The premiere Canadian prime time NHL ice hockey telecast program.The premiere Canadian prime time NHL ice hockey telecast program.The premiere Canadian prime time NHL ice hockey telecast program.
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- 15 wins & 17 nominations total
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I've never even seen a complete show and I can tell you that this is the best hockey show ever. I wish I had a satellite just so I could watch this show on Saturday Nights. Every Canadian hockey fan watches "Hockey Night in Canada" and every American Hockey fan only wishes "NHL Tonight" could compare. There is no comparison to what our neighbors to the north have.
10barryrd
I began watching this regular Saturday night broadcast in the mid-1950's when we had our first television set. This was on the CBC English network. It was a black &white screen with a grainy picture, not the sharp colour broadcasts we view nowadays. I remember Bill Hewitt, Foster's son, doing the play by play commentary in Toronto on alternate weeks while Danny Gallivan handled the broadcasts in Montreal.
My dad and I would watch the Toronto games with great enthusiasm as we cheered for the Maple Leafs. For the Montreal games, we watched the far noisier Montreal fans who made those games seem like life or death struggles. If players like Jean Beliveau, Dickie Moore or Maurice Richard scored the winning goal, the sirens and organ music would blare with boots, hats and just about anything else ending up on the ice surface.
How we looked forward to those games! In the 1960's, the broadcasts became flashier and racier. Times have changed but the excitement of this fast-paced sport has been our national obsession. From its low key production days to now, it has always been the top draw on Canadian television and a part of our shared history.
My dad and I would watch the Toronto games with great enthusiasm as we cheered for the Maple Leafs. For the Montreal games, we watched the far noisier Montreal fans who made those games seem like life or death struggles. If players like Jean Beliveau, Dickie Moore or Maurice Richard scored the winning goal, the sirens and organ music would blare with boots, hats and just about anything else ending up on the ice surface.
How we looked forward to those games! In the 1960's, the broadcasts became flashier and racier. Times have changed but the excitement of this fast-paced sport has been our national obsession. From its low key production days to now, it has always been the top draw on Canadian television and a part of our shared history.
Hockey Night In Canada is the best hockey show on TV. It's better then NHL on FOX, (Although FOX is cool), and better than all the hockey games on ESPN, it's just too awesome, plus the theme music is the best. Just remember if you're in Canada on Saturday Nights, switch to CBC, and watch Hockey Night In Canada!
This is a tradition in Canada.
It is much better than anything that ESPN or Fox has. We got Ron McLean and Don Cherry to ramble on at the intermission. This show's theme song is pretty much the other national anthem in Canada and it has been a tradition for over fifty years.
It is much better than anything that ESPN or Fox has. We got Ron McLean and Don Cherry to ramble on at the intermission. This show's theme song is pretty much the other national anthem in Canada and it has been a tradition for over fifty years.
It began as an extension of CBC's Saturday night radio coverage of the Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadians. Just to show how different programming policies were then, CBC didn't broadcast games until the start of the second period. Many fans had never experienced a first period until HNIC came to be televised in 1952.
In Toronto, games were broadcast by the father & son duo of Foster and Bill Hewitt. By the late fifties, Foster let Bill take over the reins and returned to radio. In Montreal, the play-by-play was handled by veteran sportscaster Doug Smith, then a former English teacher named Danny Gallivan. The fifties and sixties went on to be HNIC's golden age, as Leafs and Canadians ruled Saturday night, emerging into two of the best clubs in hockey.
Tired of being subject to CBC's nightmarish budget woes, Hockey Night in Canada went independent, incorporating itself as the Canadian Sports Network. They remained a fixture on CBC, Canada's public network, but later took HNIC to the Canadian (CTV) and Independent (based at CHCH Hamilton) Television Networks. Intermission hosts came and went over the years: Wes McKnight, Ward Cornell, Jack Dennett, Dick Irvin Jr., Frank Selke Jr., Ted Darling, Dave Hodge, Mike Anscombe, Dave Reynolds and Brian MacFarlane worked among these ranks.
Expansion changed HNIC, as well as the rest of hockey. In 1970, the Vancouver Canucks entered the NHL, adding the broadcast team of Jim Robson, Ted Reynolds and Bill Goode Jr. to the television mix. By the 1980s, the show had added Edmonton, Calgary and Winnipeg to their territory. Former NHL "Coach-of-the-year" Don Cherry became a popular color commentator, while veteran broadcasters Don Wittman and John Wells entered the scene. Ron MacLean began his tenure as host, which would see Cherry and himself become key fixtures.
The fermenting 'beer war' between Quebec Nordiques and Montreal Canadians, who were owned by rivals Carling-O'Keefe Breweries and Molson Breweries respectively, did not allow Quebec into the HNIC family, but the provincial rivalry went on to become one of hockey's finest ever. When the Quebec and Winnipeg franchises left for U.S. sites, a new Ottawa franchise retained the six-city face of HNIC. New faces like Chris Cuthbert, Kelly Hrudey, Scott Oake, Scott Russell, Steve Armitage and Harry Neale arrived on the scene.
Molson Breweries was a longtime sponsor for TV's longest running sports program, but dropped affiliation by the mid-nineties, when rival Labatt paid the bills. When the NHL canceled the 2004-2005 season due to the CBA lockout, CBC replaced it with "Movie Night In Canada." Ron MacLean was retained as host.
The NHL labor dispute was settled before late summer 2005 and Hockey Night in Canada made its return to CBC the following October. I find it hard to fathom that the Hockey Hall Of Fame waited until 2007 to induct the great Bill Hewitt into the hall as a broadcaster. Well deserved, albeit long overdue.
In Toronto, games were broadcast by the father & son duo of Foster and Bill Hewitt. By the late fifties, Foster let Bill take over the reins and returned to radio. In Montreal, the play-by-play was handled by veteran sportscaster Doug Smith, then a former English teacher named Danny Gallivan. The fifties and sixties went on to be HNIC's golden age, as Leafs and Canadians ruled Saturday night, emerging into two of the best clubs in hockey.
Tired of being subject to CBC's nightmarish budget woes, Hockey Night in Canada went independent, incorporating itself as the Canadian Sports Network. They remained a fixture on CBC, Canada's public network, but later took HNIC to the Canadian (CTV) and Independent (based at CHCH Hamilton) Television Networks. Intermission hosts came and went over the years: Wes McKnight, Ward Cornell, Jack Dennett, Dick Irvin Jr., Frank Selke Jr., Ted Darling, Dave Hodge, Mike Anscombe, Dave Reynolds and Brian MacFarlane worked among these ranks.
Expansion changed HNIC, as well as the rest of hockey. In 1970, the Vancouver Canucks entered the NHL, adding the broadcast team of Jim Robson, Ted Reynolds and Bill Goode Jr. to the television mix. By the 1980s, the show had added Edmonton, Calgary and Winnipeg to their territory. Former NHL "Coach-of-the-year" Don Cherry became a popular color commentator, while veteran broadcasters Don Wittman and John Wells entered the scene. Ron MacLean began his tenure as host, which would see Cherry and himself become key fixtures.
The fermenting 'beer war' between Quebec Nordiques and Montreal Canadians, who were owned by rivals Carling-O'Keefe Breweries and Molson Breweries respectively, did not allow Quebec into the HNIC family, but the provincial rivalry went on to become one of hockey's finest ever. When the Quebec and Winnipeg franchises left for U.S. sites, a new Ottawa franchise retained the six-city face of HNIC. New faces like Chris Cuthbert, Kelly Hrudey, Scott Oake, Scott Russell, Steve Armitage and Harry Neale arrived on the scene.
Molson Breweries was a longtime sponsor for TV's longest running sports program, but dropped affiliation by the mid-nineties, when rival Labatt paid the bills. When the NHL canceled the 2004-2005 season due to the CBA lockout, CBC replaced it with "Movie Night In Canada." Ron MacLean was retained as host.
The NHL labor dispute was settled before late summer 2005 and Hockey Night in Canada made its return to CBC the following October. I find it hard to fathom that the Hockey Hall Of Fame waited until 2007 to induct the great Bill Hewitt into the hall as a broadcaster. Well deserved, albeit long overdue.
Did you know
- TriviaOne of the popular features during the show's intermissions was "Coach's Corner" with former NHL hockey player and coach, Don Cherry, where he would give colour commentary to the games. He was also prone to giving controversial and inflammatory tangential comments such as insulting European players, players who wore face masks as well as activists concerned with sports-related safety and injuries such as concussions as well as non-sports related environmental activists like David Suzuki. Cherry finally went too far on Nov. 9, 2019, when he made comments many interpreted as insulting immigrants to Canada for insinuating they were not wearing Remembrance Day poppies in disrespect to Canadian veterans. The distributor of those poppies, the Royal Canadian Legion, denounced those comments and the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council was flooded with complaints. As a result, the producing network of the show, Sportsnet, fired Cherry and "Coach's Corner" was discontinued.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Les cendres de la gloire (1993)
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