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Toronto Toros

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Toronto Toros
Toronto Toros
Founded 1973
Home ice Varsity Arena
Based in Toronto, Ontario
Colours purple, red, and white
League World Hockey Association

The Toronto Toros were an ice hockey team based out of Toronto that played in the World Hockey Association and were owned by John F. Bassett. They played from 1973 to 1976 . In their first two seasons in Toronto , the Toros compiled a respectable 84-66-6 record. In their first season the team met with enough success that they were able to justify moving to Maple Leaf Gardens the second season. But crowds dwindled the next year when the club won just 24 games and failed to reach the postseason and the franchise moved again. Their home ice was Varsity Arena and Maple Leaf Gardens. The franchise was previously known as the Ottawa Nationals and later the Birmingham Bulls.

The Toros had an rivalry with the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs and their owner, Harold Ballard. With the start of the Toros the WHA had literally moved into Ballard's backyard. The were owned and operated by Ballard's former partner, John Bassett, and went head-to-head with the Leafs for Toronto fan loyalty. Despite the competition, Ballard held the one trump card that brought the Toros down: ownership of Maple Leaf Gardens.

Ballard raised the arena lease to the astronomical sum of $15,000 per game for the Toros. Bassett grudgingly accepted. He was outraged, however, when the rink was dim for his team's opening night. Ballard offered to turn all the lights on for an additional fee of $3,500 per game. Bassett howled at the demand, but gave in.

Ballard poked one further insult at his rival. He ordered the cushions on the teams' bench removed. "Let 'em buy their own cushions," he told an arena worker.

Ballard was abusive toward the WHA players. He labeled Czech defector Vaclav Nedomansky as a "traitor" for fleeing from the communist country to play for the Toros (yet later called Maple Leafs Miroslav Frycer and Peter Ihnacek, two Czechs who joined his team "brave men for having the guts to leave their native land to start life anew in Canada.")

He attempted to ban the WHA Winnipeg Jets' Bobby Hull from playing in the Gardens after Hull threatened to remove his memorabilia from the Hockey Hall of Fame. When Hull later confronted him, Ballard lied to his face.

On the night Gordie Howe scored his 1,000th career goal, while playing for the WHA's [Houston Aeros], Ballard ordered that the scoreboard over center ice not flash the news. "Why, that's not an accomplishment worthy of recognition," he told the Garden media. "A blind man can score goals in that league."