DULUTH — Bill Watson’s

1985 Hobey Baker Memorial Award is up for auction,

and is fetching bids closing in on $10,000.

Watson is the second of

an NCAA-record six players from the University of Minnesota Duluth to win

the most prestigious individual award in men’s college hockey, which is handed out every year during the Frozen Four to the most outstanding player in the NCAA.

As a junior forward from Powerview, Manitoba, Watson scored 49 goals and 60 assists for 109 points in 1984-85 while leading the Bulldogs to a second-consecutive NCAA Frozen Four appearance, as well as a WCHA championship.

Tom Kurvers was the first Bulldog to win the Hobey Baker,

earning the award the year before in 1983-84. Watson said winning the Hobey in back-to-back seasons helped create a strong bond between him and Kurvers,

who died in 2021 at the age of 58 from cancer.

Tom Kurvers (left) poses for a photo in January 1984 with his Minnesota Duluth teammates Bill Watson (second from left), Matt Christensen (second from right) and Tom Herzig. (News Tribune file photo)

Tom Kurvers, left, poses for a photo in January 1984 with his Minnesota Duluth teammates Bill Watson, second from left; Matt Christensen, second from right; and Tom Herzig.

Duluth News Tribune file photo

Watson said

Kurver’s passing put into perspective

what’s most important to him from his time at UMD — his teammates, his friends and family. He’ll still be a Hobey Baker Award winner with or without the hardware.

“Some 40 years after it, what you cherish the most are your teammates,” Watson said. “For me, it’s not just my teammates, but my classmates — Jimmy Toninato, Matt Christensen, Guy Gosselin, Norm Maciver, Mark Odnokon. Those were my classmates. I so enjoy when we get together and see each other, and of course, when we get together with all our teammates from that era. That means more than anything. That’s what’s so special.”

HobeyBakerPresentation_39.jpg

Bill Watson’s 1985 Hobey Baker Memorial Award is on display in 2012 at Amsoil Arena in Duluth. Watson won the award following his junior season at Minnesota Duluth in 1984-85. Both the school and the player are awarded the 40-plus pound trophy. Watson is auctioning off his personal trophy from 1984-85.

Contributed / UMD Athletics

Two versions of the 41.5-pound trophy are awarded each season — one to the individual winner and another to the school. Up for sale is Watson’s personal 1985 trophy, which includes his name engraved on the base.

Classic Auctions in Montreal, Quebec,

is auctioning the trophy, with bids accepted through Dec. 2. The trophy is not in mint condition.

According to the description,

the gold-colored metal plate has some wear and it has separated from the acrylic base. It will need to be reglued, according to the listing.

Watson said the top and the base became separated shortly after he accepted the award while he was bringing it back to Duluth, and he just never got around to gluing it back together.

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Minnesota Duluth’s 2012 Hobey Baker Memorial Award winner, Jack Connolly, center, poses with past winners from UMD Bill Watson, left, and Tom Kurvers after winning the award in Tampa on April 6, 2012.

Contributed / File / Larry Radloff

Marc Juteau, the president and founder of Classic Auctions Inc., said this is the first time a Hobey Baker Memorial Award has been offered for public sale. The Hobey Baker Memorial Award trophy is an important piece of hockey history, and its sale should draw significant interest, Juteau said.

“For me, that’s a really, really important trophy and I don’t see that necessarily another one to come up for sale anytime soon,” said Juteau, who admitted the value is tough to gauge because one has never come up for sale before. “I wouldn’t be surprised to get a lot more bids on it.”

Now in his early 60s, Watson said he and his wife, Molly, are starting to downsize. Watson said they would like to put the proceeds toward a couple of things they support, including the scholarship they started at UMD’s Labovitz School of Business and Economic in memory of their son, Jack, who died of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.

“Somebody else is going to see some nice value in it, and God bless them. There’s so many of those rabid collectors out there,” Watson said. “There’s some good causes that will get funded because of it.”

In addition to the trophy, Watson’s 10K Hobey Baker Memorial Award ring is being auctioned off,

as well as some other Hobey Baker memorabilia

like plaques and a commemorative bracelet.

Watson is a UMD Athletic Hall of Fame member and

his No. 14 is retired by the Bulldogs.

He was named the WCHA’s Most Valuable Player in 1984-85 and a first-team All-American for the second consecutive year.

His WCHA award plaques and individual NCAA Frozen Four awards from 1983-84 and 1984-85 are also being auctioned off, in addition to his 1983-84 game-worn Bulldogs jersey, a 1986-87 game-worn Chicago Blackhawks jersey and a signed Koho game-used stick from when he played for the Blackhawks in the late 1980s.

Watson played 108 NHL games for the Blackhawks between 1985 and 1989.