With 175 pounds on his 5-foot-7 frame, earning his nickname from a New York sports writer for his explosive, blazing speed, Cournoyer was sledgehammered by larger opponents, night after night, between 1964-79, through 1,115 regular-season and playoff games. It finally was a second back operation that forced his premature retirement from the game.
"Wear and tear," Cournoyer said of his regular trips to the body shop.
While growing up, and during many offseasons, he spent long hours developing formidable strength in his wrists and forearms by shooting heavy steel pucks that had been fashioned in his father's machine shop.
Now, his beloved golf game having been hampered for years by lingering pain in his right shoulder, Cournoyer heads into another operation. He hopes to be comfortably swinging a club by mid-May.
"Sleeping isn't comfortable," he said. "Right now, to shave, I can't even splash water on my face with my right hand. The shoulder has been sore for six, seven, maybe 10 years. It won't be a big operation, just a few days at the hospital and then rehab. I hope it's my last operation."