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| CREDIT: Star file photo |
| The Bruise Brothers, written by Windsor Star sports columnist Bob Duff, features former Detroit Red Wings tough guys Joe Kocur and Bob Probert. |
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Professional hockey was a vast wasteland in
Detroit through much of the 1970s and into
the 1980s. Between the 1966–67 season and
the 1985–86 campaign, the Red Wings played in a
grand total of four playoff series, winning one of
them.
Things were in the process of changing,
though. Steve Yzerman, was taken in the first
round of the 1983 NHL entry draft, the same year
that the Wings also tabbed two other prominent
figures for the team over the next decade, Bob
Probert and Joe Kocur. The Bruise Brothers.
Probert and Kocur. Kocur and Probert. It didn’t
matter in which order they arrived, you didn’t want
to catch either end of this doubleheader.
Two of the
most prominent heavyweights in National Hockey
League history, Kocur led the NHL with a Detroit
club-record 377 penalty minutes as a rookie in
1985–86, becoming the first Detroit rookie to ever
lead the league in this department.
Two years later,
Probert garnered 398 minutes of sit-down time in
the penalty box, shattering Kocur’s team mark and
also leading the NHL.
Kocur may have possessed the hardest punch in
hockey history, assembling a string of knockout
victories that compared to Mike Tyson’s run of
fistic dominance. Probert was more about durability.
The Energizer Bunny of tough guys, Probert
just kept throwing and throwing and throwing,
long after his opponent had run out of gas.
Beyond their pugilistic prowess, both Probert
and Kocur were solid hockey players who could
perform effectively in roles other than that of the
enforcer. During the 1987–88 season, Probert
scored 29 goals skating on Detroit’s top forward
line alongside Yzerman and Gerard Gallant and
was selected to play in the NHL All-Star Game.
During his career, he was a two-time 20-goal
scorer.
Kocur left the Red Wings in 1991, won a Stanley
Cup with the New York Rangers in 1993–94,
then made a triumphant return to Detroit during the
1996–97 season. Skating on Detroit’s checking
unit, the Grind Line along with Kris Draper and
Kirk Maltby, Kocur helped the Wings to a pair of
Stanley Cups.
To this day, they remain legendary cult heroes
in Detroit, two Motor City icons who helped put
Hockeytown back on the map.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Currently the sports columnist for The Windsor Star,
Bob Duff has covered the National Hockey League since
1988. He is an NHL columnist for MSNBC.com, Faceoff.
com and Hockey Weekly and a regular contributor to
Prospects and Beckett Magazines and The Hockey
News. The latter periodical included Duff among its selection
committee to determine the 50 greatest NHL
players. A vice-president of the Society For International
Hockey Research, Duff also is an honorary member of
the Elias Sports Bureau, official statisticians to the NHL.
Duff contributed to Total Hockey and is a regular contributor
to the NHL Guide and Record Book. Among
Duff’s other book credits include: The China Wall, The
Timeless Legend of Johnny Bower, Hockey Dynasties,
Without Fear, The Hockey News Century of Hockey, My
Life—From Normandy to Hockeytown—the Budd Lynch
Story, The Hockey Encyclopedia, The History of Hockeytown,
Nineteen—A Salute to Steve Yzerman and Nine—A
Salute to Gordie Howe. Duff, his wife Shira and daughter
Cecilia reside with their cat Shemp in LaSalle, Ont.
The book, which will retail for US$39.95 plus $6.75 shipping and taxes, will be available for sale on the Internet at www.immortalinvestments.com or by phone at 1.800.475.2066 and at yet to be announced personal appearances by the duo.
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