Brothers Tony (left) and Phil Esposito with their father, Pat, before the 1971 All-Star Game in Boston. Tony Esposito collection
"I remember Mike Nykoluk (a Rangers assistant coach) telling me on the bus that Al Arbour had chosen me," he said. "I had a $10,000 bonus in my contract if I went to the All-Star Game and Freddy wasn't happy. I sent Al a great bottle of wine."
Esposito would play against Howe in a 6-3 losing effort, each earning third-period assists, their final All-Star points. It reminded him of his first and second games in Montreal and St. Louis, deployed by coaches Toe Blake and Claude Ruel on a line with Howe and
Bobby Hull
on his wings.
"I remember this: a face-off to the left of the goaltender, 1969 or 1970," he said. "Gordie skates over to me and says, 'Where do you want me, kid?' and I say, 'What do you mean?'
"Gordie says, 'Well, you're the centerman, where do you want me?'
"I look at him and say, 'How about on the bench?'
"Gordie just blinks. 'What?'
"I just say, 'I'm just joking, Mr. Howe!' "
Esposito can remember that story any time he looks at himself in a 1980 All-Star Game team photo, even if he needs a good imagination for 1973.
Top photos: Boston Bruins superstar Phil Esposito reacts to the crowd's cool welcome before the 1973 NHL All-Star Game at Madison Square Garden in New York; cover of the game program. Paul Bereswill/Hockey Hall of Fame