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He’s not afraid of a good fight, part of the reason he earned the “Terrible Ted” nickname. “I hated to lose,” Lindsay tells The Athletic , while sipping his merlot.
Ted Lindsay continues fight against autism ... "Terrible Ted," as he was known during his clenched-fist, take-no-prisoners playing days from the mid-1940s through the mid-1960s, ...
Ted Lindsay, whose toughness on the ice as a member of the Detroit Red Wings earned him the nickname “Terrible Ted” and whose persistent fight for NHL players’ rights cleared the way for ...
The NHL Hall of Famer joined Red Wings trainer John Czarnecki to form the Ted Lindsay Foundation, which raised more than $3 million to help people diagnosed with autism and their families.
Ah, but to sum up this man with tales of toughness or fighting or ripped sweaters or bloody sticks or the 600 stitches he proudly took over his 1,068 NHL games is to reduce Lindsay to a one ...
In 2010, the league’s MVP award was renamed as the Ted Lindsay Award. ... Lindsay was also focused on giving back, and started the Ted Lindsay Foundation to support the fight against autism.
Lindsay knew fighting for players’ rights would hurt, but he did anyway. NHL insider Doug MacLean joined the Starting Lineup to discuss the sad news that Ted Lindsay passed away at 93, ...
The great Ted Lindsay won four Stanley Cups with the Red Wings -- and would have won a bunch more, he said, "if it wasn't for stupid Jack Adams, our general manager." ...
Jimmy Devellano grew up in Toronto in the 1950s, a season ticketholder for the Maple Leafs, and watched the Detroit Red Wings come to town seven times a season. “One of their great players was a ...