Skating On thin Ice: by Max Wallace Canadian University Press Racism in Professional Hockey he Montreal Forum. A Canadiens for- ward comes streaking down the right side and lets loose a blistering slapshot towards the net, only to be thwarted by the goalie’s glove which comes out to snare the puck. At the same instant, a voice from the stands shouts, “Nice save, nigger.” lf Grant Fuhr, known as ‘‘Cocoa” by his teammates, hears the taunt, he doesn’t even flinch. The Edmonton Oilers superstar is only one of a handful of black hockey players now in the Na- - tional Hockey League. Although it has been 30 years since the league admit- ted its first balck player, Fuhr is the first to make his mark in a game where the complexion of a player is usually ex- pected to match the ice surface. “I've never had any real problem be- cause of my colour,” says Fuhr after an Oilers practice at the Northland Coli- seum. “I’m just an individual like anybody else. Sure there are people out there who can’t accept that but | can and that’s all that’s important.” Si he broke in as.an 18-year-old rookie w seven years ago, Fuhr has established a solid reputation. His former teammate Wayne Gretzky has called him the ‘best goaltender in the history of the NHL.” Yet he has never really achieved the recognition usually warranted by that sort of praise. Until last year, for example, his salary was well below that of Edmonton’s re- cently traded backup goaltender Andy Moog, whose statistics pale in comparison. Many eyebrows were raised three years ago when a highly unusual arrangement between Fuhr and Edmonton coach Glen Sather was re- vealed in which Fuhr paid Sather $100 a month to manage his finances. Explaining the arrange- ment, Sather called Fuhr a “dumb kid.” While Fuhr shrugs off these details, others in- sist that his treatment cannot be ignored. Ac- cording to Bobby White, Director of Montreal's West End Sports Association, Fuhr is lucky to be playing at all. “If Fuhr didn’t wear a mask, he may never have been recruited,”’ says White, who has been developing and representing black ath- letes for the past ten years. “How many people are even aware that he’s black?” Fuhr is the archetypal black athlete who must “grin and bear it” in order to survive the racist domain of the NHL, White says. C onsiderable racial progress was made in pro sports during the late 1940s and early 50s. When Jackie Robinson shattered base- ball’s long-time colour barrier in 1946, it pre- saged the arrival of a multitude of black athletes in other mass appeal sports. It didn’t take long, once they had the chance to play, for blacks to prove that they were equally capable. The National Football League always had a small sampling of non-white players but only after 1946 did blacks enter the league in vast numbers. Professional basketball signed its first black player in 1950. But the National Hockey League was the hardest nut for integrationists to crack. The name above Bobby Orr in the NHL’s all- time player list is Willie O’Ree. Like Orr, O’Ree played for the Boston Bruins and was a major factor in hockey history. In 1958, O’Ree became the first black to break the colour barrier in the NHL. It seemed the opportunity had arrived for blacks to finally alter the complexion of the game just as they had done in other sports. But, playing in a city with a history of racial conflict, the lily-whiteness Continued on page 12 RACUILIY ONCER featuring from the UNIVERSITY OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND MUSIC DEPARTMENT, ay Eila Peterson, Watniet Wendy Grasdahl, trumpet Frances Gray, piano in a Sunday afternoon’ef-music by Bloch, Brahms; Bernsteinsand Hubeau SUNDAY JANUARY 22 3 P.M. Steel Recital Hall, UPEI Campus ADMISSION FREE =: Thursday, January 19 , 1989=