Coaches use an
array of techniques to motivate their players. Some make fire and brimstone speeches,
others use a reserved corporate executive style of communication. Fred Shero took the road
less traveled. He scribbled messages on the locker room blackboard to inspire his troops.
Before Game 6 of the 1974 Stanley Cup Finals, he wrote his most famous saying, "Win
together today and we walk together forever." Three hours later, the Flyers won the
first of two consecutive Stanley Cups.
The son of
immigrants who fled Russia to escape religious persecution, Shero was born on October 23,
1925, in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He attended the University of Manitoba for two years and
served in the Canadian navy where he made a name for himself in the field of athletics not
as a hockey player but as a boxer. Shero was the lightweight and middleweight champion but
rejected a $10,000 offer to turn professional, opting to play hockey instead.
A marginal player at best, the defenseman played three
seasons for the New York Rangers from 1947-1950. Those three years were sandwiched between
a playing career that began in 1942 for the St. James Monarchs and ended in 1958 for the
Shawinigan Cataracts. In 1957, Shero began his professional coaching career with
Shawinigan. By 1971, he had held additional minor league coaching tenures for St. Paul,
Omaha, and Buffalo, winning six first place titles during those years.
With his minor league success, the Flyers came calling for
the man with the tinted glasses in 1971. Using an eccentric, entertaining style, he began
to mold the Flyers into the "Broad Street Bullies," writing on his famed
blackboard, "Take the shortest route to the puck carrier, and arrive in ill
humor." He stressed the importance of commitment by saying, "When you have bacon
and eggs for breakfast, the chicken makes a contribution, but the pig makes a
commitment."
Practices under Shero could make an outsider shake his head
in disbelief. To improve stick handling, tennis balls would replace hockey pucks. To
increase leg strength, skaters would push a goalie seated in a folded chair around the
ice. Forwards would practice breakaways while being slashed from behind. "Nobody ever
lets you score an easy goal in a game," Shero said. "Why practice that
way."
When the Flyers beat the Minnesota North Stars four games
to two and gave the Montreal Canadiens a tough battle in the 1973 playoffs, Shero knew his
team was ready to compete for the Stanley Cup, which the orange and black won in 1974 and
1975. They remain the only NHL championships in Flyers history. In 1974, he won the Jack
Adams Award as the NHL Coach of the Year.
"The Fog," as Shero was called for tendency to
drift off in thought, didnt rest on his laurels. Three days after winning his first
Cup, he spent three weeks in the Soviet Union to study Russian techniques. Even with all
his success, this brilliant hockey mind never took himself too seriously. "Coaches
are a dime a dozen," Shero said. "I found out a long time ago that only one
thing wins for you--the players."
Feeling he did not get the most from his team during the
1977-78 season, Shero resigned from the team on May 22, 1978. Less than two weeks later,
he re-joined the New York Rangers organization as head coach and general manager. Because
Shero still had a year left on his contract with the Flyers. Philadelphia received a No. 1
pick from Rangers as compensation. After two years and change in New York, the Fog made
his final coaching stop in Tilburg, Holland, for the 1987-88 season. For the previous five
years, he had been the New Jersey Devils' radio analyst. In 1990, he returned to the
Flyers as a community relations adviser.
In 1983, Shero underwent surgery for stomach cancer. It was
the beginning of long battle with the disease that eventually claimed his life on November
24, 1990. Many of Sheros innovations--hiring an assistant coach, installing playing
systems, studying films, conducting morning skates--are common in hockey today. In 1980,
he was a co-recipient of the Lester Patrick Trophy awarded for outstanding service to
hockey in the United States.
The
holder of every major Flyers' coaching record, including years' coached (7), wins (308),
winning percentage (.642), and playoff wins (48), Shero was inducted into the Flyers Hall
of Fame in March 1990. In a 1999 Philadelphia Daily News poll, he was selected as
the citys greatest professional coach/manager, beating out legends such as Connie
Mack, Dick Vermeil, Greasy Neale, Billy Cunningham, Dallas Green, and Alex Hannum. It was
a fitting tribute to one of the most innovative coaches in NHL history.The Flyers are as
much a part of Philadelphia as cheesesteaks and Rocky. In 1967, however, when the
club was trying to secure loans to build an arena and get its operations up and running,
giving money away seemed like a better idea to area banks than investing in a fledgling
hockey franchise. Without Joe Scotts business acumen and reputation, the Flyers
might have become just another footnote in the citys then dismal hockey history.