Rube Bjorkman, you say, Whalers?
Reuben Eugene Bjorkman is alive and apparently well at age 96 in Warroad, Minnesota, where he retired almost 50 years ago after a so-so head coaching career at U North Dakota (1968/69-1977/78, 146-186-11, one trip to the WCHA East finals in 1970/71). He was a more successful head coach during his one year at RPI in 1963/64 and four years at UNH from 1964/65 to 1967/68 (40-14-0 last two years after UNH moved up to ECAC from ECAC-2). Having grown up in Durham, I got to watch Rube put UNH on the college hockey map, his last three years in the newly constructed Snively Arena, by superb recruiting.
Rube’s recruits included Steve Drapeau, Brad Houston (scored the first goal in Snively Arena), Dave Savage (Durham townie, one of the answers to my quiz question a few pages back), Dave O’Connor, Dave Hagerman (goalie from Plymouth, NH, HRef, who rented an apartment with his spouse from my parents), Dude Thorn, Joe Bartlett, Bill Noble, the William Rothwell cousins (same first names), Colin Sutherland, Bob MacCarthy (we took intro history together), Colin Clark (made 70 saves in one game), Rick Metzger (another goalie, where there was incredible depth), Bob Brandt, Rich David, Dick Walsh, Mickey Goulet, Graham Bruder (still lives in Dover), Dave Sheen, Mike Ontkean (of the movie Slap Shot fame), Pete Stoutenberg (R.I.P., married a beautiful ORHS classmate), Bob Grant (another Durham townie), besides setting the table for Charlie Holt by adding Louis Frigon and Mike McShane (one of all-time winningest college coaches at Norwich University) for the 1968/69 season, who both played with Dick Umile and Guy Smith the following year.
In 1997 Rube won the John “Snooks” Kelly Founders Award granted by the American Hockey Coaches Association. Besides a Wikipedia page (the HockeyDB site messes up his time frame at UNH by a year), there are three interview videos with Rube (about 20 minutes each, or an hour total) created about this time last year from his retirement home in Warroad, Minnesota. So, maybe Rube is not walking through our coaching door again at UNH, but I think that he was the key guy in the development of men’s hockey at UNH during the modern era.