"I spent a lot of time with Tommy," said Bowman, who served as the head coach of the Blues from 1967-1970, won an NHL-record nine Stanley Cups as a head coach and holds the League's all-time regular-season record in coaching wins with 1,248. "When you have a new team (come into the League), you're having to buy equipment, tape, sticks, you name it. I was there the whole year with Tommy, so I got to spend a lot of time with him and we got to know each other. We became good friends.
"His domain was the dressing room. He had a great rapport with the players, they just trusted him so much," Bowman told stlouisblues.com. "He always had a little skip in his step. He was pretty busy, and he would be running around the arena, just a hop, skip and a jump. That was his life. He liked to have a good laugh, he never got down or became discouraged. He was one-of-a-kind and way ahead of his time, for sure."
Woodcock worked with some legendary hockey names during his 1,362 games in St. Louis - Red Berenson, Al Arbour, Glenn Hall, Jacques Plante, Bernie Federko, Bobby and Barclay Player - you name a Blue from those eras and you can bet that player depended on 'Woody.'
"He knew what he was talking about," said Federko, who worked with Woodcock in seven of his 13 seasons as a Blue. "If you needed treatment for something, he would get you back as quick as possible, and in those days, you wanted to get back. You didn't want to miss a game because you were always afraid if you did, someone was going to come up and take your job. You played through your injuries, even much more so than you do now. It was very important to have a really good athletic trainer, and that's what Woody was. He was fantastic. Just a nice man, funny, happy-go-lucky. Woody was a great guy to be around."
In those early days, medical trainers also served as the team's equipment managers. In between treating players for bumps and bruises and deciding when to call the team doctor, the trainers also ordered gear, sharpened skates, taped sticks and helped carry hockey equipment from city to city.