Bob Pulford, a Hockey Hall of Famer who spent 30 years as a Blackhawks coach, general manager and executive in a variety of roles, died Monday. He was 89.
Pulford, a native of Ontario, already had enjoyed a lengthy playing career with the Maple Leafs and a five-year stint as the Kings’ coach before joining the Hawks in 1977, but it turned out his career was just beginning.
During the course of the next three decades, Pulford had four stints as the Hawks’ coach and another four as their GM, frequently coming to the rescue as an interim option after abrupt firings during a tumultuous era for the franchise.
Pulford was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1991, but he still had one coaching stint and three GM stints ahead of him even at that point.
‘‘Bob Pulford was a towering figure in our organization and in the National Hockey League whose impact spans generations of the game,’’ Hawks chairman Danny Wirtz said in a statement.
‘‘Whether coach, general manager, senior executive or even multiple at the same time, Bob wasn’t afraid to serve in whatever role was most needed at the time and take on the different challenges associated with each that seem unthinkable by today’s standards.
‘‘As we reflect on his life and legacy, I am particularly struck that Bob contributed to more than a quarter of the organization’s 100-year heritage. We are grateful for his leadership and devotion to the sport, which will forever be part of our club’s history. This is a tremendous loss for the Blackhawks and the hockey world at large, and on behalf of the Wirtz family, I extend our deepest condolences to the Pulford family.’’
Among the Hawks players drafted by Pulford were Denis Savard, Jeremy Roenick, Eddie Olczyk, Troy Murray, Dave Bolland and Bryan Bickell.
Pulford’s long run finally came to an end in 2007, when Rocky Wirtz’s first big move as the Hawks’ chairman after father Bill Wirtz’s death was to shift Pulford away from the Hawks’ day-to-day operations and into a vice-president role in the Wirtz Corporation.
Pulford had absorbed a lot of heat from fans and reporters by that point, but then-GM Dale Tallon was tellingly quick to offer praise.
‘‘[Bob] was very helpful, very positive when I came in with no experience as a general manager,’’ Tallon told the Sun-Times. ‘‘He made it easy for me, as far as all the little things that had to get done and how to do them. He’s been very influential in my life. He helped me get to a position where I feel comfortable in doing what I’m doing.’’
A statement from the NHL Alumni Association described Pulford as ‘‘one of the most respected figures in the history of hockey.’’ He won four Stanley Cups and was a six-time All-Star with the Leafs in the 1960s, and he earned a Jack Adams Award as coach of the year with the Kings in 1975.
Pulford was also the first president of the NHL Players’ Union in 1967 and played ‘‘a key role in early collective bargaining and helping lay the foundation for the modern NHLPA,’’ according to the alumni association.
He’s the third-winningest coach in Hawks history, although his 185 career victories trail far behind Billy Reay (516) and Joel Quenneville (452).