Toronto Toros

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Toronto Toros
Toronto Toros
Founded 1973
Home ice Varsity Arena, Maple Leaf Gardens
Based in Toronto, Ontario
Colours blue, red, and white
League World Hockey Association

The Toronto Toros were an ice hockey team based out of Toronto that played in the World Hockey Association from 1973 to 1976.

The franchise was awarded to Doug Michel in 1971 to play in the the WHA's inaugural 1972-73 season. Initially, he tried to base the team in Hamilton, Ontario, but it didn't have an appropriate venue. He also had discussions with Harold Ballard, owner of Maple Leaf Gardens about locating the team in Toronto, but those talks didn't get very far. So Michel settled on Ottawa and the team became the Ottawa Nationals. Nick Trbovich became majority owner in May 1972.

The team was a flop at the box office, averaging about 3,000 fans a game, and in March 1973—just before the end of the season—the City of Ottawa demanded payment of $100,000 to guarantee the club dates at the the Ottawa Civic Centre. The team decided to leave Ottawa and played their home playoff games at Maple Leaf Gardens, attracting crowds of 5,000 and 4,000 in two games before being eliminated by the New England Whalers. At the end of the season, the team moved to Toronto permanently, and was sold to John F. Bassett, with Steve Stavro as a minority shareholder. They were renamed the Toronto Toros in June 1974.

Initially, Bassett wanted to move the team into a renovated CNE Coliseum, while Bill Ballard—Harold's son, who was running the Gardens while his father served a prison sentence—wanted the team at the Gardens and opposed the plan to upgrade the Coliseum. The Toros ended up at Varsity Arena for the 1973-74 season. Bassett signed forwards Pat Hickey and Wayne Dillon to aid the offensive attack. He also made a strong attempt to sign Leaf centre Darryl Sittler, and thought he had an agreement for a five-year $1 million contract, but Sittler re-signed with the Leafs. The Toros played to a 41-33-4 record in the regular season, bolstered by goaltenders Gilles Gratton and Les Binkley and a strong defensive corps backstopped by ex-Maple Leaf star Carl Brewer. The Toros also fared well in the playoffs, making it to the Eastern Conference final, only to lose to the Chicago Cougars.

The Toros moved to the Gardens for the 1974-75 season. In the off-season, the team signed two ex-Leafs: former NHL superstar Frank Mahovlich and the hero from the 1972 Summit Series, Paul Henderson, as well as Czech star Vaclav Nedomansky, who defected to Toronto. Tom Simpson became the first professional hockey player in Toronto to have a 50-goal season, scoring 52 goals (a number he would never come close to matching again). The Toros finished the year with the league's fifth-best record at 43-33-2, but were knocked out of the playoffs in the first round by the San Diego Mariners.

The team bottomed out in the 1975-76 season, playing to a horrible 24-52-5 record—the worst in the league—under coach Bobby Baun, despite Nedomansky's 56 goals and the signing of 18 year-old Mark Napier, who scored 93 points in his rookie year. The Toros still averaged over 8,000 fans per game, which was a 20 percent drop from the previous year.

Following the season, with the drop in attendance and difficult relations with Ballard, Bassett moved the club to Birmingham, Alabama, where they were renamed the Birmingham Bulls for the 1976-77 season.

The Toros' rivalry with the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs and their owner, Harold Ballard, was an integral part of the team's history. Bassett was the son of John Bassett, who had been a co-owner of the Leafs with Ballard in the 1960s and chairman of Maple Leaf Gardens Ltd. Despite the competition, Ballard held the one trump card that brought the Toros down: ownership of the Gardens. Ballard raised the arena lease to $15,000 per game for the Toros. Bassett grudgingly accepted. He was outraged, however, when the rink was dim for his team's opening night. Ballard offered to turn all the lights on for an additional fee of $3,500 per game. Bassett howled at the demand, but gave in. Ballard poked one further insult at his rival. He ordered the cushions on the teams' bench removed. "Let 'em buy their own cushions," he told an arena worker.

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