Vintage-Bobby Hull Hockey Game-Munro Table Top Metal Players With Flags/Pucks

Game Features: Montreal Canadians Vs Toronto Maple Leafs 

Please look at the photos carefully. The table top game appears to be in really great shape. It is not complete since its missing the instructions, one of the goal light bulbs and the box. It does come with enough players for the board and 2 extra Toronto players as well as several teams for the scoreboard, and 2 pucks and 1 referee. Not sure how many flags and teams came with the game either. Everything that is shown that comes with the game.  The bottom battery areas appear to have some corrosion.

Unsure of the exact version or year but this particular game features 2 Canadian teams playing on a Canadian rink with the Maple Leaf being in the center of the ice. I am also not sure which game version it is but features Bobby Hull’s name and a Black Hawks head on all 4 sides. 

A true vintage hockey game.

FOR REFERENCE:

The metal table hockey game that famously featured Bobby Hull's name on all four sides was manufactured by 
Munro Games Limited in the mid-to-late 1960s and early 1970s. The specific model, often referred to as the 1960’s Munro Bobby Hull table hockey game (often labeled Model 977 or Model 2210), featured his name in bold letters on the metal side rails of the rink
Key details about this version include:
Manufacturer: Munro Games Limited (produced by Servotronics after 1968).
  • Design: Featured metal side boards with "Bobby Hull" branding in the red, white, and black Chicago Blackhawks-style color scheme.
  • Features: Some editions included an overhead scoreboard, pennant flags, metal players, and a ball-bearing, rod-operated mechanism.
  • Variations: While the 1960s models featured "Bobby Hull" on all sides, later editions of Munro's game also incorporated his name prominently, but the classic 1960s version is most commonly recognized for having his name on all four sides.
  • Model 987 (1968)
    : Often recognized for its overhead scoreboard and specific Canadian team sets, but branding was less uniform across all four sides.