Terry Harper

Terrance Victor Harper (born January 27, 1940) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player. Harper played in the National Hockey League from 1962 to 1981. During this time, he played for the Montreal Canadiens, Los Angeles Kings, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues, and Colorado Rockies.

Early life
Harper grew up in Regina, Saskatchewan playing hockey. When he was young, he suffered serious third-degree burns to his arms, chest, stomach, and legs in a fire. The damage required seven years of skin grafting. Doctors allowed him to play hockey as a way to rebuild his leg muscles.

He played for Regina's local hockey team, which was sponsored by the Montreal Canadiens. In the 1958 Memorial Cup finals, they lost to the Ottawa-Hull Junior Canadiens, who were led by manager Sam Pollock, coach Scotty Bowman and future stars J.C Tremblay, Gilles Tremblay, Ralph Backstrom, and Bobby Rousseau.

Playing career
Harper played his first 10 seasons with the Montreal Canadiens. He joined the team in 1962. However, he didn't debut for the team until 1963. While with Montreal, Harper had his greatest success, winning five Stanley Cups between 1963 and 1972.

On October 30, 1963, Harper got into an altercation with Bob Pulford of the Toronto Maple Leafs while sharing the penalty box. As a result, separate penalty boxes for teams were created 10 days later.

Before the 1972–73 season, Harper was traded to the Los Angeles Kings, where he anchored a defence that became one of the league's stingiest. Harper was immediately named team captain, a position he held for 3 seasons until his trade to Detroit after the 1974–75 season. In 1973, he was an All-Star. In that game, he made a game-tying goal for the West All-Stars. However, Bobby Schmautz then scored the game-winning goal for the East All-Stars. The Kings made the playoffs twice in his tenure there, but each time got bounced in the first round.

After the 1974–75 season, on June 23, 1975, Harper, along with Dan Maloney, was traded to the Detroit Red Wings as part of the blockbuster trade that sent Hall of Famer Marcel Dionne and Bart Crashley to Los Angeles. Once again, he was named team captain for Detroit. In the 1975–76 season, he erupted for a career-high eight goals with the Detroit Red Wings. After 4 solid seasons for a struggling Red Wings team, he played his final two seasons for the St. Louis Blues and Colorado Rockies, where he played into his 40s. He retired in 1981, at the age of 41.

In 19 seasons in the league, Harper finished with only 254 points. For his career, he finished with 35 goals, 221 assists, 1,362 penalty minutes, and a plus/minus total of +169 (this statistic did not become official until the 1967–68 season, Harper's 6th in the league).

Coaching career
Harper became the assistant coach of the Colorado Rockies in 1980–81.

Playing style
Harper was a classic stay-at-home defensive-oriented defenceman. He would often total over 90 penalty minutes per season due to his physical play, but his goaltenders were very appreciative of his ability to clear offensive players out of the area in front of the goal crease. Harper was frequently part of his team's top penalty-killing unit. He was a tough fighter and always got back up, but constantly got pounded by his opponents.

Harper rarely scored, and the "Harper hat trick" was when he scored 3 goals in a season (vs. 3 in one game). He accomplished this 5 times in his 18-year career, erupting for a career-high 8 goals in the 1975–76 season with the Detroit Red Wings.

Personal life
Harper was married for 60 years before his wife passed away. He lives alone in Folsom, California with his kids close by with his daughter also in Folsom, and two sons in West Sacramento and Stockton. Despite his old age, Harper plays hockey twice a week.

Awards and achievements

 * Stanley Cup champion – 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971 (with Montreal)
 * Los Angeles Kings Team Captain, 1973 - 1975
 * Detroit Red Wings Team Captain, 1976
 * 4 All-Star Games: 1965, 1967, 1973, 1975
 * Saskatchewan Hockey Hall of Fame, 2016