The 2013 Double-A Draft Thread

BubbaBoot

Registered User
Oct 19, 2003
11,306
2
The Fenway
Visit site
The B.A.A. Unicorns select:
- head coach Vladimir Ruzicka (3x Czech Extraliga coach of the year / 2x Czech Extraliga Champion / 2x Gold Medal World Championships)
- assistant coach Ike Hildebrand ( I can use him in a pinch if I have a rash of injuries at forward)
 

ted2019

History of Hockey
Oct 3, 2008
5,492
1,882
pittsgrove nj
Danville Dashers Select:
Center: Sergei Shepelev
profimedia-0088853105.jpg

Shepelev stole all the headlines in the final game showdown of the 1981 Canada Cup. The world was watching Canada's 21 year old superstar Wayne Gretzky on a line with Guy Lafleur and Marcel Dionne, and the newly formed Russian top line of Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov and Sergei Makarov. But it was the anonymous Shepelev who was the game's hero, scoring three goals en route to Russia's humiliating 8-1 defeat of Team Canada.

It was Shepelev's second hat trick of the tournament. He also scored three times against Czechoslovakia, giving him a team best six tallies for the tourney. Only Canada's Mike Bossy had more.

The 26 year old Shepelev seemingly had come out of nowhere. As a younger player he was a winger with Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk who was criticized by the Russian hockey theorists who felt Shepelev was too aggressive and "too arrogant."

In 1980 he had joined Spartak Moscow where famed coach Boris Kulagin almost immediately turned him into a center. It was a seemingly odd move, given that Shepelev's lack of training as a center often troubled his defensive game and his passing, two must-have traits of centers in the Soviet system. Shepelev was a winger at heart, wanting to rush the puck and cheat offensively looking for quick breaks instead of playing high and springing the wingers.

Despite the unlikeliness of success, Kulagin captured lightning in a bottle. For a couple of years in the early 1980s Shepelev's line with Sergei Kapustin and Viktor Shalimov was as good as any line in the world. In the 1981 Canada Cup that line with unmatchable speed out-performed the KLM Line, the Gretzky-Lafleur-Dionne line and the Trottier-Bossy-Gillies line.

Ultimately Shepelev's moment in the sun was short lived. He was an important member of the Soviets 1981, 1982, and 1983 gold medal teams at the world championships. But when the older Kapustin and Shalimov slowed down and were removed from the national team, Shepelev was unable to find the same success with new linemates.

Shepelev's last year with the national team was 1984, without Kapustin and Shalimov. He participated with the 1984 gold medal winning team at the Sarajevo Olympics. His last appearance with the national team came back at the Canada Cup. This time he failed to score, picking up 3 assists in 4 games, as the Soviets failed to make the finals.

All told Sergei Shepelev played in 46 games with the Soviet national team at the Olympics, Worlds and Canada Cup. He scored 22 goals and 38 points. In 453 Russian league games he added 188 goals.


Defenseman: Genrikh Sidorenkov
CCCPjerseys1956copy.png

One of the players featured in the video is Genrikh Sidorenkov. He is hardly the most renowned Russian player of all time, but nonetheless an early star. He was best known as a reliable, steady defense partner of Nikolai Sologubov, who is generally recognized as the first great Russian defenseman.

Sidorenkov was a 5'10" 185lb blueliner described as "low key," "dependable," with a "common sense style" and "a relaxed confidence." The excellent book Kings of the Ice suggests "he was a pragmatic and cautious player, exerting the minimum effort required in bodychecking while maximizing his excellent physical attributes of height and weight. Sidorenkov was respected for his well-organized game and nearly flawless performance."

Nine times Sidorenkov played on the Soviet national team, for a total of 107 games. The defenseman scored 15 goals.

He also played in 310 league games with Krylya Sovetov Moscow (1948-1951), CSKA Moscow (1951-1962, 1964-1966) and SKA Leningrad (1962-1964). A three time Soviet All Star, Sidorenkov scored a career total of 42 goals.

In addition to the 1956 gold medal, Sidorenkov added an Olympic silver medal in 1960. At the World Championships, Sidorenkov won a gold medal in 1954, silver in 1957, 1958 and 1959 and a bronze in 1961.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

tony d

New poll series coming from me on June 3
Jun 23, 2007
76,601
4,558
Behind A Tree
Left Winger Greg Gilbert

7ebb0644-cf9a-416a-8907-4c012a11e7df.jpg


Legends Of Hockey:

Left-winger Greg Gilbert played over 800 NHL games with four different clubs in the 80s and 90s. He possessed above average offensive talent but carved a niche for himself as a big leaguer based on stellar defensive work and leadership skills.

Defenseman Jimmy Fowler

jimmyfowler.jpg


Legends Of Hockey:

Defenceman Jimmy Fowler played three seasons with the Toronto Maple Leafs in the late 1930s. He was a fine passer who used his shot effectively from the point.
 
Last edited:

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,210
7,369
Regina, SK
I’ll take Murray Armstrong, C as a spare offensive center and to fill the 1917-1943 requirement. If I’m not mistaken, he was actually the second most established offensive O6 center available heading into this, behind only Jim McFadden, and considerably *ahead of Gallinger and Gainor.
*
I’ll also grab a guy who I simply can’t stand to see go another year unselected: Gerry Hart, D. Hart’s icetime profile is probably the most impressive remaining: 20.89 minutes a game, for 730 games, for excellent teams (11% above average) – and that’s without any PP TOI padding. Not sure why he slips through the cracks, as he’s a real warrior type, built like a fire hydrant, extremely physical, difficult to play against and willing to fight.
*
Regina has now qualified for the playoffs:
*
1700-1916: Collins, Rickey, Flett
1917-1943: Armstrong
1944-1966: Polupanov, Horeck, Martynyuk, McCreary, Smith
1967-1979: Vail, Golikov, Marks, Rota, Hart, Fedorov, Lapointe
1980-1994: Carney, Carkner, Wilson
1995-2005: Ryder, Horcoff, Ott
 

VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,395
6,529
South Korea
Ironmen select coach Vsevolod Bobrov, the legend as a player started coaching Spartak Moscow in 1964 and the team went to the finals in 1966 and won the championship in 1967. He coached the USSR national team in 1972 when they got silver in the worlds and came within a goal of winning the '72 Summit Series. He also coached the national team to golds in the 1973 and 1974 world championships. He has a 57-8-6 record at the helm of the national team.

3_b.jpg


Unlike his famous predecessor, Bobrov was not a dictatorial coach. A former player with strong individual skills, he preferred to neither force players into a strict hockey schema nor intimidate them with the mastery of psychological trickery used quiet often by Tarasov. As noted by eyewitnesses, Bobrov always treated his players with respect and supported their independent thinking.

6_b.jpg


1972SummitSeries said:
"We set off for Canada like blind kittens. We had only a hazy idea of the professionals." This was how the coach of the USSR national team, Vsevolod Bobrov, began our conversation. "And we remembered those films we saw of the Stanley Cup games. I know now that the cinema can really work wonders. Our boys were in low spirits after watching the stunts of the goalies and the shooting of the forwards on the screen. It reached a point where I ordered that showing of these films be stopped in order to build up team morale.

"I realize now that the makers of these films presented a dazzling spectacle far removed from what really takes place in a game in Canada. But I did not know this in August, and, therefore, turned to reminiscences to neutralize the effect of the films.

"I told the boys about our first game with the Canadians back in 1954 in Stockholm - how we, newcomers in the world championship, went over to watch the Lyndhurst club during a practice. This club represented Canada at that time. I kept nothing away from the boys and admitted that we left that workout crestfallen. It seemed to us that the Canadians were unbeatable. I recalled how Arkady Chernyshev, our senior coach at that time, proved to us that our trump cards that could beat the Canadians were speed and passing. I did not have to tell the boys anything else: They knew that we beat Lyndhurst, 7-2.

"Two things particularly troubled me before the opening game in Montreal: first of all, whether our young goalie, Vladislav Tretiak, would stand up to the hailstorm of shots, and, secondly, how much faith our forwards had in the stories about the impregnability of Canadian net-minders. These two problems were mainly of a psychological nature. As for the technical details of the coming game, our strategy was clear. We would not get tangled up in body checking, a department where the Canadians were far stronger than we. We would irritate their defence with swift passes and we would take advantage of our speed.

"I can admit now that when we were trailing, 2-0, I thought we would lose the game. Tretiak was uncertain and our forwards were timid in front of Dryden in the early stages. But after the first period which ended in a 2-2 draw, I felt a little bit more at ease. In the dressing room during the intermission, Tretiak smiled and remarked that the Canadians' shots were not stronger than those fired by Alexander Maltsev, Yakushev and Valery Kharlamov. When Kharlamov netted the third goal in the second period, I felt completely at ease, because this was a sign that they psychological crisis was over as far as my boys were concerned.

"When Kharlamov sat down on the bench after his goal, he shouted out to the rest: "Hey, fellows, you can score between their skates."

Coach Bobrov said he was "particularly impressed" by Phil Esposito.

"He is a center-forward in the real sense of the word. Everyone should copy him in finding the proper place at the proper moment in front of the goal and then shooting instantly. The wingers, Ellis and Henderson, are highly efficient. Incidentally, their style and that of our leading wingers are very much the same. Gilbert is tenacious in body checking.

"I am sorry that I did not see Bobby Orr, the famous Boston Bruins defenseman, in action. But if, as they say, Orr is in a class of his own in comparison with the rest, then he must certainly be an outstanding player. If Park, Bergman, Stapleton and White were trained under our system and taught to play faster, they could all become model defensemen. This is my opinion.

"I was somewhat disappointed by the Canadian goalies possibly because I, like the rest, expected greater things from them. I believe our Tretiak performed better than they did."

"Can it be said," I asked Bobrov, "that in the light of the USSR vs. Team Canada series, the Canadian school of hockey is better?"

"I believe that it would be wrong to assert this. First of all, I would like to talk about the schools of hockey themselves. The Canadians are more inclined to body checking, and operate more individually than our men in the rival zone. This is the major difference between the two styles. There are also certain tactical nuances favoured by each system. For instance, should the defenseman or the forward be the one to cover the opposing wingers. The Canadian and Soviet schools of hockey have much more in common today than, say, in 1954. This is only natural because in this period both schools have reciprocally enriched each other.

"But," Bobrov emphasized, "there is a fly in the ointment. There is something, regretfully, that dampens my respect for the Canadian players. This is their rough charging, and fights with players and referees. Mediocre players can be excused for such roughhousing, but I can't understand why such a top class players as those on Team Canada should go in for this. I equally can't understand the attitude of Team Canada coaches who ignored their men's dirty work."

4_b.jpg


chidlovski said:
It's a common observation that a very few outstanding sportsmen manage to become outstanding coaches. Bobrov became a great soccer and hockey coach. Ironically for a person who played most of his career with the Red Army clubs, Bobrov became a coach of the CSKA's rivalry. He brought the Moscow Spartak to several National Championships in the years when it was unthinkable to challenge the Red Army club. Alexander Yakushev, Vladimir Shadrin, Yevgeny Zimin, Alexaner Martyniuk - those are just a few Team USSR players that graduated from Bobrov's Spartak.

Bobrov was appointed the head coach of the national team when his former linemate, legendary Anatoly Tarasov, made a sensational decision to retire from the Team USSR after the 1972 Olympics in Sapporo...

The reason of his departure from coaching Team USSR in 1974 remains a mystery of the Soviet hockey. Coaches usually resign after a major competition flop. Bobrov left after winning World Championship in Finland. The story says that Team USSR was losing to Czechoslovakia. In the second intermission, the top Soviet official entered the locker room where Bobrov was outlining the plan of a comeback in the third period. Bobrov turned to the intruder and just said:

"Close the door. From the outside, please."

The official turned red and left the room. Team USSR won. Bobrov had to go too. Disobedience to the system could not be forgiven even to the champions.
 
Last edited:

VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,395
6,529
South Korea
Ironmen select coach Boris Kulagin, the assistant coach to both Tarasov and Bobrov, and head coach of the national team in the mid-seventies between the Bobrov and Tikhonov reign. He helped behind the bench in the 1972 Summit Series and head coached the winning 1974 Summit Series win over the WHA's best. His Soviet Wings won the national championship in 1974. He went on to head the gold-winning 1975 world championship team and the 1976 Olympic gold medal team. The silver at the 1976 world championship was not well received back home and he was replaced during the 1977 world championships.

kolagin.jpg


Kulagin.jpg


chidlovski said:
For many years, he worked with Anatoly Tarasov as Red Army assistant coach. Kulagin's responsibilities included players selection and evaluation and working with the junior team players. For one thing, it was Boris Kulagin who discovered and kept being persistent about Valery Kharlamov as an upcoming star of the Russian hockey. Needless to say, the "father of Russian hockey" Tarasov wasn't impressed by Kharlamov at all. Kulagin convinced him to give a young player a second chance and Kharlamov was sent to a minor league for a year.

As CSKA assistant coach, Boris Kulagin won 9 USSR titles and had no chance to replace his boss, legendary Tarasov, as head coach of the Red Army team. In 1971, Kulagin decided to go on his own and he the CSKA to become a head coach of underachieving and rather mediocre Krylya Sovetov. Learning craft from Tarasov, natural educational and motivational skills, insider's knowledge of the best young hockey prospects began to pay off for Boris Kulagin.

Kulagin's approach with the new team was genius and simple. The Red Army club had a long bench. Many talented players were simply put on a waiting list to play for the mighty CSKA. Kulagin invited them to join him in the Krylya Sovetov. In a couple of seasons, the club turned into a mixture of experienced steady players rejected by the Red Army club and the new generation of young promising players like Yury Lebedev, Vyacheslav Anisin, Alexander Bodunov (nicknamed the "kids line" in North America), Sergey Kapustin and more. In 1974, Kulagin's team won the USSR Championship and the Cup. He also replaced Vsevolod Bobrov as Team USSR head coach.

By all means, it was the peak of Kulagin's career. The Soviets won the 1974 Summit Series, World and European titles in 1975 and the 1976 Olympics. In 1976 and 1977, Team USSR lost two consecutive world championships which cost Kulagin's job. It marked the beginning of the new era in the Soviet hockey - the era of Victor Tikhonov.

716.jpg


Kulagin was transferred to Moscow in the 1960s and Kulagin became assistant coach to Anatoli Tarasov at HC CSKA Moscow, the Central Red Army team. Tarasov was also the national team coach, and Kulagin became assistant on the national team. After Tarasov was removed from the national team head coach position, Kulagin was retained as assistant coach to head coach Vsevolod Bobrov. Kulagin was assistant coach on the first "super series" between the Soviet national team and the NHL-based Team Canada in 1972, the "Summit Series". During the season, Kulagin was head coach of the Soviet Wings. After his team won the Soviet league championship in 1974, Kulagin was promoted to national team coach to replace Bobrov.

Kulagin would be Soviet head coach in the second super series, the "1974 Summit Series" against a WHA-based Team Canada. Unlike 1972, the Soviets won the series and it would be the start of a decade of supremacy of ice hockey by the Soviet national team. Kulagin remained national team coach until the final period of the 1977 World Ice Hockey Championships. With Sweden in the lead 2–1 after two periods of play, and the Soviet Union needing a win to take the championship, Kulagin was replaced as head coach by assistant coach Konstantin Loktev by the head of the Soviet delegation. Kulagin went on to coach a team in Denmark. Kulagin returned to the Soviet Union in 1980 and coached Moscow Spartak until his death in 1988.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Kulagin
 
Last edited:

Hedberg

MLD Glue Guy
Jan 9, 2005
16,399
13
BC, Canada
The Muskies select coach Cooney Weiland

1941 Stanley Cup Champion

ralph_zps67b10130.jpg


Canadian Governor General David Johnston
“He was a great teacher of what I call the beautiful game. But he also was a great teacher of the beautiful game of life,” says Johnston.

“He never gave us pep talks as we went out to start a game. He would say, ‘I’ve only got a Grade 10 education, and you guys are at Harvard. If you’ve listened to what I’ve been telling you during the week, you’re going to go out and do it.’ ”

Weiland may have cleverly referenced his Grade 10 education as a motivational tool, but when listening to Johnston describe Weiland’s approach to coaching, it sure sounds as if the coach was several decades ahead of his time.

“He taught what today we would call the New Jersey trap – I call it a game of mismatch,” says Johnston. “It required each of us to play at the level of our individual skill, but doing that with a great consciousness of the other five players on the ice. And always working in a degree of harmony with them while having a degree of spontaneity. That gets very intellectual for the game of hockey, but he taught it well.”

Indeed, that’s a lot to think about when you’re making split-second decisions on the ice. So how was Cooney Weiland able to convey those approaches and theories in a usable way?

“He was a great teacher. He knew his subject matter well. He had passion about it. He related to the whole person he was teaching, and he inspired us,” says Johnston. “We never wanted to let him down.”

U.S. College Hockey Online
A 1971 inductee to the Hockey Hall of Fame, Weiland is the longest-tenured coach in Harvard history and ranks second on the school’s career wins list with a 315-174-17 record at Harvard. In his tenure as head coach from 1950 to 1971, he led the Crimson to six Ivy League championships, five NCAA tournament appearances, five Beanpots and two ECAC championships.

Weiland, a Seaforth, Ont., native, was twice named coach of the year by the American Hockey Coaches Association – first in 1955, when he led the Crimson to third place in the NCAA tournament, and again in his final season, when his team captured the ECAC tournament. The New England Hockey Writers Association named Weiland its coach of the year five times and honored him with the Schaefer Pen Award for contribution to amateur hockey in 1962. He received the Lester Patrick Award for contribution to hockey in the United States in 1972.

and

LW Archie Briden

11479829_116048797549_zps22d57813.jpg


5'8, 170 lbs
Shoots Left

22-23, 23-24 2nd Team PCHA All-Star

24 G, 6 A, 30 Pts in 84 PCHA GP

Ottawa Citizen, Jan 29, 1946
Archie Briden, out of Haileybury, was so fast that none of his line mates could ever keep pace with him and yet he skated with such ease and grace that he appeared to be coasting.

Legends of Hockey
The name Archie Briden first came to prominence when he was a 14-year-old with the Cobalt O'Brien Mines team in 1912-13. He also suited up for the Haileybury Rexalls that same year. In six games, he had two goals. He remained with those clubs until he turned 18 when he signed with the Toronto Blueshirts of the NHA in 1916. In 13 games, Briden scored four goals and six points.

Briden, like most young men of his era, missed two years of hockey due to his service in the Canadian military in World War One from 1917-1919. In 1919-20, he headed west to join the Edmonton Eskimos of the Big-Four league where he played for two years. He then decided to head right out to the west coast and play for the Seattle Metropolitans of the PCHA. He remained in Seattle for almost three years before being sent to the Victoria Cougars midway through the 1923-24 season.
 
Last edited:

Rob Scuderi

Registered User
Sep 3, 2009
3,378
2
Mats Ahlberg, C
mats_ahlberg_1.jpg

eliteprospects said:
A given leading figure in both the Three Crowns and Leksand IF for almost a decade. Swedish champion on four occasions, games in two Olympic Games and three World Championship medals speaks volumes about his greatness (164 A-internationals).

"Mat" had the natural talent with a dazzling technique and mind in order to score.
WC finishes: 3, 5
2x WC Silver
3x WC Bronze
1x Olympic Bronze

SHL finishes according to Eliteprospects: 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 5, 6, 6, 7
4x Swedish All-Star team
4x SHL champion

Andy Aitkenhead, G
andrewaitkenhead.jpg

Really short career but won the Stanley Cup as a starter
Legends of Hockey said:
A standout for two full seasons with the New York Rangers from 1932 to 1934, Aikenhead took over the starting job from John Ross Roach and for two years was a solid if unspectacular netminder. He had played ten years in various minor leagues out west, most notably appearing in the Allan Cup finals in 1924 and 1926 with Saskatoon.

Aitkenhead's rookie season of 1932-33 was a Stanley Cup-winning one as he played all eight games for the Broadway Blueshirts, winning six and recording two shutouts en route to the championship in four games over Toronto. At 29, Aitkenhead looked set to be the team's goalie of the future.

After playing every game of the following season, though, the team was eliminated from the playoffs quickly and he lost the starter's job the next season to Davey Kerr. Aitkenhead played just ten games, and spent the next six seasons in the PCHL, retiring in 1941.
 

jkrx

Registered User
Feb 4, 2010
4,337
21
Making up some picks again.

Stig Salming, D

Stig.jpg


Antti Niemi, G

AnttiNiemiSharks.jpg


Scott Thornton, C

2331777151_ff4281b287.jpg


Ethan Moreau, LW

1314103672798_ORIGINAL.jpg


Bengt-Ã…ke Gustafsson, Coach

471px-Bengt_-%C3%85ke.JPG


Gerry "Kid Dynamite" James, RW

GerryJames.jpg
 
Last edited:

VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,395
6,529
South Korea
Remember:

1.Three (3) picks today, the last day of the draft.
2. Check your era requirements.
3. Update your roster post with complete roster, one 'C' captain and two 'A' alternates.
4. (Send in your vote in the AAA 2013 final series today)
5. Have a happy new year!
 

ted2019

History of Hockey
Oct 3, 2008
5,492
1,882
pittsgrove nj
Danville Selects:
Coach: Bill Dineen
628x471.jpg

WHA Coaching Stats:
Wins: 318
Losses: 199
Ties: 28
4 Straight Division Titles (1973-77)
2X Avco Winner ( 1973-74, 1974-75)
2X WHA Coach Of The Year (1977 & 1978)
WHA HOF Member

NHL Coaching Stats:
Wins: 60
Lossses: 60
Ties: 20

AHL Coaching Stats:
Wins: 246
Losses: 182
Ties: 52
2X Division Champs ( Adirondack Red Wings)
2X Calder Champs (1985-86 , 1988-89)
2X Coach Of The Year (1984-85, 1985-86)
2014 AHL HOF

In 1972 Dineen got a big break. He was asked to coach the new WHA team the Houston Aeros. He knew he wanted an 18 year old youngster named Mark Howe. Mark of course was the son of Dineen's old teammate Gordie Howe. Dineen immediately set about acquiring the WHA rights to Mark and Gordie's other hockey playing son, Marty. Then he approached Gordie with the idea of coming out of retirement to play with his sons. Houston badly needed some sort of draw if hockey was to succeed in the Texan city. Gordie agreed to return to the ice, and counts playing with his sons as his career highlight.

Dineen transitioned to coaching as his playing career wound down, and he would win championships in both the Western Hockey League and the World Hockey Association before returning to the AHL as head coach of the Adirondack Red Wings in 1983. Dineen’s six seasons behind the bench in Glens Falls saw him win the Louis A.R. Pieri Award as the AHL’s outstanding coach in 1985 and again in 1986, and he led the Red Wings to Calder Cup titles in 1986 and 1989.

Defenseman: Doug Murray
106547291_display_image.jpg


Murray has 1175 Hits in 486 Career Games.
Assets: Can play an effective stay-at-home role and excels in penalty-killing situations. Is an awesome physical specimen and loves to dish out bone-crunching hits.
Flaws: Will never be confused with Paul Coffey in terms of his offensive ability. Must avoid taking bad penalties. Is only average in the skating department.
Career Potential: Mammoth shutdown defenseman.

RW: Mel " Sudden Death" Hill
melhill1b_vx.jpg


Stats:
Games: 324
Goals: 89
Assists: 109
Pts: 198
3X Stanley Cup Winner:
1939 Boston Bruins (NHL)
1941 Boston Bruins (NHL)
1945 Toronto Maple Leafs (NHL)


The name Mel "Sudden Death" Hill will forever be frozen in the etches of hockey history. That's because of his NHL record three overtime goals in the same playoff series.

Born in Glenboro, Manitoba, Mel played his junior hockey for the Saskatoon Wesleys, Sudbury Wolves and Sudbury Frood Miners. His last season in Sudbury (1936-37), which saw him score a league leading 18 goals in 15 games, convinced the Boston Bruins sign him as a free agent on October 26, 1937.

Hill was no immediate hit in Beantown by any means. It wasn't until his second season, 1938-39, that he gained regular ice time, scoring 10 goals during the regular season. It was in the subsequent post-season that he had his immortalizing series against the New York Rangers.

"The first game (2-1) was a real endurance test, " Hill recalled. " It went on for three overtimes. Bill Cowley fed me a pass down the wing and I beat Davey Kerr with a high shot to put us ahead in the series. I scored on Kerr again the following night in overtime (3-2) and we took a 2-0 lead over New York."

Boston won the third game as well before Rangers unthinkably roared back with three straight wins to set up a deciding seventh game at the Boston Garden. Once again the teams battled to an overtime after Ray Getliffe had scored for Boston and Muzz Patrick for New York to make it 1-1. Like in game one the teams played two scoreless overtime periods before Mel became the hero once more.

"It was around eight minutes of the third overtime, " Hill remembered. " Cowley fed me a pass from behind the net and I was right on top of Rangers goalie Bert Gardiner. I held the puck for a second then flipped it up into the net on the short side. The fans went wild and it was a tremendous thrill to win a series for my team. "

It was somewhat ironic that Rangers general manager Lester Patrick had turned down Hill years earlier because he was " too frail for big-time hockey".

In the Stanley Cup final against Toronto, Mel once again was a key figure as Boston won in five games. He assisted on both of Roy Conacher's goals as Boston won game four 2-0. He also opened the scoring in the Cup clinching game that Boston won 3-1. All in all Mel scored 6 goals and 3 assists in the playoffs that year.

Two years later, in 1941 it was time for Mel to once again sip champagne from the Cup. This time he scored the semifinal-series clinching goal against Toronto.

"That one ranks right up with the goals against New York, " Mel said, " I came out of the corner with the puck and fired a hot shot past Turk Broda. We went on and rolled over Detroit in four straight games to win the Stanley Cup."

Mel wasn't a star player and he played within his limitations.

"I was a basic, unspectacular player who usually performed well when it counted, but I just happened to get super-hot in that series with New York," he said.

Mel also admitted that carrying the tag of " Sudden Death" wasn't so easy at times.

"It wasn't an easy tag to carry the rest of my career. It seemed like I was expected to be the hero in every playoff game from that moment on. The name "Sudden Death" was easier to live with after I retired," Mel jokingly said.

Mel was sold to the Brooklyn Americans on June 27, 1941. There he played for one season before the team folded. He was then picked up by Toronto and racked up his best season statistically when he scored 44 points (17+27) in 49 games (1942-43).

Mel played in Toronto until 1946 and then continued to play in the AHL until 1948 (Pittsburgh Hornets). Then for the next four seasons Mel played senior hockey with the Regina Caps before retiring.

After hockey he went into the soft drink business in Regina, Saskatchewan. He built a house in nearby Fort Qu'Appelle where he lived for the next 25 years until he passed away in 1996
 
Last edited by a moderator:

ResilientBeast

Proud Member of the TTSAOA
Jul 1, 2012
13,903
3,558
Edmonton
Jacques Plante Goalie Coach

Martin Hanzal C
Has impressive size and reach. Is a sound two-way pivot with the ability to take over games in a variety of ways. Owns good hands, a defensive conscience and plenty of feistiness.

George Laraque RW
 
Last edited:

VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,395
6,529
South Korea
Ironmen select right winger Rudi Ball, a 500-goal scoring Jew who even Hitler had to let the team captain play for Germany at the 1936 Olympic Games because of his reputation as one of the best and his role in the nation's win of a medal (Bronze) at the '32 Olympics.

rudi3.jpg


A real artist at skating and stick handling.. combined with a 'deadly shot'...
http://www.azhockey.com/Ba.htm

- was voted as the best European ice hockey player in a French Sports Magazine in 1930
- was considered one of the most popular and dreaded European ice hockey players prior to the Second World War.

... While reasonably short, Ball was considered extremely fast on the ice and was admired as having much skill and ability.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudi_Ball

In 1936, having Jewish heritage, Ball (the 25-year-old captain) was initially overlooked for selection in the German ice hockey team. ... Ball also believed a deal could be struck to save his family in Germany if he returned to play in the games. The German selectors also realized that without Ball.. the team would not stand a chance of winning. Another factor was that the Nazi party could not overlook the fact that Ball was without doubt one of the leading athletes in his sport. With much controversy Ball was included in the German team to play at the 1936 Olympic games. The deal for Ball's family to leave Germany was also agreed. After Ball was injured, the Germans took 5th place in the Olympic tournament. Ball played four matches and scored two goals.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudi_Ball

Olympic Bronze (1932)
World Championship Silver (1930)
European Championship Gold (1930)
World Championship Bronze (1932)
European Championship Bronze (1936 & 1938)
8 German Championships (1928 - 1944)
Spengler Cup (1928-29, 1934-35 & 1935-36)
IIHF Ice Hockey Hall of Fame (2004)
 

VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,395
6,529
South Korea
Ironmen select Jack Brannen, the center/rover for the best team in hockey in 1899 and 1900, one of four stars described as a forward tandem. He was 5th and 10th in league scoring those two years, scoring goals in three different stanley cup challenge series. He is one of the fastest players of his era, certainly at that time. The reason why Brannen was a center/rover was he alternated positions with Trihey. In 1899 Brannen was tied with linemate Farrell for 5th in CAHL scoring with 8 goals, Trihey leading the league with 19. In 1900 CAHL Brannen was top-10 in league scoring with 6 goals, behind league leader and linemate Trihey (17) and linemate Farrell (9). Brannen scored a goal against Winnipeg in a close 3-2 Stanley Cup challenge defense of their cup on February 14, 1900, and he scored three goals in two games against Halifax in another Stanley Cup challenge defense in March. The following season (Jan 29th 1901) Brannen scored a goal in a close 4-3 loss to Winnipeg in a Stanley Cup challenge re-match.

1900MonSham.jpg


On March 14, 1899, and again on March 7, 1900, three Loyola pioneers starred with the Montreal Shamrocks as the team won the Stanley Cup in two consecutive years.

In 1893-4 Harry Trihey (Captain), Arthur Farrell and Jack Brannen were a force on the hockey team at Collège Ste-Marie, out of which came Loyola College, one of the founding institutions of Concordia University.

The Shamrocks hockey team grew out of the Shamrocks Lacrosse team, world champions at the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893. It was an era of religious prejudice and Catholics did not play on the wasp-dominated teams of the Amateur Hockey Association (AHA). The Shamrocks hockey team was started with support from pastor John Quinlivan of St. Patrick’s Church (now basilica). The Shamrocks joined the AHA in 1895 and the newly-formed Canadian Amateur Hockey League in 1898.

The Shamrocks won the Stanley Cup on March 1,1899 by defeating the Montreal Victorias 1-0 before 8,000 people in the new Montreal arena at the corner of Wood and Ste-Catherine streets. On March 14 they defended the cup 6-2 in a challenge from Queen’s University.

The Shamrocks won the Cup again in 1900 when they defeated the Winnipeg Victorias on February 16, and successfully defended the title against Halifax on March 7, 1900.

As hockey moved into the 20th century, the coveted Stanley Cup occupied a prominent place in the Montreal Shamrocks’ clubhouse.

Jack Brannen, known as the fastest skater of his day, went on to fight in World War I and became a physician. Team captain Harry Trihey was the principal organizer of the 55th regiment of the Irish Rangers, and later became a prominent Montreal lawyer and businessman. Arthur Farrell died a young man. Besides the power line of forwards Trihey, Brannen and Farrell, the team included... Fred Scanlan
http://archives3.concordia.ca/timeline/histories/shamrocks.html

One of the great forward lines around the turn of the century was comprised of three players who were to be elected into the Hockey Hall of Fame -- Harry Trihey, Arthur Farrell, and Frederick Scanlan. This unit played for the Montreal Shamrocks. Scanlan joined the club in 1897-98 and quickly became part of the forward foursome, which also included Jack Brannen at rover.
http://www.legendsofhockey.net/Lege...dsMember.jsp?mem=p196510&page=bio&list=ByName

The fastest skater in hockey, Brannen was the world champion speed skater in the 220 yard distance in 1900.
http://books.google.ca/books?id=rXl...=en#v=onepage&q=Jack Brannen hockey&f=false

In February 1900, the Montreal Shamrocks won a close three-game Stanley Cup challenge series against Bain's Winnipeg Victorias, Brannen scoring a key goal in the one-goal deciding third game (he scored goals in four different Stanley Cup games over three different challenge series). :teach:He also had no less than seven noteworthy defensive references in the newspaper coverage of the February 1900 Stanley Cup series, using his great speed in a checking capacity, as the quotes from the Star newspaper reports of the following days show:

Stanley Cup Match.
Monday Night’s Game a Curtain Raiser to the Others:
The series for the Stanley Cup championship which will open on Monday evening in the Arena rink between the Shamrock and Victorias of Winnipeg will be without doubt the greatest contests which have taken place since the introduction of the national winter game. When it is considered that the visitors are coming hundreds of miles to try and capture a trophy that carries with it the title of the hockey championship of the world, an idea may be obtained of the importance of the games the result of which will be watched with the keenest interest in every city and town in Canada, from the Atlantic to the Pacific. No matches in the athletic world have ever engaged such general attention. At Winnipeg the Victorias were given a send off on their trip eastwards that was fit for a King. Every leading city in Canada within a day’s travel of Montreal will have its representation at the rink side, while the citizens of Montreal of every class and sex, the hot enthusiasts, and the phlegmatic occasional spectators who only witness such events on rare occasions, all will be there to see the great contest.

Some people, and they represent a goodly number of pretty level headed sports, say that the Shamrocks will lose the cup this time. When asked for an explanation in support of such a peculiar opinion and one at variance of all past experience when it is considered that the men that the prophets of evil select for defeat have won every game they have played this year, they shrug their shoulders and say, time will tell. Perhaps it may be that these young men are in possession of some information not vouchsafed to the Shamrock management who are quite satisfied about the capabilities of their boys. Be that as it may the Shamrocks goal, point, cover point, Captain Trihey and his three lieutenants, never faced a foe that will be more worthy of their steel and hickory than the one which is now speeding eastwards with big physique and stout hearts. Yes - the Shamrocks have need for caution on Monday night, and Wednesday night too. They must play as a one man machine. There must be no monkeying on the part of any man on the defence end in order to gratify a desire to take a run and a little frolic down the ice leaving his citadel at the mercy of a lively and astute forward man of the opposing side. There must be none of the greedy man style manifested by the forwards when an opening occurs, because such a policy or style of play can only have one result and that is disaster for the side of the man who adopts it.

WINNIPEG TEAM WON
The First Match in the Series for the Stanley Cup is Theirs by a Majority of One Game.

The Winnipeg team won.
They deserved their victory, but if it had come the Shamrock way, the Shamrocks would have deserved it equally.
It was the greatest hockey match that has ever been played in Montreal. The greatest, because both teams under the circumstances were evenly matched; because both teams put forth their best efforts, and because both teams played fair, honest, unobjectionable hockey.
The merits of the play on both sides were almost equal. The odd game might have gone to either team. Both suffered from the disadvantage of the condition in which the change of weather and the additional heat produced by the great crowd had put the ice. That the pace was as fast as the players made it, was little short of marvelous. In the second half they simply plowed through it, and though the Winnipeggers were heavier, and probably went deeper, their very make-up enabled them to stand the fatigue better than the lighter Shamrocks.
If the Shamrocks made any serious mistake, it probably was in being too careful at the beginning. From their after play, it was proven that the Winnipeg team was not by any means at its best then, and instead of taking advantage of this the Shamrocks kept on the defensive and allowed the puck for a great length of time to remain near the Shamrock goal, where the Winnipeggers managed to keep it, without scoring, however. On the whole, the beginning of the match was slow, and though the Shamrocks occasionally tried one of their lightning rushes there were times when things appeared decidedly dull. The western men, no doubt feeling their way, appeared to be unable to shoot, at least not in the way in which the Shamrocks are accustomed to do it, with a rush and without stopping, as it were, to pick up the puck. That impression was dispelled shortly afterwards, however. They picked up their confidence gradually, and did not leave the slightest doubt existing about the superiority of their present team over that of last year. The work of both teams after they were well started was magnificent, and the encouragement of the crowd helped to keep them up to it. It was almost impossible to distinguish, as far as volume and heartiness went, between the cheers that were given for the Shamrocks and the visitors, and when the final gong sounded, and the few men who accompanied the Winnipeg team from home rushed on the ice and put Bain on their shoulders, hundreds of the male spectators joined them, and carried him in procession to the dressing room. The scene towards the end of the match was naturally the most exciting.
The score stood four to three in favour of the Winnipeg team, and there was just a bare chance, that it might be tied, before the bell rang for the finish. The Shamrocks made desperate efforts to score the necessary goal. Rush followed rush, and onslaught came upon the heels of onslaught but when just two minutes before the end Tansey was ruled off for making Bain turn the prettiest somersault, that any trick skater could show, a sort of general feeling seemed to suddenly pervade the crowd that it was all up with the home team.
The referee gave the utmost satisfaction, and did about as much actual work as any of the team. He had to move his legs very fast to follow the game, and keep his eyes wide open, to watch the movements of the players. For a wonder, he blew his whistle almost sharp on time, and for another wonder the two teams were there to respond to it. The visitors came in through the South entrance, and the Shamrocks broke through the Eastern breach of the bulwarks of the rink. Many of the Winnipeg men wore bits of Shamrock ribbon on their breasts.

SHAMROCKS EVENED UP THE SCORE
BRILLIANT AND DASHING PLAY DEFEATED THE ALMOST INVINCIBLE WINNIPEGS.

The Shamrocks won!
That was the first thought, the first exclamation after the gong announced the finish of last night’s match, and swift as lightning, thought and speech combined, in the expression: “This means another match.â€
Strange as it may seem the last idea was the predominant one as the rink emptied itself. For the people who sympathized with the Shamrocks were glad because another match gave the splendid team they favoured another chance. The people who sympathized with the wonderful men that composed the Winnipeg team, while regretting last night’s defeat, were glad because they are certain that their team will win out in the end, and the people who favoured neither team, and came to see the finest hockey, that was ever played in the universe, were glad because they would be enabled to see another such struggle as has never been seen before, and as may never be seen again after this series is finished.
“Another match! Another match!†was the cry, and the ladies lost no time in telling their escorts, how not to neglect the purchase of tickets early in the morning, and the poor escorts racked their brains, to find means of leaving their business long enough to obtain these tickets, for there is bound to be such a rush today, as will even surpass that for the Irving performances at the Academy.
The Shamrocks won, and they won on their merits. No one, be he friend or foe of the winning team denied that. They played the best hockey, and though the Winnipeg men put up a game, such as has never been played by a losing team, they lost because they played not as well particularly in the second half. Their team play was inferior to that of their opponents, and their opponents were faster, but the Winnipeggers’ endurance seemed greater, and if the match could have been prolonged they might have changed the score. The Shamrocks used up every bit of energy, every atom of intelligence, every honourable policy at their command. They gauged the time at their disposal to a nicety and won. That is the secret of their victory. They moved, and turned and twisted at the word of command, so seldom heard by the spectators.
They skated five, sometimes six at a time, to the attack, and when one of the fast Winnipeg men made one of those rushes which surpassed everything that is known, they, like a flash, were at the other end of the rink again and presented a solid front to the enemy. In the second half they were equally strong in attack or defence, and their passing was faultless.
In the first half the Winnipeg work was remarkable. They were recklessly brave and brilliantly wise. In the second half they were brilliantly cautious, if such a term can be applied to the very fastest hockey that was ever played by any team that has opposed the holders of the Stanley Cup.
Last Monday night there was a splendid match. The finest witnessed in every respect, in Montreal. No one thought it could have been surpassed. Last night, with a hard, glassy sheet of ice, it was better. As good, but no better, can be seen in the future. Men cannot skate faster, play fairer or shoot straighter than these two wonderful teams did last night. The eye was hardly quick enough to follow their evolutions. The white sparks which the skates struck from the frozen surface, glittering and glowing in the electric light, almost dazzled the sight; the mixture of red and white bodies gyrating and twisting and flashing past one another in endless, restless, riotous tangle, confused; and the poor, little, persecuted puck chased hither and thither, now here, now there, now high, now low, sought rest a dozen times in the lap of some fair lady spectator. The tireless, quick-eyed, nimble-footed, fullwinded referee, in the dark jersey, unconsciously seemed to bring order out of seeming chaos, and had to jump and run to evade the apparently revengeful rubber, which seemingly blamed him for the unmerciful buffeting it received, singled him out many times as its particular prey. As to noise, there was so much of it, that half the time there seemed to be none. The ear became accustomed to the continuous howls; men and women shouted without knowing it, and only when Barney Dunphy, the Shamrock trainer, let out one of his prolonged roars, now resembling that of a wounded desert lion - when his men got the worst of it - and again like that of a cage full of captive tigers spying their dinner - when his boys won - did the crowd realize how hoarse they would be on the morrow. And such a good natured, such a fair, such a just crowd; showering such impartial approval, such honest tributes upon both teams alike. Yet it could not have been otherwise, for there was really nothing in the match to criticize and everything to commend. There were no fouls worth mentioning. Those that occurred were two cases of tripping which the referee saw, and for which he promptly ruled off two Winnipeg men, and a few other cases, perhaps on the part of other players, which he did not see.

Some of the Winnipeg supporters rubbed Gingras’ stick for luck. The same honours that were tendered to Bain on Monday were tendered to Trihey last evening, and when they carried him in a long procession off the ice, the curtain fell on a match that was a credit to the Shamrock team, a credit to the Winnipeg team, and, above all, a credit to Montreal.
“I never saw such work†said President “Jack†Armytage, “It was magnificent.â€
“The generalship exhibited by Harry Trihey was wonderful†said ex-president Code.
“You won fairly and squarely and deserved your victory†was Captain Bain’s opinion.
When players began to arrive at the rink and saw the splendid sheet of ice, there were sighs of relief and every man expressed pleasure at the sight. The ice was just right and it was possible to carry the puck along without any over exertion, such as was required on Monday night’s heavy slushy ice. This fast ice proved this. That the Shamrocks were just superior to their opponents under such conditions as existed last night. Their stick work was better and they were faster man for man. Jack Brannen proved his ability to catch Bain and more than once he foiled the big Winnipeg forward as he was about to shoot.
Both Campbell and Gingras played a strong, effective game, but they had not the same opportunities as on Monday night, and there were not the same wide openings for them to go through. Both Scanlan and Farrell played a far superior game, and Scanlan’s work was particularly good. He carried the puck out time after time, and went down the ice in great style, and had he been fortunate in his shooting there ought to have been some goals to his credit. Farrell did well, and when it is understood that he was suffering from a peculiar indisposition, the excellence of his work will be better appreciated. Jack Brannen’s speed was a great factor in the game, and his work was a vast improvement over his previous form. Harry Trihey showed cool generalship, and his work was in every way worthy of the leader of such a splendid team. The defence played a splendid game, and were hardly to be blamed for the scoring done against them. Wall’s lifts and rushes and Tansey’s stops and rushes were features. In the second half Tansey made more than one beautiful rush, and on one occasion almost tallied a score. McKenna’s work was just right. The work of the whole team could not be improved on, and they gave the greatest exhibition of unselfish team play ever seen before.
And the Victorias.
Well, they were in the position that the Shamrocks were in a few days previous. The pace was a killing one, and it looked as if the Victorias found it a bit harder than the Shamrocks, but they made a great struggle and in the last few minutes were battling in splendid style. The Winnipeg men were fortunate in the goals that they did score, but they were, at the same time unfortunate in some instances where a goal seemed likely, but was lost through failure to seize the opportunity presented. Their defence was good, and Johnstone played a particularly good game. Flett seemed to have fallen off a bit, but “Whitey†Merritt exhibited his usual skill.

The toss fell to the Shamrocks, and Capt. Trihey chose to defend the south goal. At 8.30 referee Hugh Baird blew his whistle and the great contest commenced. The Victorias assumed the aggressive in the initial stages. There was a rush. Bain fell at a critical moment and the attack was repulsed. Then Trihey took the puck to the Winnipeg end, but lost to Johnstone, who lifted back neatly. Frank Tansey was ready for it and the puck was sent out. Bain returned with the rubber, but Trihey crossed his path and got away with it. He fell and Johnstone sent it back. There was a smart exchange of lifts until Scanlan nailed the rubber and carried it to the Winnipeg poles by a magnificent run. A quick pass to Trihey and a shot followed. The puck was too high, however, and went off the ice, necessitating a face at the Vic poles. It was back again and a Shamrock offside caused another face. Bain kicked the puck out of dangerous position and carried it clear, but lost to Wall. Campbell secured the lift and had a shot after a good run. Tansey caught it and quickly cleared. A beautiful rush by Brannen, Trihey and Farrell brought the crowd up, but an offside saved what looked like a score. Bain had another chance, but Tansey spoiled it and Campbell being offside caused a face near the Shamrock poles. Gingras looked dangerous for a second; but was heavily checked by Scanlan, for which the latter received a warning. Farrell now had the puck and sailed down in good style, only to be tripped in front of the Vic poles. The Shamrock man was in a splendid position and this saved a likely score. Trihey had a chance, too, but Roxburgh landed on him in time and received a warning for tripping. Both teams were now doing excellent work. Both goals had been assailed in turn and it was difficult to choose between either. Bain saved his goal and got clear with a splendid run, but Wall took him off his feet with a good body check. Back came the Winnipeg captain, but this time Jack Brannen swept down on him and checked in time; Roxburgh made a flying dash at the Shamrock defence and landed in the net, while the puck flew down to the other end. Now Winnipeg faced the game and had the Shamrocks back in their own territory. Johnstone tried a rush, but Wall stopped him. There was a fierce scrimmage at the Shamrock poles. A timely check by Brannen sent the puck off the ice. Campbell sent in a fine shot, which was stopped, and then Bain received a warning for tripping Trihey. Gingras made a gallant attempt, but Farrell and Trihey caught him. Bain managed to get the puck and shot, but as Wall sent him in the air it was a bit wide. There was a flash of gray and green and Brannen shot out of the bunch at meteor like speed, a pass to Scanlan, a quick dodge, a well judged pass to Trihey, a smart shot and the Shamrocks had first blood. Time, 20 minutes.
On the instant the whole arena was one moving mass of humanity and the cheer that followed Trihey’s shot was a wonderful volume of sound.
There was a determined rush, and Winnipeg forced matters in the opening of the second game. McKenna stopped a corker from Campbell. Farrell and Trihey got away with the puck, but were brought up by Johnstone. The puck was sent off the ice at the Shamrock poles. Tansey stopped a hot one from the face and Scanlan carried the puck out by a beautiful run. He passed to Trihey, who shot, striking Flett. Bain shot out, but only got as far as Wall, but Roxburgh secured the puck on the return. However, the latter’s shot was caught by Brannen, who slid in front of the poles in time and stopped what seemed a likely score. Tansey caught a beautiful one from Campbell and there was a scrimmage in the poles. Wall took it out and went down, but was tripped when he got to Johnstone. The play now slackened for a time, the forwards taking a breathing spell. Bain had a shot, which McKenna stopped and lifted out. The puck landed in centre, where Johnstone was awaiting it. He lifted quickly and the puck bounded by the defence men and nestled in the net, evening the score in 8 minutes.
The ease of this performance was astonishing, but it caught the fancy of the crowd, and they cheered as justily as when the home team notched up their goal.
The Winnipeg boys let loose their enthusiasm, and had a gay time generally.
The start of the third game found the Shamrocks on the attack. Farrell went down and passed over to Scanlan, whose shot was stopped by Merritt. Roxburgh brought the rubber out of dangerous ground and sailed down to McKenna, who stopped a nice one. Tansey cleared out to centre. Here Johnstone caught it lifted on the jump and the puck bounded on to Wall and slid into the net, putting Winnipeg one to the good in one minute.
This looked ominous, but the Shamrocks pulled themselves together and forced the play until the end of the half. Scanlan sent in one splendid shot, which Merritt stopped. A rush by Wall ended in Roxburgh tripping him and a warning was issued to the Winnipeg man. Half time was reached with matters in this stage.
The second half started hammer and tongs, and the speed was terrific. Campbell got away, but Farrell caught him and brought the puck down. There was a fierce onslaught on the Winnipeg poles, and some magnificent defence work warded off the Shamrock attack. There was an off-side, which caused a face near the Victoria goals. Gingras tried to get out, but Scanlan swiped at the puck and sent it off the ice. After the face Roxburgh sent it off and another face followed. There was a lightning dash to the Shamrock end, but McKenna was on the alert and kept the puck out. Bain tried to hook one through, but Brannen landed on him and the puck was knocked off the ice. Scanlan took charge of the puck and went down. Gingras tripped him, and was immediately sent off. The play continued. Brannen went in behind and sent the puck out. Farrell had a try, which failed, but he managed to get it again and slid it to Brannen, who was in an excellent position and sent it in, making the score two all.
This performance was greeted with a wild outburst, and the Shamrock following let themselves out in great style.
It proved to be the turning point of the game, and from this out it looked Shamrock’s way.
Winnipeg appeared to be suffering from the speed of the game and although they were struggling hard, it took a few minutes in this game before they got down to real business. Scanlan carried the rubber into Victoria territory, but was tripped by Johnstone, which probably saved a score. The Shamrocks kept hammering away and the Victorias were forced to play on the defensive, Bain broke away, but Brannen caught him. Gingras was now on again and this brightened up the Vics play a bit. There was another dash by Bain, but Tansey caught him. Farrell got away and sent the puck over to Scanlan, who got down in smart style. Now the game was fast and exciting. Bain tripped Trihey and was sent off for two minutes. A rush by Roxburgh looked likely as he got by Wall, but Tansey caught him. Roxburgh made a spirited attempt, and sailed by Wall, only to fall a victim to Tansey. Bain was on again and made matters interesting for awhile. He made one dangerous charge, but Tansey secured the puck and batted it to one side. Here Scanlan secured it and broke clear of Gingras. He flew down the ice, went by Johnstone. A nice pass to Trihey followed, and a beautiful shot landed the deciding goal in the net.
Oh such a cheer.
Every one who had the least sympathy for the Shamrocks arose, and the cheer that came from those enthusiastic throats was a joyful one. There yet remained fourteen minutes to play, and the fourteen minutes included some grand hockey. The Winnipeg men worked gallantly to score, but the Shamrock defence was on its mettle and Wall, Tansey and McKenna did remarkable work. Scanlan, Brannen, Trihey and Farrell kept hammering away at the Winnipeg poles in turn. But the Victorias were out for glory, too, and kept the Shamrock attacks off in great style. Once Roxburgh got away and made a splendid run to the Shamrock end. His shot was high and the puck went off the ice. There was a discussion as to where the puck should be faced, at the side or in front. It was finally forced in front, but the Shamrocks worked it away and Tansey made a spectacular rush that brought a cheer. Shamrocks took things easy sending out one or two men at a time and the gong crashed out with the puck in the centre of the ice.
And here the second chapter of the contest closed. Even the Gods are good and gentle.

THE SHAMROCKS RETAIN THE CUP
Winnipegs Satisfied That Their Opponents Won It Fairly and Squarely.
The Shamrocks retain the Stanley Cup.
The Winnipeg team, after the hardest battle since its first senior team was gotten together, lost it by one goal; a thing not unprecedented in the history of its hockey victories and defeats, for it seems fatality with the Winnipeggers to lose or win with one goal.
They deserved a better fate. They came for the second time to try and bring the cup home; they played the game in a manner which compelled the best team in this part of Canada to put forth all its strength to defeat them, and they played it in a manner that challenged the admiration of everyone who saw them.
But the Shamrocks were better, and the Shamrocks won the third and deciding game.
They, too, played the hardest game that they have ever played in their life, and they, too, deserve unbounded credit for the wonderful way in which they played it.
For that matter, both teams played throughout the series of three games as no other two senior teams have ever played before. In the first place, every one of the 3 matches was clean as clean could be, and in the next place they were the fastest exhibitions of hockey that any one, no matter where, has seen. Monday’s match, considering the heavy ice, was faster than people have been accustomed to. Tuesday’s match was faster than most people would ever have thought of; but the last eleven minutes’ play of last night’s contest beat them all. In fact, to those who watched that last eleven minutes’ play, the remainder of the match was well lost. Not because that period was more particularly brilliant than the remainder of the match, but because it was the crucial time in which the destiny of the cup was to be decided, when each team had four goals to its credit. There was a wait just previous to that, on account of a broken skate, and it was evident to everyone that the team which scored the first goal, after the play had started again, would virtually win the series. When play did start, the excitement became so intense that men even forgot to shout, but swore under their breath, while the players used their very last efforts, and there is little use denying that both teams were pretty well used up, for the pace had been fast and furious throughout the evening, to score that goal.
The fight had become in reality a desperate one. The pace was the pace that kills. Worn out as they were, and yet moving like lightning and acting with an intelligence, stimulated to a superlative sense of acuteness, by the terrible excitement under which they were labouring, there was little to choose between either team, or either’s manner of play. One minute passed, another minute passed, and a third, and nothing was accomplished on either side, beyond preventing opponents from scoring, but so many were the narrow escapes on either side, so quick and severe were the attacks made by both, so close the checking, so accurate and deliberate the team work, that the strain became almost too great to bear. Ten minutes of agony to the adherents of both teams passed in this manner, and then while Bain collided with a Shamrock man and fell prone on the ice, hurt in the head, the puck flew through the Winnipeg goal. The goal was not allowed, because the referee maintained that it took place after Bain had been hurt. It took Bain quite awhile to recover, and incidentally gave the crowd an opportunity to get back its breath, which for the last two or three minutes had been coming in short gasps.
There was then only one more minute to play, and more than ever it became a certainty that the scoring of the next goal would decide the fate of the cup. The puck was faced fairly near the Winnipeg goal, and in ten seconds Trihey had scored what was the deciding game. Almost immediately after that he broke his skate, and there had to be another wait with only twenty seconds left. When the skate was changed, there were a few turns on the ice, and all was over. No one expected that Winnipeg would manage to score another goal, but such is the feeling for a brave antagonist, that while a sigh of relief went up, when it was finally known that the cup was safe, there was mingled with it a feeling of regret that the Winnipeg team had to leave empty handed, after making such a noble fight. The ovation which the Shamrocks got this time was something never to be forgotten. So enthusiastic was it, that the spectators for nearly a quarter of an hour, remained in their seats to witness it. They were hugged and kissed, and carried away, and thrown in the air, and were no doubt, proud as they must have felt, glad to reach their dressing room after all they had gone through that night. Whatever honour was done them they deserved. By their wonderful play they upheld Montreal’s honour in the hockey world, by their fair and gentlemanly treatment of their opponents, they won the friendship and admiration of all who have witnessed these three record matches. His Excellency the Governor General dropped in during the last ten minutes. He had been induced to drive over from the patriotic entertainment, for a little while, and though His Excellency no doubt has witnessed all sorts and conditions of sport, it was easy to see that those ten minutes impressed him greatly.
“When is the next game?†he asked, and it was noticeable that he was disappointed when he was informed that such games are indeed few and far between.
And the games are over.
Games won by skill, fairly and squarely on the merits won by a great team from another great team. Won after a series of matches that is without parallel in the annals of the sport, and won after a series of matches that have never been equaled for the sportsmanlike spirit in which they were played. Games where the honour of the victors is not greater than that of the vanquished, and where all share alike in the glory that surrounds such great contest.
Think of it, three matches and there is but one goal between the two teams and each match won by one goal. That is a record to look on with pride, and the record that will go down through the course of time and mark an epoch in sport.
How was the victory won?
Let a gentleman from Winnipeg answer that question. “The Shamrocks have the greatest hockey team that ever went on the ice. Their work at every point is perfect and their team play is, without exception, the greatest that has ever been seen. The manner in which their players have been schooled has been a revelation to us, and we go home feeling proud to have been defeated by such opponents.â€
There you are.
Their team is perfect. No point is left unguarded, and no advantage is permitted to remain unused. It may have often appeared to people on the side that the team is letting up, that some player is off colour, that the forwards are blocking the defence, or some other such thing is taking place, where they are mistaken. There is a sudden dash of a forward down, probably he is alone, and all attention is centred on him. There may be a scrimmage in front of the opponent’s goal and you are surprised to find a player where he was least expected and there is a shot from an unexpected quarter. An opponent gets through and finds a clear road to the Shamrock poles, and when he gets up there he finds, not only the three defence men that he knew were there, but the four forwards whom he thought were left yards in the rear.
When an opposing combination works the puck to the Shamrock poles it has not a defence alone to contend with, it has a complete team, and it is this style of game, carried on in a methodical manner, and at all times, that has won for the Shamrocks their championship, and now has been the means of successfully defending their great trophy.
That Victoria team is a splendid one. They have, with one exception, of course, the finest lot of players that ever faced a referee, and nothing but the game the Shamrocks play could ever have defeated them. They are strong, inclined to be rough, perhaps, but in a fair manner, and being big heavy men, are entitled to make use of any advantage they possess in this way. Not that they have done so, except in a legitimate manner. But hockey is a game where strength should have its place and the men who have battled in these matches are not the men to bother about a good fair check.
That defence of the Victorias is a fine one, and only such great stick handlers and such splendid shots as the Shamrocks could work their way to victory through them. Johnstone and Flett are a splendid pair to have in front of a goal, and they stood off the Shamrock attacks as no other team has done.
There were two features in last night’s matches that appealed to the audience. Your true hockey expert on the side likes to pick out some little incident, or great one for that matter, and seizes upon it as a groundwork for his opinions. In last night’s match there were two incidents that to the spectators were the telling points in the game - Arthur Farrell’s run and Harry Trihey’s shot that scored the last goal and won the match. One was equally as important as the other and each were necessary to the victory; both were magnificent and both caused a howl that was remarkable.

HOW THE CUP WAS SAVED.
At 8.27 all was ready and the game commenced.
Bain broke away and the puck went over to Gingras and the latter started his run, but Brannen jumped to the side and bore the rubber away. Gingras recovered, but was checked by Scanlan. However, the puck slid up. Wall lifted clear and Johnstone returned. There was a warm attack on the Shamrock poles. The puck was lifted away by Tansey and Gingras was offside on Johnstone’s return. The pass back gave Wall a chance and he lifted to the Victoria goal. Flett saved and batted it aside to save a score from Jack Brannen’s rush. Trihey’s check and Campbell’s run sent the puck into the side, near the peg poles. From the face the puck traveled over to Gingras and he went up and had a try at the Shamrock poles. Tansey stopped and Brannen got away like a flash with Bain’s return. Over it went to Farrell, who got down the ice and passed to Scanlan, who shot. The shot was stopped and Johnstone cross-checked Farrell, when the latter attempted to close in on Merritt. The puck was carried to the other end and Roxy had a shot. Brannen got away with the puck. Back it came with Bain in charge and a pass gave Campbell a chance, which Tansey spoiled. The Shamrock point carried the puck out, and losing it, got back in time to stop a shot from Bain. He could not clear, however, and McKenna was called upon to take care of one from Gingras, which he did. Then Tansey took one out of a nasty looking corner and got the rubber away. Scanlan got a chance and broke through to the Winnipeg end and lammed in a shot that made Whitey Merritt stand up. There was a great rush to the Shamrock stronghold and Tansey saved in great style. There was some hot work here for a few moments, and these moments were anxious ones for Shamrock hearts until Fred Scanlan got the puck and carried it out. Between Scanlan and Farrell the puck was brought into Victoria territory and Scanlan had a shot which Flett took in charge. There was an exchange of lifts between Wall and Johnstone and one puck struck McKenna and bounced off the ice. Bain tried to get in from the face, but Tansey spoiled his shot and Trihey carried the puck and had a wide shot. Campbell carried the rubber back with a splendid run and shot. McKenna stopped and Bain got another in from the rebound. McKenna stopped this, too, and Wall took the puck away from Roxy. He went down the ice. Three men jumped at him, but he bore the puck down by main strength, and it slid over to the side. Trihey had it and a second later shot it into the net, taking the first goal for the Shamrocks.
The second goal came in the way of a surprise to the Shamrocks. There was a rush by Bain and the puck was hovering around the Shamrock poles. Then Gingras had a chance and a neat side shot scored for the Victorias. This was short and sweet, and the puck was in Shamrock territory all the time.
Brannen did the trick at the face and the puck went over to Farrell, who with Trihey’s assistance got right in on the goal. Flett blocked the shot and cleared. Bain attempted to get in on McKenna, but Brannen caught him in time, and then Tansey stopped a dangerous rush by the Victoria forwards. There was a pretty run by Farrell, but an offside pass in front of the Winnipeg poles spoiled their chance. There was some end to end work and much offside play, which was promptly stopped. There was considerable play in Winnipeg half, but there was no really likely looking shot, save one which Flett attended to. There was a clear and the puck landed in Shamrock half. Bain took an offside pass and went in. When he shot Umpire Christmas put up his hand. The players did not appear to notice this, and kept on playing, Bain had his eye with him and succeeded in getting the game stopped. Then the matter was explained and the Winnipeggers were given credit for a goal. This was a damper for the Shamrocks, and the Winnipeg contingent let themselves loose in great style.
Scanlan’s rush was the first feature of the fourth game. An offside in front of the poles saved the Victorias. The puck was sent out, but Trihey and Farrell carried it down. Farrell’s pass to Trihey was just at the right spot, and the shot tallied, making the score two all. It appeared that this was a bit offside, but nobody appeared to bother and so the goal counted, but this just evened matters up.
The fifth game was remarkable for a brilliant dash by Farrell. There was a dash at the Shamrock poles. McKenna stopped a shot and the puck fell beside the post. Farrell took it. He twisted through the defence, dodged Bain, and sent off for the other end. By the time he reached centre he was traveling at a great rate. A swoop on one side and now Johnstone was passed, a glide on the other and Flett was behind, one straight path led to the goal. Farrell took it and before Merritt rightly understood the situation the puck landed just in the centre of the net and the Shamrocks were in the lead. This run of Farrell’s was just the counterpart of his famous dash last winter, which won the Montreal match, and was the prettiest bit of work done in the game to that time. It brought every man to his feet, and the applause that greeted Farrell’s performance was deafening.
The half ended without any further scoring though it was affirmed by the Shamrocks that Tansey landed the puck in the net after a brilliant dash, and there were many people who were ready to corroborate this, but it was not official, and so the goal does not go on record. Scanlan looked likely at one time, but a trip stopped his progress when he landed in front. Then he had another and met Johnstone’s body squarely with the result that he was obliged to go off for a few minutes to recuperate. Trihey missed a splendid pass in front just before the call of time.
As Gingras passed the telegraph desk he was called and a handsome bouquet of flowers was handed to him. He smilingly received them and went off the ice with the cheers of the crowd.
The Victorias opened the attack in the early stages of the second half, and Gingras sent in a hot one. Farrell carried the puck out and passed to Trihey. The latter shot wide, and Gingras carried the puck away and a rush for the Shamrock poles followed. An offside spoiled the play and Farrell followed with another. Trihey made a good dash. He was belaboured by Johnstone, for which the latter was warned. There followed a series of lifts, and the game slackened, while the forwards got a little steam. Rushes by both forward lines places both goals in jeopardy in turn. Trihey and Flett came together and both were sent off. Then Scanlan got his chance and sent a beautiful shot in scoring.
This placed the Shamrocks two to the good and matters looked easy for them. But the crowd knew nothing of the anxious moments that were to follow.
The Shamrocks kept hammering away at the Victoria goal. Trihey and Farrell lined two beauties in, but both were taken care of by Merritt. Gingras had a chance and got away to the other end and before anybody realized it he had scored on a neat side shot. This put the Victorias within hailing distance and they brightened up accordingly.
There were fifteen minutes to play and almost anything was possible.
Early in the eighth game Brannen was sent off for a fault which looked more like Gingras as the latter was holding the Shamrock man’s stick. Then Gingras got his chance and dodged in on the Shamrock defence and scored.
Consternation reigned in the Shamrock, and the little band of Winnipeg men together with their Montreal friends frantically cheered and cheered again for their favourites.
Brannen was still off and the ninth game commenced without him. Farrell got in a fine run and he and Johnstone met in the corner, Farrell rolled to his feet and the Winnipeg man followed suit. Both were promptly sent off, each asking the other what he had done. This came with five Shamrock men and six Victorias went on for awhile until Brannen jumped on and evened matters and the other pair were soon on again. Flett’s skate was loose and this caused a delay. Play being resumed Campbell went in and made a nice shot, which was stopped. There was a run by Farrell and the Winnipeg goal was in danger for a moment. Brannen had a chance, but Bain spoiled him and an offside followed. Scanlan carried the rubber in front, but Johnstone bore it away. Now the Shamrock poles were threatened, but McKenna was equal to the occasion and the scene of operations was changed by Wall’s run. Back came the puck and Campbell looked dangerous for a moment, but Farrell checked him in time. The teams were tiring rapidly and some of the men looked as if they were gone. Scanlan had a beautiful chance, but Johnstone took him off his feet and saved that. Trihey a chance, but the puck struck Flett and that was off. Then the puck went to the other end and there was a hot time until Wall carried it out. Winnipeg was hard pressed, and it looked as if they were gone. Farrell had the puck on the side and was flying in at a great rate. Bain on the other side of the ice rolled down, just as Farrell shot and the whistle just sounded before the puck landed in the net. The goal was not allowed and Bain was carried off the ice, claiming a sprained ankle. He returned and the game went on. There was just one minute to play and when this was known the excitement was intense. The face took place about twenty feet to one side of the Winnipeg poles. Brannen snapped the puck back landing it at Trihey’s stick, a quick twist and it was safely caged in the net and the Shamrocks had broken the tie just ten seconds after the sound of the whistle.
Fifty second remained to play and when thirty of them had expired Trihey’s skate broke and the game was stopped. Trihey went in for another one. Then he came out again and the puck was faced near the Shamrock poles. Brannen batted the puck aside and Trihey carried it away. Slowly the seconds passed. Finally the gong rang out and the match was over. Like an avalanche the crowd bore out on the ice cheering like mad. The teams attempting to cheer each other were swept away on the human torrent and were carried off the ice and were swallowed up in the dark entrances. The cheers of the multitude echoed and re-echoed, the tension was relieved and the Stanley Cup was safe.
Derek Thurber:
http://www.facebook.com/topic.php?uid=6252584548&topic=3720

In a January 3rd 1900 game against the Montreal AAA (Winged Wheelers), the Shamrocks won 6-1 and the Montreal Gazette describes: "Brannen's play induced roughness" "The Shamrocks are rapidly rounding to form. Trihey and Farrell were the luminous stars last night. Brannen's speed is all there, and is well backed up by Scanlan."
http://news.google.com/newspapers?n...abctAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rH4FAAAAIBAJ&pg=6420,210890

Brannen is interestingly part of a pretty impressive bunch of multiple McGill grad Stanley Cup champions:

McGill (multiple) Stanley Cup champions

Lester Patrick (six times)
Billy Gilmour (five times)
Art Ross (five times)
Graham Drinkwater (three times)
Fred Scanlan (three times)
Jack P. Brannen (twice)
Shirley Davidson (twice)
Harry J. Trihey (twice)
Arthur F. Farrell (twice)
http://www.redmenhockey.com/press/award_winners.shtml

athletics.concordia said:
In 1893-94 Harry Trihey, Arthur Farrell and Jack Brannen were a force on the seven-man hockey team at CollÂge Ste-Marie, out of which came Loyola College, one of the founding institutions of Concordia University. The winter of 1893 marked the first appearance of a hockey team from the Jesuit institution that played outside the college grounds. The insightful Father Bernard Devlin recognized the extraordinary talent of the young men at the college and arranged games with other schools. But surely he had no idea his actions would set off events that would heavily impact the game of hockey.
http://athletics.concordia.ca/halloffame/inductee.php?id=127
 

tony d

New poll series coming from me on June 3
Jun 23, 2007
76,601
4,558
Behind A Tree
The Panthers finish up the 2013 AA draft with the selection of

Bill Derlago, Centre

000305164.jpg


Legends Of Hockey:

In Toronto, Derlago finally got the stable setting he needed to establish his game as a smooth-skating playmaker who had the deft passing touch that could successfully feed Rick Vaive's cannon-like shot. The two worked together to raise each other's game, especially Vaive's, to sniper status.

Mike Corrigan, Left Winger

corrigan.jpg


Legends Of Hockey:

In 1967-68, Corrigan joined the Los Angeles Kings for five games while playing the bulk of the season in the AHL with the Springfield Kings. He had a very productive season, scoring 24 goals and 54 points in 58 games but he failed to earn a roster spot with Los Angeles the next season. However, Corrigan was inserted into the Kings lineup for 36 games in 1969-70 where he scored ten points.

The Vancouver Canucks acquired Corrigan's services for 1970-71, and in 76 games he notched 21 goals and 49 assists. Midway through the next season, he was sent back to Los Angeles for his second go-round with the Kings where he played a regular role for the club. Corrigan's best individual season came in 1972-73 when he scored 37 goals and 67 points with 146 minutes in penalties, all of which were NHL career highs.

Todd Gill, Defenseman

9192opc-toddgill.jpg


Wikipedia:

Gill had a very solid 1992–93, as he tied his career high with 11 goals and set a career high with 43 points in 69 games to lead the Leafs defense in scoring, and was fourth overall in team scoring, helping the team qualify for the playoffs.
 
Last edited:

jkrx

Registered User
Feb 4, 2010
4,337
21
Final picks then..

Max Kaminsky, C

Sports%20Wall%20of%20Fame%20-%20Max%20Kaminsky%20(from-NF%20Parks%20Recreation%2091823-506109).jpg


Alfred Kuchevsky, D

Alfred-Kuchevsky.jpg


Dave Lowry, LW

5078-82Bk.jpg
 

VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,395
6,529
South Korea
Ironmen select 6'2 223 lbs. Brendan Witt, one of the most prolific hitters in the game, he was consistently Top-10 in hits and even led the league with 322 hits in 2000-01. The rearguard had ten seasons of 20+ minutes of play, 890 NHL games over 14 NHL seasons with 1424 PIM.

witt-bloodied.jpg


At his best, Brendan Witt is everything a team could want out of a physical defensive defenseman.

Brendan_Witt_1.jpg


Witt has the ability to be a presence on the ice, the sort of intangible that is so poorly appreciated in salary arbitration or on the stat sheet. He is at his best when putting up triple-digit PIMs, playing a tough, in-your-face style of play. Witt's skating is average but perfectly sufficient for a defensive defenseman, and his point production is negligible. He dishes out crushing hits but does not take himself out of the play to do so, and his judgement in this regard improves yearly. When he is on his game, Witt will clear the crease assiduously. When not, he will stand aside and watch. The skillset is not the problem with Witt, but rather attitude and focus.

There are times when Witt seems to have a chip on his shoulder a mile wide, and others when he can carry the team. Personal difficulties have led to long stretches of indifferent play from a player whose effectiveness depends on his willingness to clear the crease and keep opposing players honest after the whistle.
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/bmarshall63/witt_profile.html
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad