Career
Ball spent the majority of his career in the Eastern Hockey League. Football
Ball spent six years in the Canadian Football League as a defensive education Hockey
He had four consecutive seasons of at least 300 penalty minutes, including a career high 362 PIMs in 1968-1969.
During the 1968-1969 season, Ball also recorded a career high in assists (42) and points (55).
Ball played the 1970 season with the Long Island Ducks. He played the 1971 season with the Johnstown Jets.
On 13 September 1971 he was named player-coach for the Jacksonville Rockets. Despite his holding a position as player-coach, Ball and goaltender Ted Ouimet were dealt to the Syracuse Blazers on December 15, 1971.
Ball was suspended for two games, effective March 13, 1973, after a brawl in a Blazers-Rhode Island Eagles game.
Ball had a minor role in the movie Slap Shot. He played defenceman Gilmore Tuttle, who was from Mile 40, Saskatchewan, and was running a donut shop after his retirement from hockey. Tuttle was also claimed to be the "former penalty-minute record holder for the years 1960 to 1968 inclusive." Gilmore Tuttle, according to public address announcer Jim Carr, wore uniform number 15.
Prior to becoming a professional hockey player, Ball had served as a police officer in Toronto.
Ball had also worked as a masked professional wrestler in the Toronto area. "I wasn"t supposed to do it," said Ball, "but like those (teammates) who wrestled in Macon, I wore a mask, so no one could tell who I was." Ball also admitted that he wrestled under different aliases.
After his retirement from hockey, Ball worked for a construction company in Grand Junction, Colorado operating heavy equipment such as bulldozers. Ball died from natural causes on January 20, 2006.
He was 67 years old.