Even though you've probably waved a rally towel before, it's unlikely you ever thought about who first came up with the idea. The rally towel likely has its origins at
Western Kentucky University
where basketball coach
E. A. Diddle waved a red towel
on the sideline during games. Rally towels came to professional sports in 1975 when former Pittsburgh Steelers radio broadcaster
Myron Cope
created the Terrible Towel
to stir up the fans
.
In 1982 rally towels arrived in the NHL
courtesy of
Vancouver Canucks coach Roger Neilson. Neilson was outraged by several unfavorable calls during a road game in the conference finals - as a protest, he draped a white towel over a hockey stick and waved it in mock surrender. Canuck fans greeted the returning team at the Vancouver airport waving white towels, then continued waving towels at the next home game; the so-called "
Towel Power"
propelled the Canucks to the series victory.