overpass
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In 1958, Sport Magazine polled 70 sports writers and commentators from across the United States and Canada to choose an all-time, all-star NHL hockey team, providing a snapshot of the general opinion on the all-time greats.
G: Bill Durnan
D: Eddie Shore
D: Doug Harvey
C: Howie Morenz
W: Maurice Richard
W: Gordie Howe
Edit: I have a copy of the magazine now. Below are pics of the article.
Vote totals were not provided. Below are notes about the voting taken from the article.
Overall
- Selectors displayed remarkable agreement
- Six clear-cut selections
- No close battles anywhere
Howie Morenz, C
- runaway selection at C
Gordie Howe, W
- Voters were asked to name their top two wings, regardless of which side they played
- Howe won by a large margin over the third place choice, Ted Lindsay
Maurice Richard, W
- Almost a unanimous selection
- Clinching a place on the team was as automatic as these projects come
Eddie Shore, D
- drew more votes than any other defenseman
Doug Harvey, D
- No comment directly on Harvey, but the article says 19 defensemen received votes
Bill Durnan, G
- The pick of Durnan over half a dozen other great goalies probably was due largely to the fact that he was the only goal-tender in history to win the Vezina six times
Others receiving votes
-in the order they were listed in the article. The article doesn't specify if this is in descending order of votes, except that Lindsay was third among wingers, but it could be
- We know this is incomplete because it says Johnson, Kelly, and Clancy were a few of the 19 defensemen who received support
- Center: Milt Schmidt, Bill Cowley, Syl Apps, Jean Beliveau
- Wing: Ted Lindsay, Bill Cook, Busher Jackson, Aurel Joliat
- Defense: Ching Johnson, Red Kelly, King Clancy
- Goal: Frankie Brimsek, Terry Sawchuk, Chuck Gardiner, Turk Broda, Roy Worters, George Hainsworth
Selectors:
- 60 media members and 10 individuals affiliated with NHL teams
- 3 NHL coaches voted. Toe Blake, Tommy Ivan, and Billy Reay. And one active player, Red Sullivan.
- Voters came from all six NHL cities. New York was a little overrepresented, and Detroit and Chicago underrepresented. And the Montreal voters skewed anglophone, I only see three francophone names in Barrette, Meloche, and Saucier.
- Per the article, most voters hadn't seen the era of Morenz: "Though most of the men who voted were not around, by their own admission, when Howie Morenz played for the Canadiens, enough of them did see him (and the rest had only to examine his record) to place him at center on the all-time all-star team."
Here's a writeup (in French) on the team from Parlons Sports, Feb 8 1958
La Patrie, Feb 2, 1958, also references Sport's team.
It looks like the voters didn't go back to pre-consolidation hockey, except for players like Morenz, Cook, and Clancy who still played most of their careers after 1926. No mention of Nighbor, Taylor, Lalonde, or Cleghorn. Seguin wrote that this team of stars "will probably not satisfy the veterans, but even those who claim the best hockey was played 40 years ago must admit that this club would be difficult to beat in any era of hockey."
G: Bill Durnan
D: Eddie Shore
D: Doug Harvey
C: Howie Morenz
W: Maurice Richard
W: Gordie Howe
Edit: I have a copy of the magazine now. Below are pics of the article.
Vote totals were not provided. Below are notes about the voting taken from the article.
Overall
- Selectors displayed remarkable agreement
- Six clear-cut selections
- No close battles anywhere
Howie Morenz, C
- runaway selection at C
Gordie Howe, W
- Voters were asked to name their top two wings, regardless of which side they played
- Howe won by a large margin over the third place choice, Ted Lindsay
Maurice Richard, W
- Almost a unanimous selection
- Clinching a place on the team was as automatic as these projects come
Eddie Shore, D
- drew more votes than any other defenseman
Doug Harvey, D
- No comment directly on Harvey, but the article says 19 defensemen received votes
Bill Durnan, G
- The pick of Durnan over half a dozen other great goalies probably was due largely to the fact that he was the only goal-tender in history to win the Vezina six times
Others receiving votes
-in the order they were listed in the article. The article doesn't specify if this is in descending order of votes, except that Lindsay was third among wingers, but it could be
- We know this is incomplete because it says Johnson, Kelly, and Clancy were a few of the 19 defensemen who received support
- Center: Milt Schmidt, Bill Cowley, Syl Apps, Jean Beliveau
- Wing: Ted Lindsay, Bill Cook, Busher Jackson, Aurel Joliat
- Defense: Ching Johnson, Red Kelly, King Clancy
- Goal: Frankie Brimsek, Terry Sawchuk, Chuck Gardiner, Turk Broda, Roy Worters, George Hainsworth
Selectors:
- 60 media members and 10 individuals affiliated with NHL teams
- 3 NHL coaches voted. Toe Blake, Tommy Ivan, and Billy Reay. And one active player, Red Sullivan.
- Voters came from all six NHL cities. New York was a little overrepresented, and Detroit and Chicago underrepresented. And the Montreal voters skewed anglophone, I only see three francophone names in Barrette, Meloche, and Saucier.
- Per the article, most voters hadn't seen the era of Morenz: "Though most of the men who voted were not around, by their own admission, when Howie Morenz played for the Canadiens, enough of them did see him (and the rest had only to examine his record) to place him at center on the all-time all-star team."
Here's a writeup (in French) on the team from Parlons Sports, Feb 8 1958
La Patrie, Feb 2, 1958, also references Sport's team.
It looks like the voters didn't go back to pre-consolidation hockey, except for players like Morenz, Cook, and Clancy who still played most of their careers after 1926. No mention of Nighbor, Taylor, Lalonde, or Cleghorn. Seguin wrote that this team of stars "will probably not satisfy the veterans, but even those who claim the best hockey was played 40 years ago must admit that this club would be difficult to beat in any era of hockey."
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