Rogatien Vachon’s long journey to the Hockey Hall of Fame finally ends Monday – Los Angeles Times

As the youngest of the kids who sneaked water from the well to create a hockey rink on the Vachon family’s dairy farm in tiny Palmarolle, Canada, Rogatien Vachon was destined to become a goaltender.

Using homemade sticks, with a couple of lights illuminating the ice and cows as their audience, they’d play from morning until night. It was glorious: just them and the elements, no coaches to criticize them. He didn’t mind the times his mother scolded them for taking so much water that they’d left the well nearly dry.

“They said, ‘If you want to play with us, then you’ve got to be in goal,’” Vachon recalled. “Not exactly a goal. Two whatever we put on the ice. Two blocks. And then, whenever you let a goal in, you’ve got to go and find the puck in the snowbanks.”

Even then, Vachon showed hints of the quickness and tenacity that would lift him to the pinnacle of professional hockey as a three-time Stanley Cup champion with the Montreal Canadiens and the first superstar of the fledgling Kings. Now 71, he still carries in his heart the spirit of that put-upon little brother, the small-town kid who made it big despite standing 5-foot-7. Those memories will be with him Monday in Toronto during his long-overdue induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame.