San Francisco Seals
vs. Seattle Totems
KFRC Radio 61
Monday, May 6, 1963
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Bill
King in 1966
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In
the days before the expansion of the National Hockey League beyond
its original six teams, the Western Hockey League was quite nearly
as "major league" as any minor league could be. In fact, when the
NHL began considering expanding in the 1960s, much consideration was
given to simply annexing the WHL to quickly extend the league's
reach to western North America.
During the 1962-63 WHL season, the San Francisco Seals
played their home schedule before packed houses at the Cow Palace in
Daly City.
Coached
by Bud Poile and led on the ice by Nick Mickoski, Orland Kurtenbach,
Eddie Panagabko, Gary "Duke" Edmundson and Dan Belisle, with Jimmy
McLeod in goal, the Seals finished the regular season with a 44-25-1
record and 89 points, good for second place behind the Portland
Buckaroos (92 points) in the WHL's Southern Division.
Moving through the WHL playoffs, the Seals rode into the
finals on the back of goaltender McLeod,
who
had led the league in regular-season wins with 43 and would end up with
the playoff highs in wins (10) and shutouts (3). In the finals against
the Seattle Totems — who had finished the regular season in second place
in the Northern Division with 72 points — the Seals battled their
opponents for seven games, four of which went into sudden-death
overtime, including the deciding finale.
For the radio broadcast on RKO General's KFRC (610 kc.)
in San Francisco, we join our Seals commentators,
Roy Storey and Bill King, for the dramatic conclusion of the seventh
game, which will determine the winner of the WHL's Lester Patrick Cup.
Storey, widely considered as one of the top sportscasters in the Bay
Area during this era,
later made it to the NHL as voice of the California Golden Seals in
1970-71 and 1971-72 (on San Jose's KEEN) before heading down south with the Los Angeles Kings for the
1972-73 season.
King, who had also begun working as the lead announcer
for the newly-arrived San Francisco
Warriors in 1962-63, would become the first — and, to
this date, the only — broadcaster to call a World Series, Super Bowl,
NBA Championship and professional hockey championship as a voice of the
winning team.
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The Bay Area Radio Museum extends
its gratitude to
Len
Shapiro for providing us with this rare broadcast
recording from his personal collection. |
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