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Inducted in the Hall of Fame in
2002. Although he never played ice
hockey, Norman de Mesquita has served the sport he loves in many
different ways. He
was taken to see his first game at the age of 14, in October 1946 and,
as he describes it, "...it was love at first sight". He
became an instant fan of the sport and of Wembley Lions in particular. In
the late forties and early fifties, he held the franchise for sales of
the weekly newspaper "Ice Hockey World" at the three large
London arenas, Wembley, Harringay and Earls Court. It was at that time
that he got to know many of the major figures in the sport, including
the Chief Referee, Ernie Leacock, who was also the Assistant Secretary
of the British Ice Hockey Association. When,
in 1954, Norman decided to try his hand at refereeing, it was to Ernie
Leacock that he turned for guidance. Starting with junior games in
January 1955, he soon worked his way up to senior level, finally hanging
up his skates in November 1968 after officiating at what proved to be
Lions' last ever game at Wembley. In
the sixties, Norman embarked on a broadcasting career which saw him contribute many reports on cricket, his other
great sporting love, before becoming Sports Editor at BBC Radio London.
Many fans still recall his Sunday morning sports phone-in, when,
whatever the subject under discussion, he always managed to turn the
conversation to ice hockey Ice
hockey was briefly revived at Wembley in 1973/74 when the London Lions,
a Detroit Red Wings farm team, were in residence. Norman was the PA
announcer at their games, as he was for many other major sporting events
at the Empire Pool (later to be known as Wembley Arena). When
Heineken staged their first British Championship weekend at Wembley in
1984, Norman was, of course, the man at the microphone, as he was every
year until the Heineken sponsorship ended in 1996. During that time, he
became known to ice hockey fans up and down the country as "The
Voice of Wembley". When
"Ice Hockey World" was revived as a glossy magazine in the
1980s, Norman was one of its regular contributors and, after that
publication closed, he began his outspoken "From the Shoulder"
column in "Ice Hockey News Review" One
other aspect of his involvement with ice hockey merits a mention. In
1979, he took a small group of fans to New York to watch a few NHL
games. Since then, he has organised more than twenty trips for his
"London Ice Hockey Nuts" taking in several North American
cities. Others have since jumped on the band wagon, but Norman pioneered
the notion of giving British fans their first glimpse of the "big
boys" on the other side of the pond. Nobody
can claim to have done more to spread the ice hockey gospel in Britain
over the past fifty years. Compiled by Tony Allen March 2002 |