Monday, February 25, 2008

Trade Deadline Rescued Murphy From Toronto In 1997

They booed him, unmercifully, every time he touched the puck. They made signs deriding him. Games at Maple Leaf Gardens became nasty. The fans were bidding him good riddance.

And he was one of theirs.

Larry Murphy, at the trade deadline in 1997, was held up as the punching bag for Toronto Maple Leafs fans frustrated with the team's Stanley Cup drought -- which continues today and is now 41 years old. It was obvious that he had to go; the differences between Murphy and the fans were irreconcilable.

To the rescue came the Red Wings.


Murphy came to the Red Wings at the deadline in '97 and added two Cups to his resume


They traded for Larry Murphy at the deadline in 1997, and free from the slings and arrows in Toronto, he helped the Red Wings win Stanley Cups the next two springs.

I bumped into Murphy the night Steve Yzerman's jersey went up to the rafters. We spent some time together in the alumni suite, watching the game below. I asked him about the final days in Toronto. He shrugged it off. Didn't seem to bother him all that much.

"It's all about winning," he said. "When you don't win, people get frustrated."

Mats Sundin, it was reported, has told Leafs management that he doesn't care to waive his no-trade clause. He would like, in other words, to stay in Toronto.

"To me, it means more to be part of the journey from October to June," Sundin said to the press, explaining his decision. "I've never cared for the idea of the rental player."

Tell that to Raymond Bourque, who finally won a Cup in 2001 with Colorado, after over 20 years with the Bruins and some failed Finals appearances. He didn't seem to mind the idea. But I can certainly understand Sundin's sentiment, and find it rather refreshing.

Of course, Sundin isn't being hung in virtual effigy in Toronto, the way Larry Murphy was. And it's perhaps easier for Murphy to shrug off that poor treatment, since he was a four-time Cup winner (two in Pittsburgh, two in Detroit). Plus, Murphy ended up being revered in Detroit, and stays close to the team as a TV analyst. Those miserable Toronto days are long gone.

By the way, if you're lucky enough to get the NHL Network (I do, with DirecTV), you might want to take a sick day. The network is providing non-stop coverage of Deadline Day tomorrow, from 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. They'll be all over it. I work from home, so I can bask in it; Deadline Day in the NHL is one of my favorite days of the year.

In 1997, I'm sure it was Larry Murphy's favorite day as well -- even if he could shrug it off some 10 years later.

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