Gordie Howe wards off Toronto defenseman Pat Quinn behind goalie Bruce Gamble during a Jan. 18, 1969 game at Maple Leaf Gardens. Other players, from left: Alex Delvecchio, Dave Keon and Murray Oliver.
Among the most durable players to ever lace up, Howe's bumps and bruises were catalogued, probably an incomplete list, by author and hockey historian Brian McFarlane in his 1998 book "The Red Wings": broken wrist, fingers, ribs, collarbone (undiagnosed for a year), toe (by a Bobby Hull slap shot), nose (14 times), cheekbone and foot; carpal tunnel surgery; severe concussion; hernia; torn knee cartilage; about 500 stitches to the face.
"You've got to love what you're doing," Howe once said. "If you love it, you can overcome any handicap or the soreness or all the aches and pains and continue to play for a long, long time."
For Mr. Hockey, the rugged, historic journey to hockey immortality began 75 years ago with his first game.
"I didn't have high expectations for my career at that point," he said. "I just wanted to stick around for a full season so I could say that I played a year in the big leagues. After I scored, I thought I'd be in the record books, at the very least."
Photos: Turofsky and Graphic Artists, Hockey Hall of Fame; Getty Images