Английская Википедия:Bernie Wolfe (ice hockey)

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox ice hockey player Bernard Ronald Wolfe (born December 18, 1951) is a Canadian businessman and former professional ice hockey player. Wolfe played 119 games over four seasons in the National Hockey League with the Washington Capitals from 1975 to 1979.

Early life

Wolfe was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and is Jewish.[1][2][3] His mother, Fay Wolfe, observed upon his becoming an NHL hockey player: "Of course I would have preferred him to be a doctor, or some kind of professional man. But if Bernie is happy, then we're happy."[4][2] His father, Mickey, had played goaltender for the Canadian Army team.[4]

Wolfe attended, majored in financial management, and played hockey at Sir George Williams University in Montreal, where he was named the school's top male athlete.[5][2] Playing for Sir George Williams, he was a Quebec University Athletic Association First Team All-Star goaltender in 1972 and 1974, and a CIAU First Team All-Star in 1974.[6] He backstopped Sir George Williams to the 1974 Canadian CIAU University Cup championship game, losing to the Waterloo Warriors; Wolfe won the Major W.J. "Danny" McLeod Award, as Most Valuable Player of the national championship tournament.[7]

Later, while he was playing in the NHL, he took courses at George Washington University.[5]

Biography

Signed as a free agent in 1975 by the Washington Capitals, Wolfe played for four seasons before retiring in November 1979 at age 27.[2] Playing in 40 games for the Capitals during the 1975–76 season, the second season in the franchise's existence, he set club records for seasonal goals against average (GAA) at 4.16, and consecutive scoreless minutes at 80:43; while these figures are not impressive, they were a major improvement from results during the Capitals' first season, when they recorded the worst single season record in the history of the NHL,[8] including an all-time worst 446 goals against, with a fourth-all-time worst 5.58 team GAA.[9] He showed flashes of brilliance and was a solid performer on a team that struggled in those early years.[10] He retired with one year remaining on his guaranteed contract, saying he "just didn't enjoy it anymore".[2] In 119 games, his record was 20-61-21, with 424 goals against, a 4.17 goals against average, and one shutout.[2]

Wolfe retired from professional hockey in 1979 and began a financial planning practice.[3] He earned his Certified Financial Planner designation in 1981. Bernard R. Wolfe & Associates Inc., which in 2014 managed $14 billion in assets.[2]

In 1992 when he was 40 years old, the Capitals attempted to re-sign him in order to make him the goaltender they would expose in the 1992 NHL Expansion Draft. League rules required every team to make a goalie available for the draft who had at least one game of NHL experience.[11] Wolfe agreed to sign for the league minimum salary of $100,000; he promised to donate his salary to charity if his contract were approved by the league, but it never was.[11] The attempt was immediately denied by the NHL[2] for obvious reasons; Wolfe had long retired from the NHL and was well into his career as a financial planner. Phil Esposito, who had recently become part owner of the expansion Tampa Bay Lightning, was quoted as saying about the incident: "I didn't just pay $50 million for Bernie Wolfe. He wasn't any good when I played against him".[11] Since the Capitals were unwilling to expose any of their current goaltenders, they eventually signed Steve Weeks for that purpose.[11]

Wolfe co-wrote a book, How to Watch Ice Hockey (1982), with journalist Mitch Henkin.[12]

Wolfe was the president of the Washington Capitals Alumni Association from 1992 to 2007.[11] In 1999, he had both of his hips replaced.[11]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA SV% GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1973–74 Sir George Williams University CIAU 18 10 4 4 1080 74 0 4.11
1974–75 Maine Nordiques NAHL 37 19 17 1 2156 150 1 4.17
1974–75 Richmond Robins AHL 17 6 7 2 918 142 2 2.74 7 3 4 427 26 0 3.65
1975–76 Washington Capitals NHL 40 5 23 7 2130 148 0 4.17 .886
1975–76 Richmond Robins AHL 3 2 0 0 147 6 0 2.44
1976–77 Washington Capitals NHL 37 7 15 9 1777 114 1 3.85 .879
1977–78 Washington Capitals NHL 25 4 14 4 1325 94 0 4.26 .871
1977–78 Hershey Bears AHL 3 3 0 0 180 4 1 1.33
1978–79 Washington Capitals NHL 17 4 9 1 860 68 0 4.75 .855
NHL totals 119 20 61 21 6091 424 1 4.18 .877

See also

References

External links

Шаблон:Authority control