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Lee Fogolin—Like Father, Like Son
In the Fogolin family, success breeds
success. Both Lidio
"Lee" and Lee Jr. have won Cups. Father Lidio enjoyed an All-Star
season with the Detroit Red Wings in 1949-50, and his
punishing checks and no-nonsense defensive style helped
bring the Cup to Detroit. Son Lee Jr.
enjoyed a banner career with the Edmonton Oilers,
winning a pair of Stanley Cups during the early days of the
great dynasty.
"…To have two guys from the same
family who come from that area (northern Ontario) both
win the Cup is incredible," said Fogolin. "It’s not
something you think about when you win the Cup, but when
you retire and look back on it, you realize just how
difficult it is to get your name on it. I guess we were
both very fortunate."
Lee Jr. was born February 7, 1955, in
Chicago, where his dad played for the Blackhawks. After
his father retired, the family returned to northern
Ontario where the son quickly showed that he had
inherited many of his father’s hockey sensibilities.
After some outstanding junior years in Thunder Bay, he
excelled with the major junior Oshawa Generals.
The Buffalo Sabres drafted Fogolin
11th overall in the 1974 draft. American boosters noted
that he was the first-ever American-born player selected in the first round, but, as the family had
returned to Canada years before, Fogolin was American by
birthplace only, and he was a proud product of the Ontario
junior system.
The Sabres did not waste time with
their young player, as he was inserted directly into the Sabres’ lineup for the 1974-75 season.
Although he
spent a 20-games with the minor-league Hershey
Bears, he was back with the Sabres as they marched to
the Stanley Cup final, only to lose to the Philadelphia
Flyers. Fogolin established himself as a steady
defenceman—and while he never scored more than three
goals in a season for the Sabres, he entrenched himself
as a regular in the Buffalo lineup until 1979.
The Oilers plucked Fogolin from
the Sabres’ in the 1979 expansion draft, and he
immediately brought veteran leadership to a
very young hockey club.

"Certainly, after spending five years
in the NHL up in Buffalo, I could see that this team had
the ingredients for success," recalled Fogolin. “But
even I didn’t think that it would have the success that
others thought it would.
"It was a totally different
atmosphere than in Buffalo. In the established NHL
teams, the rookies moved up very slowly. The veterans
let them know that they would have to battle for ice
time. Sometimes a young player could spend a lot of his
time sitting on the bench for two or three years."
Fogolin enjoyed a solid career with
the Oilers from 1979 to 1987. He was part of two Stanley Cup
championships and significantly upped his offensive output.
In 586 career regular-season games with the Oilers, Fogolin earned 160 points.
His best
season came during 1980-81, when he finished with 13 goals and 17
assists. He also tied an NHL record for shorthanded
goals by a defenceman with four that year.
Like his father, Fogolin’s assets
were his defensive knowledge, physical play and
leadership. Coach Glen Sather
valued those tools, and on March 15, 1981, the
Oilers named Fogolin captain of the team.
He held the position until the eve of the 1983-84
season, when he made a decision to put the team’s best interests ahead of
personal glory. He volunteered to surrender the "C" to
Wayne Gretzky, feeling that it would be the Great One
who could be the one to lead the Oilers to a Stanley
Cup. Fogolin was astute in his decision, and won two
Stanley Cups with the Oilers.
Fogolin finished his career in 1987
with a short return stint with the Sabres, but knee
troubles pushed him towards retirement.
Fogolin is not forgotten for his
accomplishments in either Edmonton
or Thunder Bay; in 1993, he was elected to the
Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame.
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