Title/Author:
"The Legion Team: Forgotten Hockey in Waterloo, 1927-1930” written
and narrated by Tim Harwood
Tags:
Ice Hockey, amateur, history, audiobook
Publish date:
May 20, 2015 (print
version published June 13, 2013)
Length:
143 pages
Rating:
5 of 5 stars (outstanding)
Review:
The city of Waterloo,
Iowa is the home for the Waterloo Black Hawks, a junior hockey team playing in
the United States Hockey League. While they are the only team currently playing
in the city, they are not the first team.
There was an amateur team that played in the 1920’s sponsored by an
American Legion post that captured the fancy of fans in Waterloo. This book by Tim Harwood attempts to revive
the memories of that team.
Because the players on
those squads are no longer with us and details of the games and the teams are
difficult to obtain, this book is a work of dedication for the author as he
painstakingly brings the details of the team, its games and its home in a
manner that is easy to read or listen to. The reader will not only learn about
the team sponsored by the Becker-Chapman American Legion Post, but the book
starts out by telling the story of the two men who died in World War I and whom
the Post was named for. Neither of them
played hockey (both were football stars) but their stories set the stage for
the beginning of hockey in Waterloo.
The club, sometimes
referred to as the Hawks, was not a professional team nor was it affiliated
with any other club or league.
Throughout its existence, it never traveled to another city for a game.
Instead, teams from cites as far away as Chicago, St. Paul and Winnipeg came to
Waterloo where they faced a club that won more games than it lost and would
play in front of several thousand enthusiastic fans. The arena did not have the
capability to make artificial ice, so the games were only played when it was
cold enough to have natural ice inside.
The book is a nice
summary of the games played throughout the four year history of the
Becker-Chapman team, with enough detail provided that a reader or listener will
comprehend just how good the team was and the enthusiasm of the fans. Some games are filled with details like
specific goal scorers, statistics and attendance while a few are not covered in
as great detail. It was all dependent on the newspaper accounts at that time
since statistics were not kept and being an independent team, there were no
league archives to research.
The rules of the games for the team and in that era are also explained and some of them are quite different from today. The team often carried only eight or nine players, so some of them played the entire sixty minutes. Imagine a superstar player today like Sidney Crosby or Connor McDavid playing an entire game with no shifts. The ice wasn’t always smooth – not only from the conditions of the arena and weather, but also because the rink was also used for public skating.
The end of the team’s run in Waterloo was due to economics. The Great Depression was in full swing and like so many other businesses, the American Legion had to cut back on expenses and one of them was hockey. While the first two years produced a small profit, the fourth year resulted in a small financial loss and the Legion did not want to sink further in the hole with the team, so it folded. When it did so, a chapter of Iowa hockey ended with it and this book does a great job of bringing that team back to life. While a short book without a lot of depth on the team’s players, it nonetheless will inform the reader about that era of hockey and is recommended to be added to the library of any hockey fan.
Book Format Read:
Audiobook
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