Hockey stick owned by Toronto Maple Leafs legend Bill Barilko hits auction block
A piece of hockey history is on the auction block — a signed stick owned by Bill Barilko, the Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman who scored the Stanley Cup-winning goal in overtime in 1951.
The National Hockey League's website shows Barilko, born in Timmins, Ont., played 252 games in his career. He spent all of his five seasons with the Toronto Maple Leafs.
For many, Barilko's goal against the Montreal Canadiens on April 21, 1951 is one of hockey's most celebrated. It was also Barilko's last, as in August of the same year, he died when a plane he was in went down while on a fishing trip to James Bay. The Leafs didn't win another Cup until 1962. Six weeks after that win, the crash site and Barilko's body were located.
His story inspired The Tragically Hip song Fifty-Mission Cap.
The game-issued stick from the 1950-51 season is being auctioned off by Miller and Miller Auctions based out of New Hamburg, Ont. Benjamin Pernfuss is the consignment director in the sports category at Miller and Miller and called it a "unique find."
"It's one of those items that gives you a rush when you hold it in your hand, just knowing that you're touching a piece of history," Pernfuss told CBC Kitchener-Waterloo's The Morning Edition.
"Every day, I'm in different people's collections and seeing items and it's not every day that I see something I haven't seen before. But this is one of those items and it really brought me a lot of joy to source it and and offer for sale."
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The stick is stamped number five, which indicates it was issued to Barilko because that was his number for the 1950-51 season. The stick is taped for game use in a way that matches Barilko's style and there are puck marks and lower hand grip wear, which could indicate the stick was likely used in a game, although Miller and Miller Auctions is unable to confirm that.
The stick was made by Love & Bennett, a hockey stick supplier for the team, and the company's name is stamped on the stick.
Pernfuss says the stick includes Barilko's signature and several other identifiable signatures including: Turk Broda, Ted Kennedy, Joe Klukay, Cal Gardner, Fleming Mackell, Ray Timgren, Howie Meeker, Harry Watson, Bill Juzda, Sid Smith, Max Bentley, Al Rollins and Tod Sloan.
Miller and Miller Auctions notes the signatures of Rollins and Sloan also help date the stick to the 1950-51 season.
Miller and Miller Actions had put an estimate for the stick at between $3,000 and $5,000, but Pernfuss says because it's so rare, "the sky is the limit."
"There's not a lot of his memorabilia out there and the stick was owned by Barilko and signed by him as well. So it's a significant piece and a rare item in hockey history," Pernfuss says.
The online auction closes Sunday evening.
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New York Times
28 minutes ago
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But the 33-year-old Mrázek has finished three of the past four seasons with a save percentage below .900 and feels more like taking a flier than a surefire solution next to soon-to-be 38-year-old Cam Talbot. Detroit does have Sebastian Cossa knocking on the door at AHL Grand Rapids, but he struggled down the stretch with the Griffins and, for that reason, is tricky to project as an early-season solution. For all those reasons, it made sense when I heard earlier this offseason that the Red Wings could be looking for a goalie. But a weak goalie class in free agency made it seem like a back-burner idea. There are some names on Johnston's updated trade board, though, who could represent meaningful upgrades, though they wouldn't be without risk, nor cost. The Anaheim Ducks' John Gibson has been an intriguing trade candidate for years now, and by this point, his $6.4 million cap hit for the next two years doesn't look too scary. But before this past season's .911 save percentage (in 29 games), Gibson had largely hovered between .899 and .904 behind a bad Ducks team. It's a little hard to know what to make of him, and Anaheim's ask may not be cheap, either, as they look to emerge from a rebuild. Thatcher Demko would be a high-ceiling option, to be sure. He's 29 and has two top-10 Vezina finishes to his name, including finishing as runner-up in 2024. He's also struggled with injuries, though. He's played more than 35 games just twice in his career, and will need a new contract in a year. A healthy Demko would be the kind of goalie who could seriously elevate a team like Detroit, similar to what Linus Ullmark did for Ottawa a year ago. But he wouldn't come cheap. Advertisement Frankly, it's hard for me to see Detroit paying the price for either of those two goalies, considering Cossa should be NHL-ready within a year. 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Would the Red Wings retain money to deal him, or do they simply hold onto him, sort of like an insurance policy if they can't upgrade over the next week? Advertisement Yzerman did say in April he felt Tarasenko's play was better than his production last year, and that he was hopeful Tarasenko would give Detroit more next year, so perhaps the Red Wings plan to keep him anyway. But the veteran winger simply wasn't consistently impactful enough last year, so in a week that's sure to have plenty of moving parts — some in Detroit's control, some not — how the Red Wings handle Tarasenko is one more thing to watch. (Top photo of Patrick Kane: Patrick Smith / Getty Images)