The
Kansas City Blues were a minor-league hockey team based in
Kansas City, Missouri that played in the
Central Hockey League from 1967 to 1972, and again in the 1976-77 season, mainly as an affiliate of the in-state
St. Louis Blues of the
National Hockey League. The 1967 Blues were owned by Missouri Lieutenant Governor (1968-1972) William S. (Bill) Morris, and represented the return of hockey to Kansas City for the first time in over 30 years. Morris was determined to bring an NHL team to Kansas City and tried to lay the groundwork by convincing his friend Sid Soloman, owner of the St. Louis Blues, to create a farm team in Kansas City. The Blues made history on February 21, 1971, when Blues goalie
Michel Plasse became the first goaltender to score a goal in a professional hockey game, scoring against the
Oklahoma City Blazers. This goal was unfortunately witnessed by few as a snow storm was moving through the Kansas City area causing even the team's owner to leave the arena early.