By David Eskenazi and Steve Rudman
An odd thing happened to hockey icon Golden Guyle Fielder the last time he visited Seattle (Oct. 4, 2008). En route to his induction ceremony into the State of Washington Sports Hall of Fame, Fielder couldn’t locate KeyArena, his enshrinement site, even though he had played for several years in the facility, known in Fielder’s heyday with the Seattle Totems as the Center Coliseum.
“I just had an awful time trying to find that place,” said Fielder, bollixed by new construction and one-way streets that had altered the look, feel and navigation of the lower Queen Anne neighborhood since his residency there in the 1960s.
Even odder than Fielder losing his bearings on induction night: it not only took 40 years for him to receive recognition that should have come his way about the time of the Watergate hearings (1974), but 13 members of the Pacific Northwest media entered the State of Washington Sports Hall of Fame ahead of the greatest hockey player ever to crease a sheet of ice in this state.
Fielder starred for the Seattle Bombers in 1953-54, for the Seattle Americans from 1955-57 and with the Totems from 1957-69 15 seasons in all (he would have played 16 but Seattle, stumbling financially, did not field a hockey team in 1954-55). During that time, the Totems played in five Western Hockey League finals and won three championships, Fielder serving as the centerpiece as both team leader and incomparable stats machine.
Fielder topped the WHL in assists 12 times and in points nine times. He received 11 All-Star salutes, captured six Leader Cups as the league’s Most Valuable Player, and three Fred J. Hume Cups as its Most Gentlemanly Player. In 1956-57, playing for the Americans, Fielder became the first professional hockey player to produce 100 points in a season (122), a feat he replicated three other times. In other words, he racked up Wayne Gretzky-like numbers two decades before Gretzky. His career point total — 1,929 – is still the minor league record nearly four decades after his final pro contest.
That a player so clearly gifted spent his entire career in the minor leagues, except for 15 National Hockey League appearances spread among the Chicago Black Hawks (3 games) Boston Bruins(2) and Detroit Red Wings (10), is an enigma that has baffled the hockey cognoscenti for decades, especially since Fielder has always been considered the greatest player of his time not named Gordie Howe, Maurice Richard or Jean Beliveau.
Fielder offers several reasons for his missing out on the NHL, not the least of which is that all he wanted to do was play. The WHL provided that opportunity while the NHL could not.
The NHL included six teams in Fielder’s era, so jobs were scarce. Fielder was small, standing 5-foot-9 and weighing 160 pounds. While Fielder had remarkable offensive instincts, especially when it came to passing, stick handling, intuition and anticipation, his style ran contrary to the NHL’s overwhelming orientation to defense.
It’s probably language abuse to suggest Golden Guyle played with guile but, in fact, he did. Still, the NHL simply found his game too unconventional to condone. So Fielder, who believed in handling the puck and setting up his wingers, never found an NHL fit.
Originally signed by the Chicago Blackhawks as a free agent March 9, 1951 (the 20-year-old Fielder received a $100 signing bonus), Fielder saw action in three games (no points) before Chicago loaned him to New Westminster of the Pacific Coast Hockey League for cash in August of 1951. The Blackhawks traded Fielder to Detroit Sept. 23, 1952, which waived him a year later (Sept. 29, 1953).
Claimed by the New York Rangers, Fielder spent one, out-of-season month with the Rangers before they traded him to the Seattle Bombers just prior to the 1953-54 season for the rights to a prospect named Lee Hyssop (who never did much) in what turned out to be one of the greatest deals ever consummated by a Seattle professional sports franchise. Fielder received one more shot at the NHL, just prior to the 1957 season.
“I had a good tryout in Detroit in 1957,” said Fielder. ”I went all through training camp – I played with Gordie Howe – but we got off to a terrible start. I went to the second line, the third line and then to the bench. I told Jack (GM Jack Adams) that I was wasting my time and his time. Anybody can sit on the bench. Jack gave me a $500 raise, and I stuck around a few more games. Then I wasn’t even dressing. I told Jack, ’Just get me out of here. Were wasting each others time.’ I like to think that I could have played in the NHL. I was a little smaller, but agile. I just didn’t have the patience to stick. I only wanted to play, and to the best of my ability.”
The Western Hockey League offered Fielder an opportunity to maximize his skill set. So Fielder, Idaho born (Nov. 21, 1930) and Saskatchewan reared, returned to Seattle, where the Bombers had been renamed the Americans, and helped launch the second great age in Seattle ice hockey, the first coming between 1915-24, when the Seattle Metropolitans played for the Stanley Cup three times in a four-year span, winning the prize once (1917).
In 1956-57, playing on an Americans squad that included future Vezina winner Charlie Hodge, future NHL general manager Emile The Cat Francis, and Ray Kinasewich, who tallied 44 goals, Fielder shattered the professional single-season scoring record with 122 points en route to claiming MVP accolades and the first of four consecutive scoring titles.
A year later (1957-58), the Americans defeated New Westminster in the first round of the playoffs, Seattle’s first postseason series win since 1948-49, when the old Ironmen represented the city in the Pacific Coast Hockey League
For the 1958-59 season, the Americans became the Totems and, fueled by All-Stars Fielder, Val Fonteyne, Gordie Sinclair and Bev Bentley, won their first WHL title, sweeping the Calgary Stampeders 4-0.
Although the Victoria Cougars swept the Totems in the 1959-60 playoffs, Seattle featured one of the most offensively talented teams in league history, the only season in which the WHL’s three leading scorers Fielder (95 points), Bill MacFarland (86) and Rudy Fillion (85) came from the same club. Also, Marc Boileau and Tom McVie finished sixth and seventh.
The Totems reached WHL finals in 1960-61 (lost to Portland) and 1962-63 (lost to San Francisco). Sandwiched between was a year (1961-62) in which MacFarland paced the league with 46 goals and was selected MVP.
With MacFarland becoming head coach in 1966-67 (the Totems vacated Mercer Arena in 1964 and moved to the larger Center Coliseum), the Totems swept Vancouver to win their second WHL title, and then won the championship again in 1968, beating the hated Buckaroos in five games.
When Fielder recalls his 15 years in Seattle (he lived in Edmonds, where he purchased his first and second homes, one of them a trailer), four things come to his mind: his teammates and the friendships they represent, the Totems’ fierce rivalry with the Portland Buckaroos, a galling playoff loss to the San Francisco Seals in 1963, and a playoff triumph over Portland April 20, 1968, that still ranks as one of the most remarkable postseason victories by a Seattle team in any sport.
In the 1963 WHL finals, the Totems faced the San Francisco Seals (named in honor of the city’s former minor league baseball team), with all seven games played at the Cow Palace due to scheduling conflicts at Civic Arena in Seattle. Seattle seemed to have a title locked, leading 3 games to 1. But the Seals rallied to take the last three contests — the final two in overtime — and captured San Francisco’s first pro hockey title.
“Tough to lose, but Ill never, ever forget that series,” said Fielder.
Five years later, in the WHL finals against the Buckaroos, the Totems collected a victory in Game 1, but fell behind 6-2 after two periods of Game 2 at the Seattle Center Coliseum. Seattle then scored two goals in the first minute and a half of the third, and another about halfway through the period to slice the Buckaroos lead to 6-5. The Totems believed they scored the tying goal late in the period, but officials waived it off due to a high stick. With just over a minute to go, Seattle pulled its goaltender, and scored with 19 seconds left to knot the game. Fielder hit the game winner in overtime in what announcer Bill Schonley described as “the greatest comeback in Seattle hockey history.” The Totems went on to win the series in five games.
“That’s one game I’ll just never forget, because of the rivalry,” said Fielder. “That was just an unbelievable game. I was fortunate.”
That marked the last time the Totems won a playoff series, and the end of good times for Fielder in Seattle. He was 39 years old and figured he didn’t have much ice time left.
“I got a little discouraged at the end of my career in Seattle,” Fielder explained. “I wondered what I was going to do with my life after hockey. Most places look after their players. I thought they (the Totems) would look after me. I went in to talk to them, and nothing happened, so I retired. I was a little disappointed in that respect. But we had some good hockey fans in Seattle.”
Fielder didn’t stay retired long, only a matter of months. He un-retired when he received a $20,000 offer from the expansion Salt Lake Golden Eagles (Western Hockey League), coached by a former Americans teammate, Ray Kinasewich, who acquired Fielder’s rights from the Totems in exchange for Bobby Schmautz Nov. 14, 1969. Fielder spent two and a half years in the Utah capital before the Golden Eagles traded him to Portland, where he finished his career (1972-73) and entered retirement.
By that time, the Totems had imploded. In 1971-72, they went a wretched 12-53-7, finishing with 17 fewer victories than the next-worst team. Those Totems scored 175 goals, lowest in league history, and allowed an astounding 331. Goaltender Jack Norris had a 5-28-5 record and allowed 4.14 goals per game. His backup, Bob Sneddon, went 3-13-2 and allowed 5.31. The Totems’ 53 defeats were the most in a single season in WHL history.
Worse than the mess on the ice: The Totems financial situation had become so dire that owners Vince Abbey and Eldred Barnes sold a majority interest in the club to Northwest Sports, which owned the Vancouver Canucksof the NHL, to keep their Seattle operation afloat. A condition of the sale permitted the Totems to survive as a farm team of the Canucks and included the proviso that if Seattle were ever offered an NHL franchise, Abbey and Barnes would be entitled to re-acquire the team from Northwest Sports.
The Totems enjoyed few highlights after that. On Dec. 25, 1973, they defeated a touring Czechoslovakia Army Team 6-4 in front of 6,041 at the Seattle Center Coliseum. Eleven days later, Jan. 5, 1974, the Totems squared off against the Russian National Team, also at the Coliseum, in a game that represented the coming out for a young Russian goaltender, Vladislav Tretiak, who would become an international star over the next decade. More than 12,700 fans watched the Totems, behind Don Westbrookes hat trick, score a shocking 8-4 victory over the defending World Champions.
Seattle’s sporting fortunes took a turn for the better in 1974, when the city received a National Football League franchise (Seahawks) and a North American Soccer League franchise (Sounders). Although he had made no impact yet, Don James also signed to coach the University of Washington football team, and King County broke ground on the Kingdome.
The other development: On June 12, 1974, the National Hockey League announced that a group of Seattle businessmen, headed by Abbey, had been awarded an expansion team to begin play in 1976-77. Cost of the franchise: $6 million. The condition: Abbey had to make a $180,000 deposit on the franchise by the end of 1975, and had to repurchase the shares in the Totems he sold to Northwest sports (Vancouver Canucks) in 1972.
The announcement that Seattle, along with Denver, would receive an NHL franchise spelled the end of the Western Hockey League. In 1975-76, the Totems moved to the Central Hockey League to await their entry into the NHL.
It never happened. Abbey missed several NHL-imposed payment deadlines while scrounging for financing. A desperate Abbey tried to pluck the Pittsburgh Penguins out of bankruptcy for $4.4 million in June of 1975, and also attempted to lure the San Francisco franchise (California Golden Seals) to Seattle for the 1975-76 season. Both efforts failed. Eventually, the Seattle and Denver NHL expansion deals fell apart. Denver joined the new World Hockey Association, the money-losing Totems folded, Seattle wound up with nothing, and Abbey sued the NHL on anti-trust grounds. That went for naught: the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals finally tossed out his claim.
”I was really disappointed the Totems folded,” said Fielder. ”With the NHL and the new World Hockey Association, there just weren’t enough good players to keep our league going.”
Historically, Seattle has almost always had high-level professional hockey, starting with the Frank Foyston, Bernie Morris-led Metropolitans (Pacific Coast Hockey Association, 1915-24) and continuing with the Eskimos (Pacific Coast Hockey League, 1928-31), Sea Hawks (North West Hockey League, 1934-41), Ironmen (PCHL, 1944-51), Bombers (WHL, 1952-54), Americans (WHL, 1955-57) and Totems (WHL, 1958-69). But after the latter bellied up, Seattle did not receive another team until the junior league Seattle Breakers (now Thunderbirds) were established in 1977.
The city seemed primed to receive an NHL team in 1990, when a consortium led by Chris Larson of Microsoft, former Totems player and coach Bill MacFarland and Bill Ackerley, son of Sonics owner Barry Ackerley, met with league officials to discuss the matter. The Seattle bidders went to the expansion meetings prepared prepared to pay a $50 million expansion fee, but Barry Ackerley mysteriously (at least it seemed mysterious then) undercut his co-presenters by unilaterally informing the NHL that Seattle would withdraw its expansion application.
Turned out that Ackerley did not want the Sonics competing for favorable Coliseum dates and advertising dollars with an NHL franchise. So when the Coliseum (becoming KeyArena) underwent a $100 million facelift in 1994-95, Ackerley had it designed so that it could not possibly accommodate an NHL franchise, meaning, among other things, that Fielder would never be supplanted as Seattle’s greatest hockey star.
Fielder settled in Portland after leaving hockey, bought a place on the Oregon coast and took a job no one could have anticipated.
“I worked at the dog track in Portland selling mutuel tickets, Fielder said, “and then in the summers I worked at Turf Paradise (a race track in Phoenix). I did that for 15 years. I also had a house-watching (security) business for a couple of years – we watched 70-80 houses 24/7 – but eventually I got tired of the cold, wet winters and moved to Arizona.”
For a lot of years, golf served as Fielders principal competitive outlet. He played several times a week as a 5-handicapper, even into his 70s.
“I still play a little bit of golf, but mostly pool now, he said. “I can’t make the little putts anymore. I have it in my mind that I can’t make them, and so I cant. It gets very discouraging when you can’t make those putts. So now I play in a pool league. It’s a little money game.”
Fielder has been married to his second wife, Georgia, for eight years and lives in a gated community (Leisure World) in Mesa. Nearing 80 years old, he doesn’t travel much, except to Tortilla Flat, an old ghost town east of Mesa, where he enthralls guests with stories about gold in the nearby Superstition Mountains. Fielder also keeps in touch with old teammates – he sees Bill MacFarland once or twice a year – and still watches hockey, although the modern game is not quite to his liking.
“I watch hockey all the time,” he reported. “But I don’t really enjoy it anymore. There are three things. First of all, hockey has been taken over by big, strong, fast guys, but they don’t have a brain in their heads. Nobody can backhand. There’s no finesse anymore, so its like watching paint dry. There’s nothing happening. On top of that, the contracts are just ridiculous. So I enjoy hockey, I just don’t like the style they play. A lot of these players are goons who just go out there to fight. There aren’t any playmakers. They telegraph every play. I’ve never seen so many goals scored in my life from the corner. We never scored goals like that.”
Golden Guyle would know. He scored 401 (Hockey Reference.com) of them and assisted on 1,398 others.
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DavidsWayback Machine Archive. David can be reached at (206) 441-1900, or at seattlesportshistory@gmail.com
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12 Comments
Well written. And after being at game 7 of the Detroit-San Jose series last week I can say that Seattle really is missing something. Sorry, folks, among other things, Sounders soccer does not even compare. And, regardless, if teams in Southern California and Florida of all places can support a NHL franchise, Seattle certainly should be able to as well.
Thanks for visiting our web site. It’s all about the arena.
Well written. And after being at game 7 of the Detroit-San Jose series last week I can say that Seattle really is missing something. Sorry, folks, among other things, Sounders soccer does not even compare. And, regardless, if teams in Southern California and Florida of all places can support a NHL franchise, Seattle certainly should be able to as well.
Great article. I started watching the Totems in 1963 and this brings back a bunch of memories. Lucky to have been able to watch Fielder, and a lot of other good players, for so many years. I was at the 7-6 comeback win against Portland and Fielder scored that winning goal on, you guessed it, a blistering backhand shot.
For two summers in the mid-60s I went to a hockey school run by Fielder and Gordie Sinclair in Woodinville. What a couple of amazing athletes. Besides being a phenomenal golfer, Fielder had a big array of trick pool shots, you couldnt touch either of them in ping pong and for gawdsakes they could even throw ringer after ringer in horseshoes!
Incidentally, in the photo about halfway down showing a Canucks player, the people standing behind the screen were in the general admission section in the old Ice Arena. I think it was $2 for those tickets and you stood for the entire game.
Thanks again for a great article.
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Great article. I started watching the Totems in 1963 and this brings back a bunch of memories. Lucky to have been able to watch Fielder, and a lot of other good players, for so many years. I was at the 7-6 comeback win against Portland and Fielder scored that winning goal on, you guessed it, a blistering backhand shot.
For two summers in the mid-60’s I went to a hockey school run by Fielder and Gordie Sinclair in Woodinville. What a couple of amazing athletes. Besides being a phenomenal golfer, Fielder had a big array of trick pool shots, you couldn’t touch either of them in ping pong and for gawdsakes they could even throw ringer after ringer in horseshoes!
Incidentally, in the photo about halfway down showing a Canucks player, the people standing behind the screen were in the “general admission” section in the old Ice Arena. I think it was $2 for those tickets and you stood for the entire game.
Thanks again for a great article.
Interesting article. The only Totems game I went to was a very memorable game, but not for a very good reason. Early 70’s I believe. One of the players (I’m pretty sure it was a visiting player and not one of the Totems) beat the living daylights out of an official. Just grabbed him by the shirt and pummeled his face into a bloody pulp. I think the poor guy’s bloody face was on the front page of the sports section of the Times or P.I. if I remember correctly. Anyway, interesting article.
Interesting article. The only Totems game I went to was a very memorable game, but not for a very good reason. Early 70’s I believe. One of the players (I’m pretty sure it was a visiting player and not one of the Totems) beat the living daylights out of an official. Just grabbed him by the shirt and pummeled his face into a bloody pulp. I think the poor guy’s bloody face was on the front page of the sports section of the Times or P.I. if I remember correctly. Anyway, interesting article.
I would expect nothing less from David Eskenazi. A thoroughly enjoyable read on one of Seattle’s great sports stars. I must point out, though, that the first time the Soviet Red Army team faced the Totems was on Christmas night, 1972. The Totes spotted the Soviets a 3-0 lead, then clawed their way back to tie the game at 4-4. But then the Russians demonstrated why they had given Team Canada such a scare back in September of ’72. They scored 5 unanswered goals to win the game 9-4. Alexandr Yakushev was the star of the game with 3 goals and an assist.
I would expect nothing less from David Eskenazi. A thoroughly enjoyable read on one of Seattle’s great sports stars. I must point out, though, that the first time the Soviet Red Army team faced the Totems was on Christmas night, 1972. The Totes spotted the Soviets a 3-0 lead, then clawed their way back to tie the game at 4-4. But then the Russians demonstrated why they had given Team Canada such a scare back in September of ’72. They scored 5 unanswered goals to win the game 9-4. Alexandr Yakushev was the star of the game with 3 goals and an assist.
Wow, great article! That is very disappointing to hear that the Totems came so close to joining the NHL but didn’t. Me and my brother were talking a few weeks back about how much we want the NHL in Seattle (or better yet, Bellevue!), and we were talking about what would be the best name for the team, and we both agreed hands down that ‘Totems’ would be our first choice.
Wow, great article! That is very disappointing to hear that the Totems came so close to joining the NHL but didn’t. Me and my brother were talking a few weeks back about how much we want the NHL in Seattle (or better yet, Bellevue!), and we were talking about what would be the best name for the team, and we both agreed hands down that ‘Totems’ would be our first choice.