Misplaced Pages

Broome Dusters

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Broome Dusters were an ice hockey team in the North American Hockey League . They played in Binghamton, New York , United States at the Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena . The team logo was designed by Johnny Hart , artist of the comic strip B.C. and a Binghamton native.

#901098

63-581: The Dusters played in the NAHL, which served as the inspiration for the movie Slap Shot , which includes a "Broome County" team. One scene in the film was specifically drawn from events that occurred in Binghamton. In the movie, the Hanson brothers wear black-rimmed, Coke-bottle eyeglasses , and in one game, get into a fight immediately after the opening faceoff. In reality, both Jeff and Steve Carlson of

126-465: A Strasbourg goose ." However, she praised Newman for giving "the performance of his life—to date." It has been brought to our attention that the broken cd of #SlapShot was found at the wreck of the #HumboltStrong team bus. We wish "putting on the foil or "buying a soda after the game" could help but instead we will reflect and pray God gives peace and comfort during this time. In the years since its initial release, Slap Shot has come to be regarded as

189-500: A cult classic . Critical reevaluation of the film continues to be positive. In 1998, Maxim named Slap Shot the "Best Guy Movie of All Time" above acknowledged classics such as The Godfather , Raging Bull , and Newman's own Cool Hand Luke . Entertainment Weekly ranked the film #30 on its list of "The Top 50 Cult Films". In the November 2007 issue of GQ , Dan Jenkins proclaimed Slap Shot "the best sports film of

252-447: A $ 100 reward to any player who assaults Tim McCracken, the player-coach of the rival Syracuse team. The Chiefs rise up the ranks to become contenders for the championship. Eventually, Dunlop meets the reclusive team owner, Anita McCambridge, and learns that his efforts to increase the team's popularity and value through violence have been for naught, as McCambridge could sell the team if she wished, but would make more money if she folded

315-573: A Norsemen fan held up a derogatory sign stating that blacks should be playing basketball. The next game in the series was held in Johnstown, and the Jets retaliated by attacking the Norsemen players during the warm-ups, with a huge brawl erupting. The Norsemen players and coaches then returned to the dressing room and refused to come out to start the game. The game was awarded to the Jets by forfeit, as

378-549: A ball directly into the Dutch bench after fouling Nathan Aké . This resulted in the Dutch players surrounding Paredes which led to a brawl. Bench-clearing brawls are prohibited in scholastic competition with the National Federation of State High School Associations specifying the penalty for leaving the bench area to participate in a fight in any sanctioned sport as an automatic ejection and, if actively involved in

441-409: A brawl's participants. Since a bench-clearing brawl by definition involves everyone on both teams, it is exceedingly unlikely that all participants will be ejected, but the player or players responsible for the precipitating event are often ejected. Fines and suspensions generally result and are issued at a later date. Fighting in ice hockey by enforcers is an established, if unofficial, part of

504-496: A career as a Hollywood character actor, an assistant director, and eventually a line producer. The characters of the Hanson Brothers are based on three actual brothers: Jeff, Steve, and Jack Carlson , who played with Ned Dowd on the Jets. The character of Dave 'Killer' Carlson is based on then-Jets player Dave "Killer" Hanson. Steve and Jeff Carlson played their Hanson brother counterparts in the film. Jack Carlson originally

567-416: A factory town in decline. Dowd based much of her script, as well as several of the characters, on her brother Ned Dowd 's playing experiences on 1970s minor league professional hockey teams. While Slap Shot received mixed reviews upon release and was only a moderate box-office success, it has since become widely regarded as a cult film . In the fictional Rust Belt town of Charlestown, Pennsylvania ,

630-448: A fairer fight, and a typically neutral outcome. As in most cases, managers and/or umpires will intervene to restore order and resume the game. In at least one case, (the infamous Ten Cent Beer Night promotion) the home team ( Cleveland Indians ) left their dugout to defend the visiting team ( Texas Rangers ) from fans who had stormed the field . Depending on the severity of the unsportsmanlike conduct , an umpire may or may not eject

693-570: A fight, an automatic suspension . In addition, school administrators may implement more severe penalties such as disqualification from activities, academic suspension or expulsion . In more severe instances, participants and coaches can face criminal charges (for example, assault and battery and endangerment of a minor , respectively), and entire schools can face sanctions from their state's athletic association, ranging from letters of reprimand, forfeiture of contests, withholding of travel expenses and extended suspensions of players and coaches to, in

SECTION 10

#1732783649902

756-417: A fine of $ 10,000 for the first player to leave his bench or the penalty box to participate in a brawl; for each subsequent player after the first to leave his bench or the penalty box, the penalties include, in addition to in-game penalties, an automatic five-game suspension and a fine of $ 5,000. The International Ice Hockey Federation rules prescribe a double minor penalty plus a game misconduct penalty for

819-476: A furious McGrath tells them that various National Hockey League scouts are watching the game. Dunlop and the rest of the team, except Braden, immediately switch back to brawling, much to the delight of the fans. However, when Braden sees his estranged wife cheering for the Chiefs, he enters the rink, but instead of joining the brawl he performs a live striptease, adding to the audience's enjoyment and breaking up

882-470: A game between Canada and the Soviet Union during the 1987 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships . The game was rougher and more dangerous than is generally accepted, and with 6:07 left in the second period, a fight broke out between Pavel Kostichkin and Theoren Fleury , causing both teams to leave the benches for 20 minutes. The officials ordered that the arena lights be turned out, but to no avail, and

945-751: A similar incident occurred in Utica, New York, in a game between the Johnstown Jets and the Mohawk Valley Comets . Jeff Carlson was hit in the face by a cup of ice thrown by a Utica fan and went into the stands after the fan with brothers Jack and Steve. All three were arrested and Dave Hanson gathered the money for bail for the Carlson brothers. Slap Shot was a moderate hit upon release, grossing $ 28,000,000 over its theater run, which placed it at #21 among movies released in 1977 and well below

1008-539: A team member against an official will draw the penalty of ejection from the game, with further sanctions by league officials virtually certain. This also includes on-field penalties that move the ball closer or further from the goal line depending on the team sanctioned, hurting the team's winning chances far more than in other sports. One notable brawl at the college level was between the University of Miami and Florida International University , where tough talk between

1071-501: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about a sports team in New York is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Slap Shot (film) Slap Shot is a 1977 American sports comedy film directed by George Roy Hill , written by Nancy Dowd , and starring Paul Newman and Michael Ontkean . It depicts a minor league ice hockey team that resorts to violent play to gain popularity in

1134-429: Is ambivalent on the subject of violence in professional ice hockey. Half the time Hill invites the audience to get off on the mayhem, the other half of the time he decries it. You can't really have it both ways, and this compromise badly mars the handsomely made Universal release, produced by Robert Wunsch and Stephen Friedman." Vincent Canby of The New York Times described the performances as "impeccable" and thought

1197-428: Is one of few mainstream American films that was translated in colloquial Québécois French and not Standard French . Heavy use of Quebec expressions and foul language has made this version of the film a cult classic among French-speaking Canadians, where lines from the movie such as "Dave est magané" ("Dave's a mess") and "Du hockey comme dans l'temps" ("good old-fashioned hockey") are common catch phrases. The movie

1260-599: The IIHF eventually declared the game void. Both teams were ejected from the tournament, costing Canada a potential gold medal, and the Canadian team, disgusted at what they perceived to be a conspiracy against them, chose to leave rather than stay for the end-of-tournament festivities, from which the Soviet team were banned. A notable KHL bench-clearing brawl saw all the players of Avangard Omsk and Vityaz Chekhov , except for

1323-471: The Johnstown Jets hockey team. He gave her the bad news that the team was up for sale. Dowd spent a month with his team doing research for a movie. She worked her own notes and from tape recordings that her brother had made for her in the locker room and on the team bus. She was paid $ 50,000 for the screenplay, which took four months to complete, and was present during the entire filming. The movie

SECTION 20

#1732783649902

1386-511: The Johnstown Jets wore similar glasses, and did get into a long fight right after an opening faceoff. Johnstown Coach Dick Roberge told the Johnstown Tribune-Democrat , "We got into Binghamton about two or three weeks before the playoffs. In the team warmup, we're out there and all the Binghamton players came out with the plastic glasses and big noses, every one of them, poking fun at the Carlson brothers. We went back in

1449-766: The National Basketball Association changed the penalty for leaving the bench to participate in a brawl from a $ 500 fine to an automatic one-game suspension. In 2010, the Northern Territory Football League in Australia ruled that any player found to have left the interchange bench to participate in a melee would be ejected from the match. They would also have their melee fine increased by 25% and receive an automatic one-game suspension. Bench-clearing brawls do not occur very often in gridiron football . All levels of

1512-550: The Toronto Triumph and the Philadelphia Passion . It was unclear what punishment either team would face as Toronto was already using replacement players due to a mass walkout of the original team earlier in the year. A minor bench-clearing brawl occurred during the 2022 FIFA World Cup in the quarterfinal match between Argentina and The Netherlands , when Argentinian player Leandro Paredes kicked

1575-618: The University of New Hampshire in 1970. Syracuse Bulldogs rookie goon Ogie Ogilthorpe, who was mentioned throughout the film but never actually seen until the final playoff game, was based on longtime minor-league goon Bill "Goldie" Goldthorpe . Like Ogie Ogilthorpe, Goldie Goldthorpe is also infamous for his rookie season in professional hockey (1973) when as a member of the Syracuse Blazers he amassed 25 major fighting penalties before Christmas. The Broome County Blades in

1638-489: The Utica Memorial Auditorium (used as Peterborough where the pre-game fight occurs and where a Hanson reprimands the referee for talking during the anthem); Onondaga County War Memorial (used as Hyannisport where the Hanson Brothers charge into the stands to accost a fan and are arrested); and in other Johnstown locales. Coincidentally, the Johnstown Jets and the NAHL folded in 1977, the year Slap Shot

1701-516: The Ice (2002) and Slap Shot 3: The Junior League (2008). Paul Newman and the rest of the original cast did not participate in either sequel, with the exception of the Hanson Brothers, who had major roles in both. Bench-clearing brawl A bench-clearing brawl is a form of fighting that occurs in sports, most notably baseball and ice hockey , where most or all players on both teams leave their dugouts , bullpens , or benches, and charge onto

1764-465: The U.S. in the 1970s. At that time, violence, especially in the low minors, was a selling point of the game. Dowd would call his sister “from these various towns—Utica, Syracuse, New Haven—and tell me how he was being beaten-up and having his teeth knocked out.” That, she told The New York Times , “sort of fascinated me.” Dowd was living in Los Angeles when she got a call from Ned, a member of

1827-480: The action is limited to pushing and shoving. Noteworthy is that players from opposing bullpens run onto the field, often side-by-side, depending on bullpen locations, to join the brawl (which is usually over by the time they arrive), rather than brawling among themselves. This highlights the purpose of coming onto the field which is to show support instead of escalating the conflict. Unlike most other team sports, where teams usually have an equivalent number of players on

1890-667: The dressing room and the boys said, 'Coach, as soon as that puck is dropped, we're pairing up.' We had one heckuva fight. They went about 30 minutes until everyone got tired. We met them again in the finals (1974–75) and beat them four straight." When the NAHL folded in 1977, the team was replaced by the Binghamton Dusters of the American Hockey League who previously operated as the Providence Reds . This American ice hockey team-related article

1953-552: The drunken center of the Hyannisport Presidents. Coincidentally, Brophy would later coach Dave Hanson , who played Jack Hanson, with the Birmingham Bulls in 1978. In one scene announcer Jim Carr remarks that Ned Braden is "a college graduate ... and an American citizen!" – both unusual distinctions for a pro hockey player of the time. In real life, Michael Ontkean played hockey for and graduated from

Broome Dusters - Misplaced Pages Continue

2016-403: The field at any given time, in baseball the hitting team is at a numerical disadvantage, with a maximum of five players (the batter, up to three runners, and an on-deck batter) and two base coaches on the field, compared to the fielding team's nine players. For this reason, leaving the dugout to join a fight is generally considered acceptable in that it results in numerical equivalence on the field,

2079-479: The fight. When McCracken protests this "obscene" demonstration and sucker-punches the referee for dismissing him, Syracuse is disqualified, granting the Chiefs the championship. After their win, with the Chiefs effectively folded, Dunlop accepts the offer to be the player-coach to a Minnesota team, intending to bring his teammates with him. The original screenplay by Nancy Dowd is based in part on her brother Ned Dowd 's experiences playing minor-league hockey in

2142-526: The film for the first time when he was 11 years old during a hockey road trip with his team. After the Humboldt Broncos bus crash in 2018, a broken Slap Shot DVD was found at the crash site. Steve Carlson met with some of the survivors. Concurrent with the release of the film, Berkeley Books released a novelization of the screenplay, written by Richard Woodley . The film was followed by two direct-to video sequels: Slap Shot 2: Breaking

2205-596: The film had "a kind of vitality to it," but found it "unfunny" and noted an "ambiguous" point of view with regard to violence. Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times was negative, writing that since the "characters possess so little dimension and since we have so little opportunity to get to know and therefore care about them, their incessantly brutalizing behavior and talk can only seem exploitative in effect. What's more, in playing for laughs, Slap Shot gives

2268-673: The film shows the Hanson brothers jumping the Peterborough Patriots during pre-game warm-ups. This is based on events in a mid-'70s North American Hockey League playoff series between the Johnstown Jets and the Buffalo Norsemen . The Jets had a black player on their roster, and during a playoff game held in North Tonawanda, New York (a northern suburb of Buffalo where the Norsemen played their home games),

2331-618: The film were based on the Broome Dusters . One scene was specifically drawn from events that occurred in Binghamton, New York . In the film the Hanson brothers wear black-rimmed, Coke-bottle eyeglasses, and in one game get into a fight immediately after the opening faceoff; in reality, both Jeff and Steve Carlson did wear that style of glasses, and did indeed get into a long fight right after an opening faceoff. Coach Dick Roberge : We got into Binghamton about two or three weeks before

2394-510: The first player to leave the bench during an altercation and a misconduct penalty for other such players; a player who leaves the penalty box during an altercation is assessed a minor penalty plus a game misconduct penalty. In addition to these penalties for leaving the bench, all players engaging in a fight may be penalized. One of the more notable incidents was the Punch-up in Piestany ,

2457-405: The game penalize any "substitute who leaves the team box during a fight" (as it is worded in the high school rule books) with automatic ejection and possible further sanctions depending on the league, and the amount of equipment a football player wears greatly increases the risk for injury in a brawl. In addition, on-field umpires and referees move in immediately to break up fights, and any contact by

2520-558: The game) and suspensions. As in baseball, hockey brawls usually result from escalating infractions. In this case, dangerous hits, excessive post-whistle roughness, taking shots after the whistle, attacking the goaltender , and hatred from competition in a game with a significant amount of inter-player violence, all contribute to bench-clearing brawls. In the National Hockey League the penalties include, in addition to in-game penalties, an automatic 10-game suspension and

2583-499: The goaltenders, begin fighting at 3:34 into the first period. The referees ejected 33 players and both teams' coaches before the game was abandoned as only four players remained; the teams and players were fined a total of 5.6 million rubles ($ 191,000), with seven players being suspended, and the game was counted as a 5-0 loss for both teams. Bench-clearing brawls have also been known to occur in other sports, and officials in those sports have been cracking down on such brawls. In 1995,

Broome Dusters - Misplaced Pages Continue

2646-627: The grosses of Paul Newman's three previous wide-release films: The Towering Inferno , The Sting , and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid , which all grossed over $ 100 million. Reviews were mixed, and ranged from Rex Reed writing in The Daily News that it was “violent, bloody and thoroughly revolting,” to Newsweek 's assertion that the film was “tough, smart, cynical and sentimental—the key ingredients in our new pop populism.” Variety wrote that "director George Roy Hill

2709-428: The incidence of violence in sport, does everything it possibly can to make the audience wallow in that violence." Gene Siskel gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four in his original print review, writing that "what Slap Shot does to its ultimate failure is exaggerate every one of its fine facets. It's as if those locker room tape recordings had been edited to remove the silences and banalities, to include only

2772-482: The local steel mill is about to close permanently and lay off 10,000 workers. This threatens the existence of the town's minor league ice hockey team, the Charlestown Chiefs, which is already struggling with a losing season, indifferent players, and an increasingly hostile crowd. Player-coach Reggie Dunlop, like most of the team, has no employment prospects outside hockey. As a money-saving measure,

2835-483: The making of Slap Shot , said to Time in 1984: There's a hangover from characters sometimes. There are things that stick. Since Slap Shot , my language is right out of the locker room! Newman stated that the most fun he ever had making a movie was on Slap Shot, as he had played the sport while young and was fascinated by the players around him. During the last decades of his life, he repeatedly called Reg Dunlop one of his favorite roles. Al Pacino wanted to play

2898-543: The mixed reviews, the film won the Hochi Film Award for Best International Film. Pauline Kael in The New Yorker was mixed, writing that "I don't know that I've ever seen a picture so completely geared to giving the public 'what it wants' with such an antagonistic feeling behind it. Hill gets you laughing, all right, but he's so grimly determined to ram entertainment down your throat that you feel like

2961-421: The more I liked it." The Wall Street Journal ' s Joy Gould Boyum seemed at once entertained and repulsed by a movie so "foul-mouthed and unabashedly vulgar" on one hand and so "vigorous and funny" on the other. Michael Ontkean's strip tease displeased Time' s critic Richard Schickel , who regretted that "in the dénouement [Ontkean] is forced to go for a broader, cheaper kind of comic response." Despite

3024-436: The most outrageous sex-and-violence. And regrettably, 'Slap Shot' moralizes about violence in its tacked-on, whipsaw ending. This, after filling the screen with nonstop mayhem." Years later he said, "My initial review was mixed and then I saw it two weeks later, thankfully, and I knew it was a terrific film." He included it among the runners-up on his year-end list of the 10 best films of 1977, explaining that "the more I saw it,

3087-497: The nasty impression of seeming to patronize both the players and their fans." Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote " Slap Shot comes at you like a boisterous drunk. At first glance it appears harmlessly funny, in an extravagantly foul-mouthed sort of way. However, there's a mean streak beneath the cartoon surface that makes one feel uneasy about humoring this particular drunk for too long." Tom Milne of The Monthly Film Bulletin described it as "a film which, while deploring

3150-657: The owner plans to sell the team. To motivate the players, he leaks to a newspaper a fabricated story about a potential sale to a community in Florida , hoping that if the team becomes popular, it will actually happen. The brawls are bringing fans to the games, increasing attendance and making that prospect more likely. Ned Braden, the team's top scorer, refuses to take part in the violent antics; Dunlop attempts to get him to fight by exploiting Braden's marital troubles, but to no avail. Games begin to devolve into bench-clearing brawls which become increasingly violent. Dunlop even offers

3213-422: The past 50 years." On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 85%, based on 39 reviews, with an average rating of 7.10/10 and the critical consensus stating "Raunchy, violent, and very funny, Slap Shot is ultimately set apart by a wonderful comic performance by Paul Newman." The film is standard viewing for young ice hockey players on road trips, including Christian Hanson , son of David Hanson , who saw

SECTION 50

#1732783649902

3276-573: The playing area in order to fight one another or try to break up a fight. Penalties for leaving the bench can range from nothing to severe. In baseball , brawls are usually the result of escalating infractions or indignities, often stemming from a batter being hit by a pitch , especially if the batter then charges the mound . They may also be spurred by an altercation between a baserunner and fielder, such as excessive contact during an attempted tag out . Few bench-clearing brawls result in serious injury, as in most cases, no punches are thrown, and

3339-473: The playoffs. In the team warmup, we're out there and all the Binghamton players came out with the plastic glasses and big noses, every one of them, poking fun at the Carlson brothers. We went back in the dressing room and the boys said, "Coach, as soon as that puck is dropped, we're pairing up." We had one heckuva fight. They went about 30 minutes until everyone got tired. We met them again in the [1974 –75 season] finals and beat them four straight. A scene in

3402-411: The role of Reggie Dunlop (#7) but director George Roy Hill chose Paul Newman instead. Nancy Dowd rejected suggestions that the film was sexist and said that she considered herself to be a feminist. Yvan Ponton and Yvon Barrette (who played forward Jean-Guy Drouin and goaltender Denis Lemieux, the two Quebec players in the film) dubbed their own voices for the film's translated French version. The film

3465-592: The sport (especially in North America , where the penalty rules are more permissive); the general procedure in a one-on-one fight is to let it run to its completion and then send both players to the penalty box with five-minute major penalties . Escalations beyond isolated fights, such as when most or all players on the ice begin to fight, known as a line brawl, are prohibited . Players violating these rules face more serious consequences, such as players being assessed game misconduct penalties (being ejected from

3528-471: The team as a tax write-off . Dunlop decides to abandon the strategy of violence for the championship game, believing it to be his last, and the rest of the team agrees. However, their opponents from Syracuse have stocked their team with violent "goons," many of whom were previously suspended from the league or even imprisoned. After the Chiefs are crushed during the first period while playing a non-violent style of "old time hockey" and getting booed by their fans,

3591-536: The team's penny-pinching manager, Joe McGrath, begins selling equipment and signs three young, immature brothers, the Hansons . After seeing Charlestown fans responding positively to violence, Dunlop unleashes the Hansons, whose play mainly consists of brutalizing the other team. Although some of the players are slow to adopt this increasingly violent and thuggish style of play, it excites the fans. Dunlop learns that

3654-814: The two crosstown schools escalated into a brawl with severe consequences for FIU. At least two bench-clearing brawls have taken place in the Lingerie Football League, since renamed the Legends Football League . The first came in 2009 between the Miami Caliente and the New York Majesty ; that brawl eventually led to the Majesty suspending operations. Another occurred during the December 9, 2011 LFL game between

3717-729: Was filmed in Johnstown, Pennsylvania , Pittsburgh , and in central New York State ( Clinton Arena and Clinton, New York ; Utica Memorial Auditorium in Utica, New York and the Onondaga County War Memorial Auditorium in Syracuse, New York ). Nancy Dowd used Ned and a number of his Johnstown Jets teammates in Slap Shot , with Ned playing Syracuse goon Ogie Ogilthorpe. He later used the role to launch

3780-542: Was filmed in (and loosely based around) Johnstown, Pennsylvania, and utilized several players from the then-active North American Hockey League Johnstown Jets (the team for which Dowd himself played) as extras. The Carlson Brothers and Dave Hanson also played for the Jets in real life. Many scenes were filmed in the Cambria County War Memorial Arena and Starr Rink in Hamilton, New York ;

3843-591: Was released. Although much of the film takes place during the fall and winter seasons, when hockey is in season, filming at the Utica Memorial Auditorium took place from June 3–4. Similarly, in Johnstown, Newman is wearing a coat as though it should be cold, but there is no snow on the ground and the trees are in full bloom. The Reggie Dunlop character is based, in part, on former Eastern Hockey League Long Island Ducks player/coach John Brophy , who receives homage by his last name being used for

SECTION 60

#1732783649902

3906-414: Was the playoff series since the "win" gave the Jets the needed number of victories to capture the series. Another scene is also based on a real-life event. In the film Jeff Hanson scores a goal and is hit in the face by a set of keys thrown by a fan. The Hansons then go into the stands after the fan and Jeff Hanson punches the wrong fan. After the game the Hansons are arrested for the incident. In real life

3969-618: Was written to appear in the film as the third brother Jack, with Dave Hanson playing his film counterpart Dave 'Killer' Carlson. However, by the time filming began, Jack Carlson had been called up by the Edmonton Oilers , then of the WHA , to play in the WHA playoffs, so Dave Hanson moved into the role of Jack Hanson, and Jerry Houser was hired for the role of 'Killer' Carlson. Paul Newman, claiming that he swore very little in real life before

#901098