Welcome to WHA Hockey.TV
The World Hockey Association was a major professional ice hockey league that
operated in North America from 1972 to 1979. It was the first major
competition for the National Hockey League since the collapse of the
Western Hockey League after the 1925-26 WHL season. Although the WHA
was not the first league since that time to attempt to challenge the
NHL's supremacy, it was by far the most successful.
In fact, the WHA was home to many of hockey's all-time greats, including Bobby Hull, Gordie Howe, Wayne Gretzky, Frank Mahovlich, Mark Messier, Mike Gartner, Michel Goulet and many more.
The WHA also spawned four NHL franchises: The Hartford Whalers, Edmonton Oilers, Winnipeg Jets and Quebec Nordiques
A
key part of its success was its firm stance in not recognizing the
reserve clause that found its way onto NHL contracts of the time, and
its active scouting of players from all over the world, in contrast to
the mainly North American NHL. However, the WHA was also known for its
unstable franchises, and the multi-million-dollar salaries it
introduced to the game have remained a source of contention.
The
WHA hoped to capitalize on the lack of hockey teams in a number of
major cities, it also hoped to attract the best players by paying more
than the cartel of NHL owners would.
The
league was founded by American promoters Dennis Murphy and Gary
Davidson, the founder and first president of the American Basketball
Association, respectively. Murphy and Davidson were quick to bring
Canadian investor Bill Hunter into the fold. Hunter was considered one
of the most powerful men in hockey not associated with the NHL, and
with his help, the WHA had solid backing in Calgary, Edmonton,
Saskatoon, and Winnipeg, potentially giving the new league four Western
Canadian teams - one more than the NHL had in all of Canada at the
time. Davidson later left to start the World Football League (WFL).
Part
of the WHA's success was its abolishment of the reserve clause in its
contracts, as well as the fact that it would also not honor the reserve
clauses in NHL contracts. As many players employed by the NHL were set
to have their contracts expire in 1972, many would try to defect to the
WHA as a negotiation tool with their teams, or, in any event, consider
offers to play for the fledgling league before looking to new NHL
contracts. Some, including many stars such as Bobby Hull, would carry
out their threat and join the WHA. The NHL, for its part, did nothing,
believing the WHA would fold before their first season. When it was
apparent that the WHA would play, the NHL responded by hastily adding
the New York Islanders and Atlanta Flames to forestall WHA franchises
in new arenas just opened in both cities.
On
November of 1971, twelve teams were formally announced. They included
teams from cities without NHL teams such as the Miami Screaming Eagles
-- possibly the best known hockey franchise never actually to take the
ice -- as well as teams in cities where it was felt there was room for
more than one team, such as the Los Angeles Sharks, Chicago Cougars,
and New York Raiders. Of the original twelve teams, a few, such as the
Dayton Aeros and the San Francisco Seahawks, folded, citing arena
troubles. These two franchises were moved to become the Houston Aeros
and Quebec Nordiques, respectively. Other franchises, such as the
Calgary Broncos and the Screaming Eagles, folded outright. The
Philadelphia Blazers and the Cleveland Crusaders would replace the
Screaming Eagles and the Broncos.
Although
the league had many players under contract by June of 1972, including a
few NHL stars such as Bernie Parent, many of its players were career
minor leaguers and college players. Thus, the new league was not
considered much of a threat - that is, until Bobby Hull, arguably the
NHL's top player at the time, jumped to the new league. Hull, who
considered moving to the WHA as part of a negotiation tactic with the
Chicago Blackhawks, had jokingly told reporters that he would only move
to the WHA for a million dollars, at that time a ridiculous amount of
money for a hockey player. But to everyone's surprise the Winnipeg Jets
offered this sum. Hull accepted and moved to the WHA, signing a
five-year, million-dollar contract, with a million-dollar signing
bonus. Hull's signing attracted a few other top stars such as Gerry
Cheevers, Derek Sanderson, and J.C. Tremblay.
The
WHA officially made its debut on October 11, 1972 in the Ottawa Civic
Centre, when the Alberta Oilers defeated the Ottawa Nationals 7-4.
Although the quality of hockey was predictably below that of the NHL,
the WHA had indeed made stars out of many players that had little or no
playing time in the NHL. The New England Whalers would eventually win
the WHA's first World Trophy (later renamed the Avco World Trophy when
the Avco Financial Services Corporation became its main sponsor).
However,
the league was suffering. Big stars lacked supporting players, and many
teams often found Themselves in financial difficulty, folding or moving
from one city to another - often in mid-season. The New York franchise
was a key example: as the NHL's Islanders had locked up Nassau Coliseum
for their own use, the WHA team was first forced to rent space at
Madison Square Garden, and then to play in lesser arenas, often without
visitor's locker rooms. Because of this, the franchise went through
several ownership changes year after year. Part of the financial
trouble was also attributed to the high player salaries: Derek
Sanderson was paid large amounts of cash to play for the WHA, but when
his on-ice performance suffered, he was paid even more money to sit at
home. Despite this, the WHA had several key victories, including a
court ruling which prevented the NHL from binding players to NHL teams
via the reserve clause, and the signings of more NHL stars such as Rejean Houle, Marc
Tardif and Gordie Howe, and in later years, Frank Mahovlich, Rick Dudley and Paul
Henderson. In 1974, the WHA began employing European players -- which
the NHL had largely ignored up to that time -- such as Swedish players
Anders Hedberg, Lark Erik Sjoberg and Ulf Nilsson and Czech star Vaclav Nedomansky.
By
1976, it had become evident that many of the WHA's franchises were
teetering on the verge of financial collapse, with stable teams few and
far between, and that the at one time combined 30 teams of the NHL and
WHA had badly strained the talent pool. Merger discussions then began,
with one proposal (not popular enough among the NHL owners) having six
of the then eight WHA teams moving to the NHL. Another idea had the
Edmonton Oilers and the New England Whalers moving to the NHL, with the
Winnipeg Jets following a year later. Neither of these ideas were
accepted.
The
final two seasons of the WHA saw the debut of many superstars, some of
which became hockey legends in the NHL. They included Wayne Gretzky,
Mark Messier, Rob Ramage, Rod Langway, Ken Linseman, and Mike Gartner. However, by
the end of the final season, only six teams remained. Facing financial
difficulty and unable to meet payrolls, the WHA finally came to an
agreement with the NHL on March 22, 1979: the Edmonton Oilers, New
England Whalers (renamed the Hartford Whalers), Quebec Nordiques, and
Winnipeg Jets would join the NHL as expansion teams, and the WHA would
cease operations. The Birmingham Bulls and the Cincinnati Stingers were
paid to disband. Mark Willand
"We
are without merit. We are in free fall. We are a generation of guys
with no statistics - only stories. We are WHA guys living in a WHA
world." - Al Smith, goalie New England Whalers
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Posted by: susan01 | September 17, 2009 at 01:10 AM