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Floyd Sommers.
January 2001.
Is there a win or loss that you particularly remember?
Well...let me think...one that stands out?...one that stands out for
me was a game,
I don't remember what year it was, but I scored an overtime goal to
win the game.
That was a high point for me personally.
What players, including opponents, stand out in your mind?
Oh, there are a few, but Wayne McQuaig. He was naturally strong, a
big guy. About 6'3", 220 [lbs]. He'd even be considered fairly
big today.
Is there a humorous story you can tell about those days with the
Iron Rangers?
Well, I can tell you about the time O'Neil, Hanford, and I got clean
towels in our lockers and the other guys couldn't figure it out.
We had given the towel guy a pair of goalie skates, and he would put
clean towels in our lockers. The other guys didn't have clean towels,
you see. They'd ask us, "How did you guys get clean towels?"
We'd say, "We paid the guy for towel service!"
What is the story as to how you got on the team?
Oh, I just tried out. I was a local. There might have been some guys
who were better players than me, but some of them couldn't afford
to stay around. They were from out of town, but I could afford
to stay. But, I just tried out and made the team.
Click
here
to see The Marquette Mirror's Player Profile No. 7 on
Floyd Sommers.
Can you say anything about the fans in the Palestra
at the time?
It was nice to play in front of people you knew. You knew most of
the people, and it was fun, you know, to play in front of your home
crowd.
Are there any stories that you can recall that exemplify how hockey
was
different now as compared to back then?
The biggest thing about then was that people kept there sticks on
the ice.
Today you've got sticks coming up and hitting people all the time
because of
those football helmets they wear on their heads. We didn't have the
masks
and shields that they use today, so everybody had to keep the sticks
down.
If you cracked someone with a stick you knew that you were going to
get
it back, so guys kept their sticks down most of the time.
What were some high points about those Ranger years? Low Points?
(Jokingly) Flying in airplanes was the high point. I don't know...Let
me
see...The bus trips were probably the low point. The fumes were terrible...
it would give you a headache from whatever they burned in those things
back
then...number 2 diesel or something. I would go out on the ice with
a
headache from that sometimes.
You know those blankets they use for moving? One time we had to put
those
over us because it was minus 15 or whatever it was...
Can you say anything about the road trips to different cities?
Well, the biggest crowd I ever played in front of was 7000 people
in Chicago.
That's all I'll say about the road trips.
Literally thousands of people from Marquette County think of that
team as
very special. Why do you think that is so?
Well, it was sort of the 'in thing' back then. Thursday, Saturday
night that's what a lot of people did. It was the biggest sporting
event in the U.P. then, so a lot of people remember it.
Was there any involvement with the team by Women? Minorities? Kids?
No, we never had any minority players. Although I'd tell the guys
from Canada
they were minority players...just kidding them. We had a woman goalie
who was
a backup to Lunney I think. Sometimes we'd, the team, would get together
at
the Fitch Street House. I think four of the guys lived there. Guys
would bring
there wives, girlfriends there. So you'd get a chance to talk to them
there.
Any memories specifically about the Palestra?
When those radiators would rattle. Those coal radiators would sound
like
someone hitting it with a mallet...just pounding on it.
What do you remember about actually playing the games?
I was usually nervous before games. But you get knocked down a couple
of
times, you knock somebody down, then you're fine.
(Many thanks to Mr. Sommers, one of the
most popular Iron Rangers ever, for taking the time to share this information,
and these memories, of the organization)
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