And so it begins again....
This year marks the sixth season I've been doing the Leaf of the Day.  They have yet to make the playoffs.  I continue to maintain that this is not my fault, and I will continue to make this joke every season until such time as the Leafs either make the playoffs or it is conclusively proven that these past few seasons actually are my fault, at which point I will slink off into a hole somewhere and disappear.
This season also marks 20 years since the 1990-91 disaster, which I won't be profiling in detail since it has been done to death, mostly by me.  On a personal note, it was also 20 years ago this winter that I made the decision to drop out of journalism school because if there was one thing I knew, it was that I had no desire at all to live a life in which I had to come up with some new story line day after day and get it published for a bunch of strangers to read.  
Funny how things work out.
Anyhow, to the professor that made the comment (not aimed at me, particularly) that cemented that decision in my mind, thanks for sending me on a very interesting 20-year journey.  I've done and been a number of different things and I wouldn't trade any of it.  Well, maybe I'd trade Gretzky high stick thing.  I could have done without that.  The rest is a keeper.
Now, every year I try to kick things off with a player who embodies something I'd like to see in the Leafs and this year, it's Paul Henderson.  Paul was never a superstar, just a solid pro who could come up big when he needed to.  He had good wheels and could play a solid game at either end of the rink.  Even though a number of Leaf teams he played on didn't fare all that well, Paul was never a minus player during his NHL career (at least in the seasons where the stat was tracked).

Paul came to Toronto in the Frank Mahovlich deal of 1968. The Leafs were floundering, Frank was about a year away from walking out on hockey (by his own admission) and the trade, while controversial today (then, too), revitalized the Leafs. They caught fire down the stretch and made up nine points, but fell just short of the playoffs. Henderson was +13 in as many games and contributed 11 points.

Over the next few seasons, Leaf teams would be up and down, trading years where promise abounded with years of near disaster. Throughout it all, Paul Henderson was a consistent bright spot, always scoring at least 20 and as high as 30. In 1971-72, Paul hit for a career high of 38, which was good enough to get him onto Team Canada's checking line with Bobby Clarke and Ron Ellis. Nobody needs to describe what happened next.



Coming back to the Leafs, torn apart by the WHA and heading for a pretty rough season, was not easy for Paul. He struggled with the pressure of being the national hero and missed a lot of time to injury. He still hit for 18 goals in half a season, but it was the beginning of the end. With the huge influx of new players coming in and the team turning over, he decided he'd had enough of Harold Ballard and jumped to the Toronto Toros of the WHA. He'd stay in that league until it folded and then had one last season with Atlanta.

Paul found peace through his faith and has spent the last thirty years or so as a sought-after speaker. He was diagnosed with cancer earlier this year and I haven't heard much of late. His 1972 sweater recently sold for over one million dollars at auction and will be taken on a cross-country tour.

Six years ago, Paul Henderson was the first-ever Leaf of the Day. I used this scan below and apparently never bothered to scan the back. The text would have said something witty and insightful like, "Hey look, it's Paul Henderson!"

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I was able to do these things faster in those days.  Not sure why.
Visit the Paul Henderson Gallery at the HHOF.
Paul Henderson's stats:

1960-61 Goderich Jets OHA-B
1960-61 Hamilton Red Wings OHA-Jr. 30 1 3 4 9 12 1 1 2 4
1961-62 Hamilton Red Wings OHA-Jr. 50 24 19 43 68 10 4 6 10 13
1961-62 Hamilton Red Wings M-Cup 14 7 7 14 22
1962-63 Detroit Red Wings NHL 2 0 0 0 9
1962-63 Hamilton Red Wings OHA-Jr. 48 49 27 76 53 3 2 0 2 0
1963-64 Detroit Red Wings NHL 32 3 3 6 14 14 2 3 5 6
1963-64 Pittsburgh Hornets AHL 38 10 14 24 18
1964-65 Detroit Red Wings NHL 70 8 13 21 30 7 0 2 2 0
1965-66 Detroit Red Wings NHL 69 22 24 46 34 12 3 3 6 10
1966-67 Detroit Red Wings NHL 46 21 19 40 10
1967-68 Detroit Red Wings NHL 50 13 20 33 35 0
1967-68 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 13 5 6 11 8 +13
1968-69 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 74 27 32 59 16 +18 4 0 1 1 0
1969-70 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 67 20 22 42 18 +14
1970-71 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 72 30 30 60 34 +14 6 5 1 6 4
1971-72 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 73 38 19 57 32 +14 5 1 2 3 6
1972-73 Canada Summit-72 8 7 3 10 4
1972-73 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 40 18 16 34 18 +2
1973-74 Toronto Maple Leafs NHL 69 24 31 55 40 +9 4 0 2 2 2
1974-75 Canada Summit-74 7 2 1 3 0
1974-75 Toronto Toros WHA 58 30 33 63 18
1975-76 Toronto Toros WHA 65 26 29 55 22
1976-77 Birmingham Bulls WHA 81 23 25 48 30
1977-78 Birmingham Bulls WHA 80 37 29 66 22 5 1 1 2 0
1978-79 Birmingham Bulls WHA 76 24 27 51 20
1979-80 Atlanta Flames NHL 30 7 6 13 6 +5 4 0 0 0 0
1979-80 Birmingham Bulls CHL 47 17 18 35 10
1980-81 Birmingham Bulls CHL 35 6 11 17 38
Leaf Totals 408 162 156 318 166 +84 19 6 6 12 12
NHL Totals 707 236 241 477 304 56 11 14 25 28
WHA Totals 360 140 143 283 112 5 1 1 2 0
Major Totals 1067 376 384 760 416 61 12 15 27 28


Played in NHL All-Star Game (1972, 1973)      
- Traded to Toronto by Detroit with Norm Ullman, Floyd Smith and Doug Barrie for Frank Mahovlich, Garry Unger, Pete Stemkowski and the rights to Carl Brewer, March 3, 1968.
- Selected by Quebec (WHA) in 1972 WHA General Player Draft, February 12, 1972.
- WHA rights traded to Toronto (WHA) by Quebec (WHA) for cash, June, 1974. - Transferred to Birmingham (WHA) after Toronto (WHA) franchise reloctated, June 30, 1976.
- Signed as a free agent by Atlanta, September 17, 1979.
What the HHOF has to say about Paul:

A skilled right-winger, Paul Henderson used his speed and a willingness to gamble on offense to great effect during his pro tenure. He scored at least 20 goals seven times in the NHL and was a top performer in the World Hockey Association. Despite an exemplary career as a professional, Henderson carved his permanent place in hockey history with his scoring heroics for Team Canada in the 1972 Summit Series versus the Soviets.

Born in Kincardine, Ontario, Henderson was signed as a teenager by the Detroit Red Wings' organization. He was a standout with the parent club's top junior affiliate, the Hamilton Red Wings, where he scored an OHA best of 49 goals in 48 games during the 1962-63 season. That impressive year also featured a two-game call-up to the Wings. The next year he split his playing time between the Motor City and the Pittsburgh Hornets of the American Hockey League.

Henderson developed into a consistent, full-time NHL winger in 1964-65, playing on a line with Pit Martin and Larry Jeffrey. The following season he recorded his first 20-goal season and helped Detroit reach the Stanley Cup final, where they succumbed to the Montreal Canadiens in six games. Henderson lost 24 games to injury in 1966-67 but still managed to score 21 goals.

Late in the 1967-68 season, Henderson was involved in a multi-player deal that brought him to the defending Stanley Cup-champion Toronto Maple Leafs. Norm Ullman was the key player joining Henderson in Hogtown while the Wings' prize catch was Frank Mahovlich.

Henderson scored a personal best of 27 goals during his first full year in Toronto in 1968-69. He formed an effective partnership with former Red Wings teammate Norm Ullman and emerging star Ron Ellis. Between this season and 1971-72, the Ullman-Henderson-Ellis line established a host of Maple Leafs single-season scoring records for a forward line. In 1970-71 Henderson scored a career high of 60 points then registered a personal best of 38 goals the following season.

What was lacking from this period of individual success for Henderson was any sort of post-season achievement by Toronto. After being in 33 playoff games in three seasons from 1963-64 to 1965-66 with Detroit, Henderson took part in only 19 post-season matches in seven seasons with the Maple Leafs.

The triumph that stands out in Henderson's career is from the early 1970s. Coming off his 38-goal performance in 1971-72, the speedy winger was deemed a potential asset on the Canadian squad being that was assembled for the upcoming Summit Series against the Soviets. Team Canada coaches Harry Sinden and John Ferguson believed that Henderson would add depth and stability to their squad. Nobody on either team could have anticipated what would transpire during the series.

During Canada's disappointing 1-2-1 showing in the first four games of that series in Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg and Vancouver, Henderson performed admirably on what was essentially a checking line. He and linemates Ron Ellis and Bobby Clarke were the most cohesive unit from the first day of training camp and they were arguably three of the most consistent players among the Canadian contingent in the first half of the series.

After a heartbreaking loss in the first game in Moscow, game five of eight, Canada stormed back to win the last three games, each by a goal. Remarkably, Henderson scored the winner in each of these one-goal decisions. The most spectacular was the winner with two minutes to go in game seven, which gave Canada a 4-3 win.

Late in the eighth game, with the score tied 5-5, Henderson called for Pete Mahovlich to come off the ice. He immediately headed for the net and narrowly missed his first chance before jumping on the rebound of a Phil Esposito shot. Henderson took two swipes at the puck before slipping the series-winner past Vladislav Tretiak with 34 seconds left in the game. This historic moment earned Henderson a special place in Canadian history. Nearly every Canadian who is old enough is able to recall where they were when "the goal" was scored.

Exhausted and distracted 1972-73, Henderson managed to play only 40 games for Toronto. The team was seriously weakened by defections to the World Hockey Association and finished well back of playoff contention. Improvements came the following season and Henderson scored 24 goals in 69 games. During this period, Maple Leafs owner Harold Ballard feuded with many of his players. After experiencing the euphoria of the Summit Series, Henderson felt the environment around the Toronto team seemed stale. This contributed to the famous winger's yearning for a change of scenery.

Henderson stayed in Toronto but joined the Toros franchise of the World Hockey Association prior to the 1974-75 season. Before suiting up for his new club, he took part in the 1974 Summit Series, which matched most of the Soviets from the previous series against a Team Canada squad made up of the top stars from the WHA. Skating with the likes of Gordie Howe, Bobby Hull and '72 series-veteran Frank Mahovlich, Henderson was expected to come up with some pretty good offense and leadership. He played well but the Soviets were out for revenge and posted a 4-1-3 series win.

In five seasons with the Toronto Toros/Birmingham Bulls franchise, Henderson scored 140 goals but took part in only five playoff games. On September 17, 1979, he was signed by the Atlanta Flames and split the season between that NHL team and the Birmingham Bulls of the Central Hockey League. Henderson scored his last 13 NHL points in Dixie before retiring from the league. One night in March, he gained a measure of revenge against Ballard by scoring two goals in a 5-1 Atlanta win at Maple Leaf Gardens, which earned him selection as the game's first star.

Henderson played his last pro season in 1980-81 and then retired. His NHL total is 236 goals, but it was his unforgettable moments on the ice at the Luzhniki Arena in Moscow that ensured his immortality in hockey history.


Henderson712_medium

OK - sorta tipped my hand with this card in the Esso post, but it was relevant.  Guess I could have used Ullman, who I also had scanned and fit the bill.

(Edit - added the 70-71 pic I'd forgotten.)