It was Jan. 5, 1975. Crouch, then 18, was in net for the Junior A Markham Waxers, playing against the Royal York Royals at a rink in North Toronto. As he recalls it, the play was routine. The outcome was not.

“There was a puck entering into our zone. And as a goalie, I raced out, slid on my left side, and as I did, two players jumped over me and one of their skates caught me on the side of the neck,” said Crouch.

Black and white images, captured by a local newspaper photographer, show the players suspended in air moments before impact. Then a dazed Crouch, sitting in a spreading pool of his own blood, with the man who saved his life, team trainer Joe Piccininni, desperately working to staunch the flow.

Almost five decades later, Crouch recalls that the emergency surgery lasted three hours, but can’t remember how many stitches it took to sew him back up. A case review saved in his scrapbook, details the devastating injuries — extensive muscle and nerve damage, a nick to a vertebrae, the carotid artery completely severed and the jugular vein mostly cut through.

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    11 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Then a dazed Crouch, sitting in a spreading pool of his own blood, with the man who saved his life, team trainer Joe Piccininni, desperately working to staunch the flow.

    A case review saved in his scrapbook, details the devastating injuries — extensive muscle and nerve damage, a nick to a vertebrae, the carotid artery completely severed and the jugular vein mostly cut through.

    Crouch returned to the ice within a month, wearing what may well have been the first hockey neck guard, designed by his father Ed — then the Whitby, Ont., fire chief — and stitched together by a local seamstress.

    “Whether it’s something that’s mandated directly or on a phased-in basis, that’s something we’ll discuss with the players’ association,” NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman told reporters in early November.

    Therien notes that rec players are often the most vulnerable, playing late at night in rinks without trainers, off-ice staff, or even spectators to help or call an ambulance.

    Canlan Sports, the company that runs Adult Safe Hockey — the country’s largest beer league with 65,000 players across four provinces — says a neck guard mandate is on its horizon.


    The original article contains 944 words, the summary contains 189 words. Saved 80%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!