Galen Head

Galen Head
Born (1947-04-16) April 16, 1947
Grande Prairie, AB, CAN
Height 5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Weight 160 lb (73 kg; 11 st 6 lb)
Position Right Wing
Shot Right
Played for Detroit Red Wings
Fort Worth Wings
Johnstown Jets
Salt Lake Golden Eagles
NHL Draft undrafted
Playing career 19671976

Galen Russell Head (born April 16, 1947) is a retired Canadian professional ice hockey player who spent the majority of his career with the Johnstown Jets of the Eastern Hockey League and North American Hockey League. Head played one game in the NHL with the Detroit Red Wings during the 1967-68 NHL season and wore #15.[1]

Juniors

Head started out playing in the Grande Prairie Minor Hockey Association at age 13. Three years later, Head would make the jump to what is known as "senior hockey" and play in the South Peace Hockey League as a member of the Grande Prairie Athletics, where he would win SPHL Rookie Of The Year honors in 1963-64.[2]

He would remain with the Athletics until midway through the 1964-65 season, where he would receive an invite from the Edmonton Oil Kings. Head would remain with the Oil Kings during the 1965-66 season, where he would face off against the Oshawa Generals, a team led by future hockey Hall Of Fame member Bobby Orr.[2] The Oil Kings would go on to defeat the Generals and would win the Memorial Cup. Head would score 16 points in 19 games during the 1965-66 post-season.[3]

Head continued to play with the Oil Kings for one more season, scoring 50 goals and 42 assists and trailing only Garnet "Ace" Bailey in regular season point totals.[4]

Professional

Head would receive an invitation from the NHL's Detroit Red Wings to attend training camp in the fall of 1967.[2] In camp, he was assigned #15 and was given $130 for a one-game tryout but was eventually released on September 22.

Head would later be assigned to the Johnstown Jets, a team in the Eastern Hockey League. He would score 53 goals in his rookie season. As a result, Head was recalled by Detroit where he would "play six or seven shifts" in his only game with the Red Wings.[2] Head would also see time with the Fort Worth Wings, another Detroit affiliate.

The following season, Head would have his best statistical season. He would score 67 goals and 121 points in 72 games, which would lead all EHL players.[5]

Head would become player-coach of the Jets during the 1973-74 season as a result of a coach walking out prior to the start of the season. Head would later be named official head coach that season and be named captain of the team. He would play until the 1975-76 season, where he would retire after eight seasons with the Jets.

Despite being retired from hockey since 1976, many of Head's statistics are among the highest in Johnstown history. His 308 goals as a member of the Jets ranks third all time, while his 601 points rank fourth and his 293 assists are sixth highest.[2] His 67 goal season and 69 single season goals (regular and post-season) were a record until former Johnstown Chiefs forward Mark Green eclipsed the totals with 68 goals in the regular season and 70 single season goals in 1991-92.

Personal

Head, like several members of the 1975-76 Johnstown Jets, had a part in the movie Slap Shot. He plays one of the uncredited hockey players.[6]

Head was one of several people responsible for founding the Bishop McCort hockey program in 1985. With Head leading the team as head coach, McCort would go to win three Pennsylvania state championships over a period of eleven years.[2]

On October 18, 2003, Head was only the third person to have their number retired by the Johnstown Chiefs. Although he did not play for the Chiefs, as they were founded a year after his retirement, he was recognized for his contributions as a player with the Jets, his tenure with the Chiefs providing game night scouting reports, and for his contributions to hockey to the city of Johnstown. He is also a member of the Cambria County Sports Hall Of Fame, the Johnstown Hockey Hall Of Fame, and the Grande Prairie Hockey Hall Of Fame.

Head currently resides in Johnstown, Pennsylvania.

See also

References

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