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Paul Dooley delivers one of my favorite lines in the whole movie as the Hyannisport announcer (the game when the Hansons go into the stands to fight fans).

"The fans are standing up to them. The security guards are standing up to them. The peanut vendors are standing up to them. And by golly, if I could be down there, I'd be standing up to them."
 
Of all the overrated comedies in the world, Slap Shot isn't one of them.
 
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“This young man has had a very trying rookie season, what with the litigation, the notoriety, his subsequent deportation to Canada and that country’s refusal to take him. Well, I guess that’s more than most 21-year-olds could handle.”

“Ogelthorpe!”
 
"Here's a name for you nostalgia fans: Clarence "Screaming Buffalo" Swamptown. I'll never forget an exclusive interview in which Swamptown revealed that he calls his hockey stick the "Big Tomahawk," and he usually refers to the opposing players as "the little scalps."
 
Almost didn't make it back to work this afternoon because it was on when I was home for lunch. Sig line changed in honor of it.


vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
 
"Andre, of course, has been living in semi-seclusion in northern Quebec ever since the unfortunate Denny Pratt tragedy.”
 
I forget where I read it (hell, it might have been on this board), but the actor who plays Oglethorpe actually helped inspire the movie.

Ned Dowd was screenwriter Nancy Dowd's brother, and she visited him and the team once and asked the players who their owner was. She was amazed at the fact they didn't know, and that gave her the idea to write a movie about minor-league hockey. It also said on IMDB that she wanted to do a documentary, but George Roy Hill convinced her it would be better as a comedy movie.
 
mpcincal said:
I forget where I read it (hell, it might have been on this board), but the actor who plays Oglethorpe actually helped inspire the movie.

Ned Dowd was screenwriter Nancy Dowd's brother, and she visited him and the team once and asked the players who their owner was. She was amazed at the fact they didn't know, and that gave her the idea to write a movie about minor-league hockey. It also said on IMDB that she wanted to do a documentary, but George Roy Hill convinced her it would be better as a comedy movie.

I've heard bits and pieces of the above too.

Whatever the case, it's a classic.
 
They brought their TOYS!
Every piece of **** that comes on the market, you gotta buy.
 
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