanley Cup, after a 39 year drought. So, even though I know I had nothing to do with it, I am gonna claim a bit of responsibility since the year I found my cap, the Bruins win another cup. LOL And I am taking that to the bank.

    @newdistbear@newdistbear3 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for sharing your story. Hockey is number one sport here in Canada and always will be.

      @mckessa17@mckessa173 жыл бұрын
    • That's an amazing story. Some things just are meant to happen

      @maxrcrypto@maxrcrypto3 жыл бұрын
    • Great story!

      @joeipp98@joeipp983 жыл бұрын
    • Hockey before 1980 sucked

      @ghytgb@ghytgb3 жыл бұрын
    • @@ghytgb Guess Les Habitants you are usually on about were lousy teams winning 4 Stanley Cups in a row in the 50s and 1976-79.

      @wesleybarton3871@wesleybarton38713 жыл бұрын
  • I remember... Habs fans from Montreal, Bobby Orr was the greatest pure talent I ever saw... They were Béliveau but that was different, he was the gentleman, puck handling like only he could do, but it was different... Boby Orr was different, never a defence ever played before like him... after he played all was different... but this was pure talent... he really did float on ice as others were just skating...

    @lalalafamille@lalalafamille3 жыл бұрын
  • Boston was home to an impressive line up of greats including: Tom Brady, Larry Bird, Bill Russell, Carl Yastrzemski, Roger Clemens and Ted Williams, yet Bobby Orr sits atop them all in the hearts of New Englanders.

    @davebuehner4307@davebuehner4307 Жыл бұрын
  • What a great documentary, I've watched it so many times

    @dtmania@dtmania2 жыл бұрын
  • Ken Hodge had the most wicked slap shot I had ever seen, he was a big man, with Espo, Cashman and Hodge, man that line was amazing

    @mo9504@mo95043 жыл бұрын
    • Yes that line really gave it to the Seals, Barons and the other ten to fifteen pathetic teams back then. So great🤣

      @ghytgb@ghytgb2 жыл бұрын
    • uhm, Bobby Hull. Problem was, nobody saw it.

      @rtaylor802@rtaylor8022 жыл бұрын
    • Trivia: Wayne Cashman was the last player who played in the original 6 to retire ( 1983)

      @michaelleroy9281@michaelleroy92812 жыл бұрын
    • yeah but he was spastic

      @DonQwantsyou@DonQwantsyou2 жыл бұрын
  • I listened to Johnny Most under my blanket 👍🏻🍀🇺🇸👊🏻

    @proteusaugustus@proteusaugustus2 жыл бұрын
  • I love hockey I grew up in San Diego with WHASan Diego Mariners but I love the NHL and the Boston bruins were fun to watch Bobby Orr and especially when they played the Philadelphia flyers Dave Schultz for those guys would fight and have a hell of a game those were the good old days keep up the good work I love this channel

    @kensteel4469@kensteel4469 Жыл бұрын
  • Most complete player ever. Wayne never threw a check, blocked a shot, or fought. Never saw Wayne skate backwards. Five Orrs vs five Wayne's, number 4 wins every time.

    @mercuryman77@mercuryman774 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic video! Bobby Orr’s team👍 Unreal how he played…. How many levels above everyone else. Best player Ever to play the game: bar none👍👍

    @barrydeacon3551@barrydeacon35512 жыл бұрын
    • Yup and the records are gretzkys That’s the shame of the nhl

      @happymantom@happymantom Жыл бұрын
  • That,sMe at 12,31 getting scored on .i was the goalie with the Seals,Proud to be in this video,Loved going into the aBoston Garden,Gerry Cheevers was my lifetime Idol and Great friend.I know Only One thing in my Life for Sure.Bobby Orr was the Greatest Athlete that ever lived or ever will live. Gary Smith

    @marshallsmith87@marshallsmith872 жыл бұрын
  • The 1970 Bruins with Orr, Turk, Hodge, and Esposito were unstoppable! They were fun to watch as a kid!

    @WilliamHBaird-eq2hp@WilliamHBaird-eq2hp2 жыл бұрын
  • These guys weren't hockey players, these guys were rock stars!

    @michaelleroy9281@michaelleroy92813 жыл бұрын
  • At 11 years old I was a goalie in a small town an hour from Parry Sound trying to play a game we played on the lake with kids from our community because our arena was basically a big farmers equipment shelter with electric heaters hanging from the roof and maybe room for 110 or so parents. That year was my worst as most of the guys were huge and I was the only sucker to go in the net. We went to Parry Sound for the tri-town series and their arena was massive as Orr built the town an arena that year after the big win and man it was electric we thought we were truly REAL players haha. Played for 20 some years in the net and watched many a cup series routing for Toronto still am today so I Love this game from a kid and met Bobby and his brothers years after playing hockey in Muskoka and those memories are still great times thanks to that kid from Parry-Hoot. Great family from good strong roots in Canada like many players today like the Great one we make the game from our youth, its our sport -PERIOD Americans can have their football and baseball. Loved the video it was amazing memories TY.

    @woxineaucrows7355@woxineaucrows73552 жыл бұрын
  • This brought back such great memories!!!! Outstanding special.

    @stevenjohnson3875@stevenjohnson3875 Жыл бұрын
  • Just viewed this; I got hooked on hockey in 1966 in N. Jersey as a big Rangers fan. I just wasn't aware of how connected Boston was w/ the Bruins, until seeing this video, tonight. Was moved to L.A. in 1967, the first year the Kings had a franchise, so still a big fan of the game, seeing the Kings finally win 2 Cups in 2 years, about 10 yrs. ago. Winding down now, in retirement, so not as close to the game since Gretzky retired and since the Kings finally won their 2 Cups.😊

    @timmellin2815@timmellin281519 күн бұрын
  • I was 13 when they won the cup, but watching Bobby in his rookie year set the stage for a love of hockey that still burns bright today as I still play at 66. My thirst to want to watch him and the Big, Bad, Bruins has never waned.

    @kevinstorti3047@kevinstorti30478 ай бұрын
  • I grew up with Bobby Orr, I used to cut articles out of the newspapers, anything about Bobby I had it. He was my hero. Oh , I forgot to tell you I was from Montreal.

    @ianmcculloch6839@ianmcculloch68393 жыл бұрын
    • He was great when playing against those weak ass AHL quality teams that filled up the league but when facing the Habs he looked like he was in High School🤷🏼

      @ghytgb@ghytgb3 жыл бұрын
    • @@ghytgb are you near sighted ?

      @ianmcculloch6839@ianmcculloch68393 жыл бұрын
    • Funny thing the Bruins manhandled Montreal during the season, in the playoffs it was different.

      @appletile2887@appletile28873 жыл бұрын
    • @@appletile2887 it was that way against the Canadiens forever like the too many men on the ice game in game 7 in 1979

      @michaelleroy9281@michaelleroy92813 жыл бұрын
    • Les Habitants have not had a decent hockey team since 1993. Then the only competition for the Cup was the L.A. Kings with The Great One and not much else.

      @wesleybarton3871@wesleybarton38713 жыл бұрын
  • This Orr was pure gold for the city of Boston and the hockey world.

    @appletile2887@appletile28873 жыл бұрын
    • "Bobby Orr Woke Up The City Of Boston to The Game Of Hockey Like No Other!"

      @thomaspsanzi8947@thomaspsanzi89472 жыл бұрын
  • Dennis , shoulder pads was not the issue young hockey players followed - he didn’t wear socks and just 2 strips of tape on the stick blade - that was the recipe !!!

    @aidanorsino1@aidanorsino13 жыл бұрын
  • Other than the Montreal Canadiens of the 1970s this was the greatest team to watch ever. Orr is and was the GOAT.

    @jmcg5838@jmcg5838 Жыл бұрын
  • This is what is called a storybook season, great video

    @michaelleroy9281@michaelleroy92813 жыл бұрын
  • I was at that game! It is one of the highlights of my life and I have the picture. A few years later I met Bobby when he visited my high school (Dedham High) and got his autograph. I now live in California and still follow the Boston Bruins games.

    @towladycbd@towladycbd Жыл бұрын
  • Jean Beliveau's goal in the second OT (23:36) was the only goal he ever scored in OT in his career. This was a very tense game--it started on a Thursday night and didn't end until the early hours of a Friday morning--the Bruins were devastated losing this game and carried that determination into the 1969-70 season when they won the Stanley Cup (Montreal actually missed the playoffs that year when they lost a critical game to Chicago on the last day of the season)

    @bufnyfan1@bufnyfan13 жыл бұрын
  • There will never be a greater more complete talent on offense, and defense, like Bobby Orr

    @antonioangelocento9855@antonioangelocento9855 Жыл бұрын
  • This was awesome it brought back so many memories. I have been a Bruins fan since I was 9 years old just before Bobby Orr started playing. My friend and I were the only Bruins fans in our area everyone else was either Leaf fans or the dreaded Habs fans. I have had a lot of Bruins memorabilia over the years. My favorite piece is of that famous goal. I found an vintage frame that had a large picture and a mirror on either side. That famous picture is now the center piece and the mirrors are gone and replaced with some of my favorite Bruins players cards. I am planning to move out of the country when I retire at the end of year and have to travel light so can't take it with me but will always be a Big Bad Bruins fan.

    @brianbaxter3913@brianbaxter39133 жыл бұрын
  • Look at these legends. Bobby Orr was my childhood hero. My family couldn't afford for me to play hockey, so I played soccer and I insisted on being on defense because of #4.

    @julio_scissors@julio_scissors2 жыл бұрын
  • My hero!

    @Canuck516@Canuck516 Жыл бұрын
  • Jean Beliveau related a story of how a few years later he and his wife were in Boston during the summer and they were walking by Fenway Park as a game between the Red Sox and Yankees was going on--a ticket taker recognized him and immediately ushered them into seats right behind the Red Sox bench--despite defeating the Bruins in many games during the course of his career Mr. Beliveau was deeply respected even in Boston

    @bufnyfan1@bufnyfan13 жыл бұрын
    • you mean behind the dugout, but this 'aint about jean the don, it about the B'S

      @DonQwantsyou@DonQwantsyou2 жыл бұрын
    • I was 15 in 1970. We lived in Brookline. I distinctly remember being relieved that we didn't have to go through the Canadiens to get to the Stanley Cup. We just couldn't beat them back then.

      @rftulie@rftulie2 жыл бұрын
    • Appetantly Beliveau was an excellent baseball player and was close to pro level.

      @johngore7744@johngore77442 жыл бұрын
    • Another interesting tidbit about Orr as told by Beliveau was that when the Canadiens lined up for a faceoff against the Bruins, the placement of their players was due solely to where Orr was, not any of his teammates.

      @September2004@September20042 жыл бұрын
    • @@rftulie ... True. Orr's Bruins NEVER beat Montreal in the playoffs, despite three tries: in '68, '69, & '71.

      @34Packardphaeton@34Packardphaeton2 жыл бұрын
  • I'm in New York and a big Ranger fan and i remember that Stanley Cup and i loved the Bruins to me still love the original six

    @thomasguerriero8189@thomasguerriero8189 Жыл бұрын
  • Is my favorite team to this day!

    @usthem9145@usthem91458 ай бұрын
  • No team ever in the history of Boston had this big of an impact on the city.

    @rafemanrafeman6705@rafemanrafeman670510 ай бұрын
  • Saw the Bruins tie the Rangers 2-2 on Dec. 3, 1966 at the Garden. Orr got an assist on the first goal - great memory.

    @northernlight696@northernlight696 Жыл бұрын
    • Funny but i don't remember seeing Orr in his defensive zone very often. He was all over the ice like a Ice Capade skater but very rarely on defense. Conclusion Orr was a forward player and surely not a defenseman hense a horrible defense player. ** And In the meantime Mtl won the cups. Montreal has always had at least 4 or 5 Orrs on its team.

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
    • @@catholiccowboy8545Montreal had zero Orr's on their team and failed to win the 1970 cup - funny.

      @northernlight696@northernlight696 Жыл бұрын
    • @@northernlight696 .. lol... You watch too much curling .... Do you know that the Leafs have not won anything for half a century?

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
    • @@catholiccowboy8545 Poor Leafs - maybe Orr should not have scored so much against the Leafs. Possibly he hurt their feelings by helping to eliminate them - so sad

      @northernlight696@northernlight696 Жыл бұрын
  • I love this documentary--and I'm a lifelong Rangers' fan. I read about Bobby Orr as a kid, after he retired and heard all these amazing stories about him. The thing that stands out most is his humility--how he used to put his head down after he scored so as not to embarrass the goalie. We desperately need a Bobby Orr in all major sports. The thing that struck me was that when the guys were telling Bobby Orr stories, he still had his head bowed. What a great man and hockey player!

    @fasteddie9867@fasteddie98673 жыл бұрын
    • This is one of the best attributes was how humble Orr was. One coach asked him why he had an open net but passed the puck to a kid who only had 3 goals all season in juniors. Bobby said " we were up 6 to 2, I figured it might help him out."

      @wesleybarton3871@wesleybarton38713 жыл бұрын
    • The best compliment I ever heard about Bobby Orr was that he was a better person than a hockey player. It may have been Derek Sanderson who said that but I'm not sure.

      @capecodder04@capecodder04 Жыл бұрын
  • LIKE FROM ME. BAKU. AZE. SUPERB UPPLOAD. BRAVO

    @elshadjafar2437@elshadjafar2437 Жыл бұрын
  • I'll never forget half way thru the 2nd period, my mother said we were going to the beach. I was 10 years old in South Boston glued to Channel 38. I remember some car going by as we were on Carson Beach, they were screaming 'We're Number One' and I knew exactly what happened.

    @jonasoverka3956@jonasoverka39568 ай бұрын
  • "Excellent Documentary on Some of The Greatest Players That Ever Played The Game of Hockey!"

    @thomaspsanzi8947@thomaspsanzi89473 жыл бұрын
  • Habs fan here. Amazing video. Great work. Loved it.

    @megaforcemedia@megaforcemedia Жыл бұрын
  • what a thrill to see this film,thank you!

    @amyodonnell2043@amyodonnell2043 Жыл бұрын
  • This is a great documentary

    @mayhemjr.803@mayhemjr.8033 жыл бұрын
  • man why the hell did i have to be born in 87 🤦🏼‍♂️….. Hockey is the best pure sport and hands down the one of the toughest sports. Growing up watching Hockey all i ever heard about is the 1970 Bruins and how they were the Beast of the East

    @howardcraigiv518@howardcraigiv518 Жыл бұрын
  • I started watching The Bruins in late 70s. Playing the old table hockey Bruins v Canadians was the team's. We would make pucks from small chunks of wood and sand them down. Game on! Special Special memories

    @jeremyparker1894@jeremyparker18942 жыл бұрын
  • Still my favorite hockey team of all time. I have also met and talked to several of these players including ORR, ESPOSITO, BUCYK and SANDERSON.

    @daletwin1@daletwin12 жыл бұрын
  • “ The Greatest Hockey Player In The History Of The World “ Bobby Orr ☘☘☘☘

    @PhynTrickSnipin@PhynTrickSnipin Жыл бұрын
    • .. lol ... Not so sure ! Funny but i don't remember seeing Orr in his defensive zone very often. He was all over the ice like a Ice Capade skater but very rarely on defense. Conclusion Orr was a forward player and surely not a defenseman hense a horrible defense player. ** And In the meantime Mtl won the cups. Montreal has always had at least 4 or 5 Orrs on its team.

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
  • bobby orr ..... only one of him...22 yrs old... amazing...

    @victormarryatt@victormarryatt3 ай бұрын
  • Best hockey era was the late 60's and early 70's. Habs and Bruins rivalry was incredible and it was a true passion for their respective fans. Derek Sanderson was certainly the best face-off player in the history of the game and of course Bobby Orr was the greatest (and still is) of all time. But the Habs record speaks for itself and they had so many "greats" throughout their storied history and they always commanded respect from the players and the fans. I remember being in BeanTown one time and getting a tour of the old Boston Gardens. The guide told me that during the playoffs staff would shut down the air conditioning on the visiting Canadiens just to make them suffer a little more during those warm & muggy spring nights. Ha Ha ... gotta support your team somehow eh??? 😁

    @briangraham1024@briangraham1024 Жыл бұрын
  • Getting Esposito, Hodge and Stanfield from Chicago might be the greatest trade in history. Question is why would Chicago give up on these guys.

    @waynejohanson1083@waynejohanson10833 жыл бұрын
    • very simple: 1) they wanted to improve defense and got 22 yrs old Gilles Marotte (Bruins were reluctant to trade him as they hoped to pair Marotte with Bobby Orr); 2) Espo as a Black Hawk was completely different player - he was too slow at Chicago and not a good setup man for Bobby Hull; 3) that was expansion year and Black Hawks would lose Hodge and Stanfield in the expansion draft anyway (Stanfield wasn't even a regular); 4) don't forget that Chicago had too much talent in the offense - Hull brothers, Mikita, Wharram, Nesterenko, Maki - they didn't think they lost a lot

      @esb-ol6yd@esb-ol6yd3 жыл бұрын
    • Another reason 1967 playoffs Hawks vs Leafs Esposito 0 points in 6 games ( Leafs upset Hawks 4 games to 2)

      @michaelleroy9281@michaelleroy92812 жыл бұрын
    • @@esb-ol6yd yeah in the end it was fairly even, Martin was a terrific player for them and the blackhawks twice ended up in the finals in that era, '71 and '73 but like the Bruins couldn't beat the Canucks

      @DonQwantsyou@DonQwantsyou2 жыл бұрын
    • @@DonQwantsyou lol, 2 finals vs 2 cups and the final, close but not really even

      @esb-ol6yd@esb-ol6yd2 жыл бұрын
    • @@DonQwantsyou The Bruins hammered Vancouver in their first 2 seasons, 70-71 and 71-72 you mean the Montreal Canadiens

      @michaelleroy9281@michaelleroy92812 жыл бұрын
  • The reason Bobby was so great is because of his humility. He and Espo born and raised on Canada's great white north. Listen to him speak always about others and not about himself. His skating was based on playing on wide open ponds from a young tender age. This is why he could skate circles around everyone. His heavy shot from making his own pucks. The sobre one always helping his team mates get home as many of them loved their alcohol. Like the great goal scorer Mike Bossy his career ended far to soon. I will never forget the 4 minute standing ovation when he retired at the Boston Garden.

    @lindsaydoke9308@lindsaydoke93083 ай бұрын
  • I’m a dye hard Montreal fan but I have to admit this was an excellent video, I just loved it.

    @Studmuffin_69@Studmuffin_692 жыл бұрын
  • Johnny Bucyk nicknamed: 'Chief' was Ukrainian. He was awesome! We share the same day in May (but many many years apart! LoL) I grew up idolizing Bobby, Phil, JB, Wayne, Cheevers. My second pair of hockey gloves were Cooper BBP. Black and white. Boston Bruins pro.

    @sawatisbillings8759@sawatisbillings87593 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you so much for this!!

    @samkampersal9134@samkampersal91343 жыл бұрын
  • As a kid not quite 8 years old, I became a lifelong Bruins fan in May 1970, whether I lived in Winnipeg, Pittsburgh, Vancouver or Philadelphia...

    @walter2cicha813@walter2cicha813 Жыл бұрын
  • I played hockey back in the day. Des Moines IA. We went to St. Louis to visit my Godparents who were probably early 40's. Die hard Cardinal fans (at that time baseball and football). Die hard Blues fans. But, boy when Bobby Orr got brought up they were all in.

    @toddm9501@toddm95013 ай бұрын
  • I lived in Ohio, but watched the Bruins, still my favorite team.

    @scottacton173@scottacton1733 жыл бұрын
  • I bought equipment with his name on it when I was a kid. I watched Mr. Orr do phenomenal things on the ice. I met Bobby Orr at a Special Olympics event (c. 1984-85) at Maguire AFB in New Jersey. We had a chance to speak. Bobby Orr is a mensch.

    @gillygil8747@gillygil87472 жыл бұрын
  • There will NEVER be another player to win all 4 major trophies again. EVER !!!!!

    @k-laus9435@k-laus94353 жыл бұрын
    • ........ and his Bruins never beat Montreal in the playoffs!

      @34Packardphaeton@34Packardphaeton2 жыл бұрын
  • Mike Eruzione's goal in 80 wasn't too shabby either 😉

    @michaelanthony1537@michaelanthony15373 жыл бұрын
    • For sure, but apples & oranges comparison

      @acousticshadow4032@acousticshadow40322 жыл бұрын
  • This was simply superb.Thank you for this upload.

    @stolis51@stolis513 жыл бұрын
  • I was 16 years old watching the Stanley Cup playoffs at my best friend's house my twin brother and another high school friend in Hull, MA. We'd be playing spades before the game started. Then we'd hear the familiar instrumental intro song. We'd pause the game and made our way into the living room to watch the game (I believe on channel 38 WSBK Boston). We'd go back to spades in between periods. Most high school kids wore Bruins jerseys. We went crazy when Bobby Orr scored in overtime to win the Stanley Cup. I joined the Air Force in 1973 finished basic training and my tech school and now was enroute to my first duty assignment. I was in my Air Force blues uniform at Logan International Airport heading to my departure gate when I passed the gate where the Bruins were waiting for their flight. Terry O'Reilly made eye contact with me and said "hey red." I was a 6'4 redhead. I stopped to say hello and then he introduced me to all of the Bruins. Was thanked for my service and then had to head to my gate. Unfortunately I had no camera and got no autographs but I was left with the greatest sports memory of my life. Meeting my hockey heroes made for the best day ever.

    @brucevidito4923@brucevidito4923 Жыл бұрын
    • Funny but i don't remember seeing Orr in his defensive zone very often. He was all over the ice like a Ice Capade skater but very rarely on defense. Conclusion Orr was a forward player and surely not a defenseman hense a horrible defense player. ** And In the meantime Mtl won the cups. Montreal has always had at least 4 or 5 Orrs on its team.

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
    • @Catholic Cowboy , Sounds like you're just a hater. If you heard all of the greats from other NHL teams that played during this tike they've all said that Orr was the greatest defenseman ever. However, you're entitled to your own opinion.

      @brucevidito4923@brucevidito4923 Жыл бұрын
    • @@brucevidito4923 ... I don't hate Orr, he was a great h. player but obviously a lousy defenseman. The Bruins were a 4 offensive players team when Orr on the ice. Certainly not the all time greatest defense player you are all talking about. I'm just fed up. Greatest about what exactly ?? For me the Bruins were a single player team .. road to disaster .. lol .. At the same time Montreal was truly great with 6 cups and twice they had a season of 8 games and 10 games lost. And some great defensemen on the the ice, Serge Savard leading the way with 9 cups. (it should not be hidden that Orr was a PR targeting Americans because they loved show off ... lol ...)

      @catholiccowboy8545@catholiccowboy8545 Жыл бұрын
  • My Fav, Johnny " Pie " Mckenzie, I remember he fought Dennis Hull, Hull came out with a bloddy face and Pie, as always was pushing his shoulder pads because he was so small, LOVED THE MAN, RIP Johnny, as long as live, you will never be forgotten ( 19 ).......

    @mo9504@mo95043 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing, this team was my reason for being as a kid. Great memories!

    @TheMrssanderson@TheMrssanderson3 жыл бұрын
  • I learned to love hockey by listening to the radio in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia as a 13 year old kid with a transistor radio. WBZ came through at night as I followed the game and heard the Boston crowds and the names Orr, Espo, Bucyk Hodge et al. Then in 1974 I was sad to see the Flyers best the Bruins . Then 3 months later my dad got Lou Gehrigs Disease and my change to adulthood came sudden as the Bruins fall from the top. My father died less than 2 years later. Saw Bobby Orr play as a shell of his former self as a Blackhawk at an Atlanta Flames games couple of years later.

    @wesleybarton3871@wesleybarton38713 жыл бұрын
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