Jack Porter - Intrepid Hockey Voyageur 2012-02-07 by Randy Pascal
Amidst whispers and rumours that post-secondary hockey might soon return to Laurentian University comes the nostalgic discussion of those, one generation
past, who recall the heyday of the sport on campus.
Few names are as synonymous with the early success of the Voyageurs as coach Jack Porter, the man who guided the team for more than a decade in
the formative years of the 1960's.
Born in Sudbury, the only boy in a family of six children, Porter and his siblings were constantly involved athletically, enjoying seasonal pursuits at
Bell Park - hockey in the winter, paddling in the summer - among a host of other activities.
"You didn't think of having a "primary" sport at the time because you were involved in everything," Porter said. A graduate of both Alexander Public
School and Sudbury High School, Porter would earn a hockey scholarship to Clarkson University, capturing an NCAA championship during his years in upstate
New York and eventually named to the school's Hall of Fame.
Returning home to pursue a career in education, Porter's arrival coincided with the founding of Laurentian University and the launch of the men's hockey
team not long thereafter.
"Tony Demarco was the first coach, but they weren't in a university league at the time - they would play intermediate teams locally." In 1964,
L.U. joined the Ontario Intercollegiate Athletic Association (OIAA), laying the foundation for a championship run that would see the Voyageurs
capture the OIAA title in six of the next seven years.
"It was an exciting time," Porter said. "The university was growing and the hockey team was growing with it. The vast majority of the team was always
local - names like Dick Proceviat, Mike Fox, Dave Tataryn, John Valiquette - and we would bolster the lineup with a reinstated pro or two."
The team emerging with the OIAA banner would move on to compete at the canadian university championships and while Laurentian never claimed a national
title, the team proved more than competitive.
Exhibition opponents featured the Russian, Czechoslavakian and Canadian national teams, as well as the defending NCAA champion Michigan Tech Huskies,
with Sault Ste Marie native Tony Esposito tending goal.
"It was fun, it was competitive, the university was alive," Porter said. "When we played U of T, there were two or three thousand people in the stands."
The rise in the prominency of the program allowed Porter to be selected to join Team Canada for a three-week excursion to Russia in 1969, meeting with
numerous hockey counterparts half a world away.
It was a natural progression for a young man groomed into coaching. "I had some very influential coaches when I played," Porter noted. "Charlie
Serre at Sudbury High School was way ahead of his time, and Bill Harrison at Clarkson."
Leaving the university ranks in the 1970's, Porter returned to youth hockey, working alongside his sons and other youngsters in a practice-first
oriented setting.
The transition from guiding young men to young boys proved seamless. "It wasn't that difficult at all because my philosophy has always been the same,"
Porter said. "You have to learn fundamentals."
"If you can't pass the puck or receive the puck, there's no sense understanding anything about positional play." Blessed with five children, Jack and
Mary Catherine, his wife of more than fifty years, shared sporting passions well beyond hockey, combining tournament treks to Lake Placid with the
opportunity to take in some alpine skiing on the slopes.
His better half provided Porter with some valuable perspective, it would seem. "I remember her telling me that I was never happy if we won because we
didn't win right, and I obviously wasn't happy if we lost," Porter said with a smile. "That's when we took up skiing."
Originally hired as Director of Intramural Athletics at the fledging university in the early sixties, Porter would ascend to Dean of Students at
University College, Principal at University College and eventually Registrar for both University College and Laurentian itself.
His hockey background, which now spans more than six decades, provides an interesting point of comparison. "I can remember when George Armstrong
was probably the biggest guy in the NHL at one time at about 6'1" and 205 or so," Porter said. "He would be undersized on a major midget team now."
Yet with the accolades of his sporting achievements behind him - Porter is a member of both the Sudbury Kinsmen Sports Hall of Fame as well as
the Laurentian Varsity Athletics Hall of Fame - it is the people and his family that provide the lasting memories.
"You go through decades and it all kind of blurs together," Porter said. "But it's always about the players you played with, the fun you had, the
coaches you had - and my family. They're wonderful."
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