Still going after half a century.
Getting together with friends, family and foes!
A website dedicated to celebrating and remembering.

First League Champs From Fifty Years Ago

Players on the winning Main Auto Body team that won the inaugural Toronto Nisei Hockey League championship in the 1961-62 season included:
Back Row, from left to right, Dave Ishikawa, Pee Wee Furukawa, Kei Higashi, Ted Nakamura, Fred Kotani and Roy Kobayashi.
Front Row, left to right, Tom Takemura, Dave Ono, Gen Hamada, John Tohana, Herb Ashizawa, John Hamada.
Absent were Dave Uchikata and Sho Mori.
Showing posts with label Mel Tsuji. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mel Tsuji. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

CJHL Founders Organizing 50th Anniversary Celebration

   A special anniversary dinner event is being organized to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Canadian Japanese Hockey League.  Organizers say details on time, date and locations are still being worked out, but that they are working to time the tribute for around the fall of 2011.
Hundreds of players (including a few females) have gone through the league, ever since the first games were played on Oct 22, 1961.
   Word of the anniversary celebration is being spread by word of mouth and phone calls.  Further exposure is being planned through various social media, such as Facebook and the internet, as well
as through publications like Nikkei Voice, the national, monthly newspaper of the JC community, and the Bulletin and website of the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre.  So far, reception has been very enthusiastic.  Many former players say they plan to attend, bringing along family members and friends.
   The league started playing its games at George Bell Arena, in Toronto's west end.  Any and all players in the JC community were invited to play in the league.  While the range of abilities of the players varied widely, the league's calibre was surprisingly good.  It was also tough and chippy at times, primarily because players didn't know each other and exerted their individualities.  Body checking was also allowed in those early days.  By comparison, the league today is tame affair because of non-contact rules.
   The CJHL also made up all-star congregations to play charity exhibitions against the NHL Oldtimers and the Italian Canadian league.  The league also organized hockey tours to Japan in 1971 and 1982.
(Mel Tsuji)    

First Champions of the Canadian Japanese Hockey League

            First Champions of the Toronto Nisei Hockey League

The first team to win the championship of the TNHL was the high-flying Main Auto Body sextet.
That came about in the inaugural 1961-62 season when the league started out on Oct 22 with six teams.
Star players on the team icluded Gen Hamada and Roy Kobayashi.   Hamada, 3rd from left, front row, played Jr. B hockey with the Brampton 7Ups, then later went on to play university hockey with Waterloo-Lutheran University and McMaster University.  It was while playing for McMaster that Hamada reaped honours.  Not only did the team win the Canadian Intercollegiate Hockey Championship, Hamada was voted the All-Canadian, All-Star winger for the championships.  Kobayashi, extreme right, back row, was captain of the Double S. Tile team that won the East Toronto Hockey Championship in 1956.  The team was made up predominantly of Japanese Canadian nisei (second generation JCs), who played in the strong senior loop at East York Arena.  At the time, the East York league was probably the strongest for senior calibre players in the area.   Two years before, in 1954, Canada's representative at the World Hockey Championships, came out of that league.  They were the East York Lyndhurst Motors team.  But the world soon discovered that the senior B team was woefully weak for a new power on the world hockey scene --- the Russians.  But the young nisei on the Double S team had made a powerful statement.  They represented a Japanese Canadian community that had settled in the Toronto and Southern Ontario area, just 11 years after being released from World War Two internment camps.  A note about the league's name.  It was originally called the "Nisei" league because most of its players and organizers were second generation nisei.  Not many people gave it much thought, probably because there weren't many third generation sansei playing in the league at the time, or if they were they were probably in a minority.  Since its inception, the league's name has gone through a few changes. The original was changed to "Japanese Canadian Hockey League" a few years after, probably because younger sansei wanted to reflect changes in the community.  That was later changed to "Canadian Japanese Hockey League" (which it is today) because league managers wanted to make a statement on the "Canadianess" if its players. (Mel Tsuji)