After a one-game benching while on his weight-loss campaign, a comparatively svelte, 189-pound Broda returned to action with his fourth shutout of 1949-50, a 2-0 win against the New York Rangers, on his way to a career-best and NHL-leading nine shutouts that season.
"There may be better goalies around somewhere but there's no greater sportsman than the Turkey," Smythe joked, as quoted in 2010's "Hockey Hall of Fame Book of Goalies."
Authors Duff and Allen recount Broda, while taking part in an NHL All-Stars exhibition series in Hollywood following the 1942-43 season, wandering off one night on a pub crawl with an American G.I. he'd met.
The soldier would be found hours later, passed out in the orchestra pit of a nightclub, but Broda was still going strong into the wee hours, playing a piano duet with jazz legend Hoagy Carmichael. Somehow, the goalie was able to shut out the Canadiens 1-0 that night.
If Broda bore a sometimes uncanny resemblance to Howdy Doody, so too did his personality mesh with Buffalo Bob's famous TV puppet. Where many of his maskless counterparts were tightly wound knots of goaltending nerves, Broda embraced everything about his life. His ability to shrug off pressure making him a brilliant playoff performer.
He spent his entire 13-plus-season NHL career with Toronto, winning five times in eight Stanley Cup Final appearances and twice winning the Vezina Trophy.
In his 101 playoff games, Broda earned 13 shutouts with a 1.98 goals-against average -- more than half a goal-against better than his average in 629 regular-season games. He won the Stanley Cup for the final time in 1951, helping Toronto defeat the Canadiens in a series that saw all five games go into overtime.