Steve Shutt was one of hockey's great sharpshooters. He had the talent to be in the right place at the right time and he had the soft hands of a surgeon.
He has a master plan that could save Canadian NHL Hockey.
Shutt is passionate about Canadian hockey. He considers the Canadian player and fans the heart and soul of the NHL. He adds, "To lose any more of our Canadian franchises would be devastating."
Steve alluded to the Toronto NHL Allstar Weekend where everything including practices were sold out and tickets were being scalped at $1000.00 each. The NHL bureaucrats from New York and around the league had never witnessed such frenzied hockey interest. Shutt credits NHL President Gary Bettman who, according to Steve, fully understands the importance of Canada to the NHL. It's still the world's best hockey breeding ground. He challenges the NHL Players Association to get involved, "as their silence has been deafening."
Steve Shutt has proven to be a hockey zealot. He worked for four years as a Montreal Radio hockey analyst alongside the great Dick Irvin. Then he was a four year Canadian assistant coach. I'm of the opinion that the Shutt Plan deserves an audience. So listen up owners, government, NHL P.A. and Mr. Bettman.
The Steve Shutt Hockey Master Plan:
1. The NHL Players Association must get involved. They could start by implementing a players tax. Players are taxed when they play in each province. Steve claims all the players do is fill in a tax form and it's painless and it's already being used in New York and California.
2. The NHL must work out a deal with Canadian lotteries so that some of their profits are kicked back to the NHL teams.
3. Shutt doesn't agree that tax dollars should go to professional teams. However, Steve wants the government to give the NHL the same tax break that other businesses with the same economic base get. When Montreal pays more property taxes than all of the American teams combined, the playing field between American and Canadian teams is not level.
We also discussed our Canadian minor hockey woes. Wayne Gretzky says we need to put fun back into minor hockey. Steve Shutt has advice for hockey parents: "Stop pressuring your kids and let them have fun. If you can't do that, stay home."
Shutt reminds parents, "Your kids will get to the NHL if they have the proper skill and proper desire and attitude. Coaches too must relax and let kids play for fun."
Steve Shutt, "the player" took an unusual road to the NHL. He was a Toronto Murlie super star junior drafted in the first round by Montreal. It didn't impress Shutt because the powerful Habs were loaded with talent and he wanted to play. For two years, he was in and out of the line-up, but then he got a break as Tardiff, Houle and Frank Mahovlich jumped to the W.H.A.
Steve was on a line with Guy Lafleur and Pete Mahovlich that was an immediate success. Later when Lemaire succeeded the flamboyant Peter M., they became the NHL's most explosive forward line. In 1976-77, Steve set a left wing scoring record with 60 goals, Guy had 57 and the lines defensive specialist Jacques Lemaire had 35. There isn't a line in the watered down NHL today that could produce those numbers.
Shutt helped lead Montreal to five Stanley Cups, was singled out for Allstar honours five times and after 12 years played his final year with the L.A. Kings. This was a year he enjoyed because it was L.A. and a new organization, but then at 33, he retired because he felt he had attained all of his goals.
Steve has been working on his fitness because this year he will be playing with the Oldtimers' Hockey Challenge across Canada. Shutt admitted he never realized until the Legends tour how popular the Habs were in the west.
"The crowds are awesome, it's a relaxed and fun time, I love the environment! I feel like a kid again."