Bob Johnson (ice hockey, born 1931)
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Bob Johnson | |
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Born | Minneapolis, MN, USA |
March 4, 1931
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Colorado Springs, CO, USA |
Previous team(s) | Calgary Flames Pittsburgh Penguins |
Stanley Cup wins | 1 |
Years as an NHL coach | 6 |
Sport(s) | Ice hockey |
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Playing career | |
1950–1951 | North Dakota |
1951–1952 | Minneapolis Millers |
1952–1954 | Minnesota |
1957–1958 | Minnesota Culbertsons |
Position(s) | Forward |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1962–1963 1963–1966 1966–1975 1973 1974 1975 1975–1976 1976–1982 1981 1982–1987 1984 1987 1990–1991 1991 |
Roosevelt High Colorado College Wisconsin US National Team US National Team US National Team US Olympic Team Wisconsin Team USA Calgary Flames Team USA Team USA Pittsburgh Penguins |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 394-224-27 |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
1970 WCHA Tournament Champion 1972 WCHA Tournament Champion 1973 WCHA Tournament Champion 1973 NCAA National Champion 1977 WCHA Regular Season Champion 1977 WCHA Tournament Champion 1977 NCAA National Champion 1978 WCHA Tournament Champion 1981 NCAA National Champion 1982 WCHA Tournament Champion 1991 Stanley Cup |
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Awards | |
1977 WCHA Coach of the Year 1987 Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame 1991 United States Hockey Hall of Fame 1992 Hockey Hall of Fame 2000 Hobey Baker Legend of College Hockey Award |
Robert Norman "Badger Bob" Johnson (March 4, 1931 – November 26, 1991) was an American college, international, and professional ice hockey coach. He coached the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey team from 1966 to 1982, where he led the Badgers to seven appearances at the NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championships, including three titles. During his time as the head coach at Wisconsin, Johnson also coached the United States men's national ice hockey team at the 1976 Winter Olympics and seven other major championships, including the Canada Cup and IIHF World Championships. He then coached the Calgary Flames for five seasons that included a Stanley Cup Finals loss in 1986. Johnson achieved the peak of his professional coaching career in his only season as coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins in 1990–91, when the Penguins won the 1991 Stanley Cup Finals, the first Stanley Cup in team history. In August 1991, following hospitalization due to a brain aneurysm, Johnson was diagnosed with brain cancer. He died on November 26 of the same year.
Contents
Youth and amateur coaching career
Johnson was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He attended Minneapolis Central High School and the University of Minnesota, where he played hockey under legendary coach John Mariucci.
After serving as a medic during the Korean War, Johnson began his coaching career at a high school in Warroad, Minnesota. He later coached hockey at Roosevelt High School in Minneapolis. He would teach his History class using a hockey stick as a pointer to the chalkboard. He became the head hockey coach at Colorado College in 1963.
In 1966, he moved to the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he was head coach until 1982. He led the Badgers to seven NCAA tournaments, winning three championships in 1973, 1977, and 1981. It was at Wisconsin where Johnson earned the nickname, "Badger Bob."
He coached the 1976 Winter Olympic hockey team, the 1981, 1984 and 1987 U.S. teams in the Canada Cup tournament, and the 1973, 1974, 1975 and 1981 U.S. national teams.
NHL coaching career
In 1982, Johnson began his National Hockey League career when he became the head coach of the Calgary Flames, a position he held for five seasons. In the 1985–86 season, he coached the Flames to the Stanley Cup Finals, where they lost 4 games to 1 to the Montreal Canadiens. From 1987 until 1990, he served as the President of USA Hockey. Then in 1990, he was named the head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins. In his first season, he coached the team, which was led by superstar Mario Lemieux, to a 1991 Stanley Cup Finals championship victory over the Minnesota North Stars, four games to two, becoming the second American-born coach to win it and the first in 53 years. He was well-known amongst players and fans for his enthusiasm and unflappable optimism, immortalized through his famous catchphrase "It's a great day for hockey!" That would be his only season coaching the Penguins.
Brain cancer and death
In August 1991, as he was preparing the U.S. team for the upcoming Canada Cup tournament, Johnson suffered a brain aneurysm and was hospitalized, where he was diagnosed with brain cancer. He was then flown on a private plane to Colorado with Dr. Dan Thompson of Mercy Hospital in Pittsburgh. He began treatment and turned the day-to-day supervision of the Penguins over to his three assistant coaches and Scotty Bowman, the team's director of player development and recruitment, who was named interim head coach. Though the team was "coached by committee", Johnson continued to oversee them from his hospital room by way of videotape and remained in contact by fax machine.
On November 26, 1991, Johnson died of brain cancer in Colorado Springs, Colorado. After his death, his catchphrase was emblazoned on a banner hanging over the ice at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and was painted at the bluelines on the ice in Pittsburgh's Civic Arena. In memoriam, it remained on the ice there for the remainder of the season. In addition, Penguins players would wear a patch on the left sleeve of their jerseys with the word "BADGER" under his birth and death years. Pittsburgh also put his name on the Stanley Cup a second time after their second straight Cup victory in 1992. "He's such a tremendous person...We would like to win it again for him,"[1] said Mark Recchi, a member of the team in 1991.
At the team's 1992 victory celebration at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh, Bowman's first remark was that "the coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins will always be – Bob Johnson".[2]
The team used "A Great Day For Hockey" as their marketing slogan for the 2008–09 season. On June 12, 2009, exactly 19 years to the day of Johnson's hiring, the Penguins won their third Stanley Cup. "A Great Day For Hockey" now adorns the entrance of the Consol Energy Center, the current home arena of the Penguins.
At the time of his death Johnson's 234 NHL victories were a record for an American born coach. Dan Bylsma, John Tortorella and Peter Laviolette have since eclipsed this mark.
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College and NHL Head Coaching record
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Colorado College Tigers (WCHA) (1963-64–1965-66) | |||||||||
1963-64 | Colorado College | 11-14-1 | 4-11-1 | 6th | |||||
1964-65 | Colorado College | 7-17-1 | 2-14-0 | 7th | |||||
1965-66 | Colorado College | 9-18-2 | 4-12-2 | 7th | WCHA First Round | ||||
Colorado College: | 27-49-4 | 10-37-3 | |||||||
Wisconsin Badgers (Division I Independent) (1966-67–1968-69) | |||||||||
1966-67 | Wisconsin | 16-10-0 | |||||||
1967-68 | Wisconsin | 21-10-0 | |||||||
1968-69 | Wisconsin | 22-10-2 | |||||||
Wisconsin: | 59-30-2 | ||||||||
Wisconsin Badgers (WCHA) (1969-70–1974-75) | |||||||||
1969-70 | Wisconsin | 23-11-0 | 12-10-0 | 4th | NCAA Consolation Game (Win) | ||||
1970-71 | Wisconsin | 20-13-1 | 13-9-0 | 3rd | WCHA East Regional Semifinals | ||||
1971-72 | Wisconsin | 27-10-1 | 20-8-0 | 2nd | NCAA Consolation Game (Win) | ||||
1972-73 | Wisconsin | 29-9-2 | 18-9-1 | 3rd | NCAA National Champion | ||||
1973-74 | Wisconsin | 18-13-5 | 12-11-5 | 5th | WCHA First Round | ||||
1974-75 | Wisconsin | 24-12-2 | 19-11-2 | 4th | WCHA First Round | ||||
Wisconsin: | 141-68-11 | 94-58-8 | |||||||
Wisconsin Badgers (WCHA) (1976-77–1981-82) | |||||||||
1976-77 | Wisconsin | 37-7-1 | 26-5-1 | 1st | NCAA National Champion | ||||
1977-78 | Wisconsin | 28-12-3 | 21-9-2 | 2nd | NCAA Consolation Game (Loss) | ||||
1978-79 | Wisconsin | 25-13-3 | 19-11-2 | 4th | WCHA Second Round | ||||
1979-80 | Wisconsin | 15-20-1 | 12-18-0 | 9th | |||||
1980-81 | Wisconsin | 27-14-1 | 17-11-0 | t-2nd | NCAA National Champion | ||||
1981-82 | Wisconsin | 35-11-1 | 18-7-1 | 2nd | NCAA Runner-Up | ||||
Wisconsin: | 167-77-10 | 113-61-6 | |||||||
Total: | 394-224-27 | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion |
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Team | Year | Regular Season | Post Season | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G | W | L | T | Pts | Finish | Result | ||
CGY | 1982–83 | 80 | 30 | 32 | 14 | 78 | 2nd in Smythe | Lost in Second round |
CGY | 1983–84 | 80 | 34 | 32 | 14 | 82 | 2nd in Smythe | Lost in Second round |
CGY | 1984–85 | 80 | 41 | 27 | 12 | 94 | 3rd in Smythe | Lost in First round |
CGY | 1985–86 | 80 | 40 | 31 | 9 | 89 | 2nd in Smythe | Lost in Cup Finals |
CGY | 1986–87 | 80 | 46 | 31 | 3 | 95 | 2nd in Smythe | Lost in First round |
PIT | 1990–91 | 80 | 41 | 33 | 6 | 88 | 1st in Patrick | Won Stanley Cup |
Total | 480 | 234 | 188 | 58 |
Honors
Johnson was inducted into the Wisconsin Hockey Hall of Fame in 1987, United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 1991, and the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1992. He was elected to the Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in 1993. On November 2, 2012, the Wisconsin Badgers Men's Hockey team dedicated their home ice rink to Johnson, dubbing it "Bob Johnson Rink".
Personal life
Johnson is also the father of 1980 Olympic hockey gold medalist and current Wisconsin Women's Hockey Coach Mark Johnson and former Wisconsin assistant coach and Toronto Maple Leafs scout Peter Johnson and the grandfather of former Wisconsin hockey player Patrick Johnson and former Denver Pioneer hockey player Scott McConnell.
See also
- List of members of the United States Hockey Hall of Fame
- List of members of the Hockey Hall of Fame
- List of notable brain tumor patients
- Notable families in the NHL
References
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- ↑ Against the Odds - Part 7 on YouTube
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External links
- Bob Johnson's career statistics at The Internet Hockey Database
- Bob Johnson's career statistics at EliteProspects.com
- Bob Johnson's biography at Legends of Hockey
- Pittsburgh media coverage of tributes for Johnson
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by | Head coach of the Calgary Flames 1982–87 |
Succeeded by Terry Crisp |
Preceded by | Head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins 1990–91 |
Succeeded by Scotty Bowman |
- Use mdy dates from September 2011
- Articles using Template:Infobox college coach with deprecated parameters
- 1931 births
- 1991 deaths
- American ice hockey coaches
- Calgary Flames coaches
- Cancer deaths in Colorado
- Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey coaches
- Deaths from brain tumor
- Hockey Hall of Fame inductees
- Lester Patrick Trophy recipients
- Minnesota Golden Gophers men's ice hockey players
- Pittsburgh Penguins coaches
- Sportspeople from Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Stanley Cup champions
- United States Hockey Hall of Fame inductees
- Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey coaches