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It was the height of the cold war and these soldiers where definitely
the super power of Europe. And for kids growing up on Canadian Forces
Base Baden-Soellingen, the players on the Baden Raiders hockey team
were super heroes, even held in higher esteem than the popular CF
104 fighter jet pilots.
The Raiders, for much of Canada's more than 40 years of NATO involvement
in Germany, where always A good team of Canadian players playing
in a European League and tournaments. But in the 1971-72 season
it took an upturn thanks to a hockey-loving base commander who pulled
some strings and posted all of the best military players. Col. A.J.
Bauer was the Punch Imlach of the armed forces and what the base
suddenly had was a stacked team of players, many of whom would have
played in today's 30 team NHL.

The Team was Jag Young, Ted Blaker, Paul Godin, Andy Burges, Ron
Hughes, Barney Barnhard, Cal Kemp, Tom Hanna, Wayne Mitchell, Pierre
Lessard, Andre Boucher, Jack Roussell, Ray Demeules, Jacques Desbiens,
Gerry Bowes, Tom Simming and Jimmy Gebhard. They where Canada's
nuclear weapons on ice.
The guy I remember most from the team was captain Gebhard, who
is a real character. He's retired in Kingston now and even at almost
68 still plays with pals. Back than he was a kind of Paul Coffey
and Marty McSorley wrapped up into one. There was one time he chased
a Swedish player into the stands to pay him back for a slash. "I
don't remember that," Jimmy told me over the phone this week… It
happened while I was there.

He also downplayed the time he skated with the Toronto Maple Leafs
and turned some heads.
It was the 1968 training camp and Jimmy, than 36, and Royal College
fellow Warrant Officer Wally Travis were brought in by Imlach to
get the Leafs in shape. After awhile the Maple Leaf players were
getting a little tired of the military regimen and at the suggestion
of captain George Armstrong decided to invite them for a scrimmage
to get back at them a little. In a column, Sun legend George Cross
wrote in the Toronto Telegram Sep. 14, 1968 "It didn't work out
that way. As a matter of fact , Armstrong and his team mates looked
as puzzled as when they missed the playoffs last spring. " It's
abbreviated a bit but Gross also wrote "Gebhard nailed Armstrong
near the boards, passed the puck to Travis who promptly beat Bruce
Gamble with a low shot. Actually Gebhard and Travis forgot to tell
the Leafes something- they were both former Kingstin Aces Senior
players."
I stopped by George's office last night and we both had a laugh
as he recalled seeing these guys teach the NHLers a little lesson.
"The Leafs could use Jimmy Gebhard today." Jokes George, who at
the time quoted an in awe Johnny Bower saying: "You know Punch should
take a look at this fellow Gebhard,. Maybe Punch should sign him."
Of course , Jimmy just continued on with his military career and
eventually made history with the Baden Raiders . But you have to
wonder what might have been if he had had been just a few years
younger at that camp in Peterborough in the fall of 68.
Copyright
©
This piece on the Raiders history was printed
on January 20, 2001 in the Night Scrawler's column of the Toronto
Sun.
We thank Joe Warmington
the author of this article; for giving us permission , using it
on our web page.
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