Yogi Berra is also mourned by the hockey world

Yogi Berra, who passed away last night at the age of 90, was one of baseball’s biggest stars and greatest legends. But did you know he had connections to the game of hockey as well?

Pictures of him practicing with the St. Louis Flyers, a minor league team in the AHL in the 40’s and 50’s (and the AHA before that) were unearthed recently, and they’re true gems. (Berra was a native of St. Louis.)

Berra, who lived in New Jersey, was also a huge Devils fan as he had a relationship with Dr. John McMullen, who owned the Devils along with the Houston Astros, who brought Berra in as a coach in the 80’s. Lou Lamiorello reflected on his relationship with Yogi:

“He was almost synonymous with the Devils every day in my early days there. Every morning I’d walk in and he’d be there at South Mountain (Arena). He’d work out with Dr. McMullen. We’d sit down and have a coffee. I must have seen him six days a week for several years. He was just a good friend. He loved the game of hockey.”

He loved hockey so much that he wrote an op-ed about the Devils in the New York Times in 2003 after their third Stanley Cup championship:

Maybe a few more people should appreciate the Devils. The team gets criticized just for being good. A former Rangers coach said they’re just a bunch of interchangeable parts. Well, I’ve always been a Rangers fan, too, and I wish they had more interchangeable parts. Good teams always have them — guys who play for the team, not for themselves, and the Devils typify teamwork at its best. (…)

New York Rangers legend Rod Gilbert posted this on Wednesday:

That’s an awesome and unique piece of memorabilia.

Berra was universally loved, in his own sport, and in the hockey world. The latter poured out their tributes to him:

“The thing you say about him is I have never heard anybody say a negative word about him, anywhere, no matter what, or anything written negative,” Lamoriello said. “Everything was so positive.”

 

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