BONVIE BITS
Stories From the All-Time Penalty Minutes Leader
Dennis Bonvie has played in more than 860 games in the American Hockey League during his career, the 15th highest total in the league’s 72 year history. But did you know he’s also appeared in 92 National Hockey League games? He broke in with the Edmonton Oilers at the end of the 1994-95 season, making his NHL debut on April 19.
“I was in warm up two weeks, I got called up from Cape Breton when the [AHL] year was out,” said Bonvie. “And I was just going in warm up every night. But it was great, I was in the NHL.
“Then [head coach] Ronny Low comes in, he says, ‘Kid you’re in, Jason Arnott’s sick tonight’. I was like, ‘Oh man!’ I couldn’t believe it. We were playing the Los Angeles Kings and Wayne Gretzky. I went out there and got a couple of shifts I think. First game in the NHL, unbelievable.”
But his second game – although brief – might be more memorable.
“We’re in Calgary, and it was the last game of the year. I ended up getting in, I was all pumped up, playing the Calgary Flames,” said Bonvie. “Craig Berube was there at the time in Calgary, so I’m out there, I’m all gung ho, I’m going to challenge him.
“And the [referee] comes up to me right after the puck dropped, then went up to our coach, and they had the wrong number down for me [on the official lineup sheet], so all of a sudden I’m ineligible. I couldn’t play, so Ronny Low said. ‘Kid you have to take your gear off you can’t play tonight.’ I was like, ‘Oh God, this isn’t happening to me.’”
Bonvie went on to spend time with the Chicago Blackhawks, Pittsburgh Penguins, Ottawa Senators, Colorado Avalanche and the Boston Bruins. It was his stop in Beantown during the 2001-02 season that produced one of the greatest moments in Bonvie’s hockey career – his first and only National Hockey League goal.
“I ended up being on the island, playing the New York Islanders,” he recalled. “I came down the wing, I got a pass and I just took a shot as hard as I can on net, and it went five-hole on Chris Osgood.
“Benoit Hogue came up to me and he was like ‘Man what’s wrong with you.’ I was hyperventilating. I was like ‘I’ve never scored before in the National Hockey League.’ I couldn’t believe it, I was like ‘Wow, this is unbelievable.’ He high fived me there, the boys were all happy.”
Of course, Bonvie’s famous wit didn’t let him down during his goal celebration.
“I go by Osgood and I was like, ‘You should retire, I scored on you, I can’t believe I scored on you,’” he laughed. “But it was great. It was just something I never thought I’d do. You’re always out there getting a shift or two trying to get that goal, but it just doesn’t seem it’s going to happen. That was unbelievable.”
One would expect professional hockey’s all-time penalty minutes leader to hold down a spot in the hockey hall of fame. And Bonvie’s name does appear in the hallowed hall in Toronto – but not for his misdeeds.
Bonvie made league history on January 17, 1995, scoring the first goal in the revived AHL All-Star Game in Providence, Rhode Island.
“They had a voting contest, we went through it, the whole league,” Bonvie said in relating how he got named to the Canadian squad as a member of the Cape Breton Oilers. “And I think Todd Marchant won for us and I was second in voting.
“It was the lockout season. And when the lockout ended [in midseason], he went up to Edmonton, I was the next guy in line, so I was going to the All-Star Game. Ralph Intranuovo went too from our team, there was two of us.”
There were more than a few people wondering what the AHL’s leader in penalty minutes (he had more than 200 at the time of the game, as opposed to just two goals and seven points).
“I went there and everything was good, but they were like…you could kind of feel it, sense it, ‘What’s this guy doing here? He’s a tough guy, he has eight points, this is an all-star game’.
“So I went out, first or second shift, I got a pass from Ralph on the blue line and went in, [Goaltender] Scott Bailey went back and - five hole - I scored. I came back to the bench, high fiving, I was ecstatic. I scored in the all-star game, this is great.
“And [the referee] came up to me and said ‘Give me your stick’. I was like, ‘No no man, I’m hot, you’re not getting my stick, you can’t have my stick’. They’re like, ‘No it’s for the hockey hall of fame, we’re taking the puck and your stick’. 'Yeah, here you go. Whatever you need!' For me, being from a small town, I didn’t know any of that stuff, I was just happy to be part of it, and all of a sudden my stick’s in the hockey hall of fame. It’s pretty special.”
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