Al Suomi

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Al_Suomi an entity of type: Thing

Albert William Suomi (October 29, 1913 – September 23, 2014) was an American NHL player, who played with the Chicago Black Hawks for the 1936–37 NHL season. Although he did not aspire to play at a professional level, Suomi nevertheless spent his young life playing hockey and was eventually scouted while playing with friends. Suomi began his career playing for the Chicago Baby Ruth team in 1934, a marketing ploy started by the company that produced the candy of the same name. In 1936, he joined a minor league team in Detroit, Michigan and, based on his experiences with the Chicago Baby Ruth team, was deemed too professional to be eligible for the 1936 United States Olympic ice hockey team. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Al Suomi
rdf:langString La Grange, Illinois, U.S.
xsd:date 2014-09-23
rdf:langString Eveleth, Minnesota, U.S.
xsd:date 1913-10-29
xsd:integer 14877012
xsd:integer 1052089400
rdf:langString Left
xsd:integer 170
xsd:date 1913-10-29
rdf:langString Al Suomi, in 1937 with the Chicago Hornets of the Arena Hockey League.
xsd:date 2014-09-23
xsd:integer 5
xsd:integer 10
xsd:integer 230
rdf:langString Albert William Suomi (October 29, 1913 – September 23, 2014) was an American NHL player, who played with the Chicago Black Hawks for the 1936–37 NHL season. Although he did not aspire to play at a professional level, Suomi nevertheless spent his young life playing hockey and was eventually scouted while playing with friends. Suomi began his career playing for the Chicago Baby Ruth team in 1934, a marketing ploy started by the company that produced the candy of the same name. In 1936, he joined a minor league team in Detroit, Michigan and, based on his experiences with the Chicago Baby Ruth team, was deemed too professional to be eligible for the 1936 United States Olympic ice hockey team. Suomi's sole season with the National Hockey League came as a result of another marketing ploy, this time on the part of the Chicago Black Hawks. Having benched all of his Canadian players, the manager declared his intent to field a team composed entirely of American players. Suomi was selected from among a pool of novice players to join the team but, after five games, the gimmick was disbanded and replaced with professionals. Retiring from hockey in 1940, he took on a series of small jobs before opening his own hardware store in Chicago. As of 2007, Suomi was the last surviving member of the 1936–37 all-American Chicago Black Hawks team and, following the 2010 death of Louis Holmes, the oldest living former NHL player. He is also believed to be the first former NHL player to reach the age of 100.
xsd:integer 1937
xsd:integer 1936
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xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8287
xsd:gYear 1937
xsd:gYear 1936
xsd:double 1.778
xsd:double 77112.0
xsd:string Left

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