EagleBelfour said:
To make the formatting better
Red Quote = my additions to bio (more to add after translations of french papers are finalized)
Didier Pitre
[/IMG]
Nickname: Cannonball, Old Folks, Pit, Bullet Shot
Height: 5'11''
Weight: 185 lbs
Position: Right Wing / Defenceman
Shoots: Right
Date of Birth: September 1st, 1883
Place of Birth: Valleyfield , Quebec, Canada OR Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada
Date of Death: July 29, 1934 (Age:50)
Stanley Cup Champion (1916)
Stanley Cup Finalist (1909, 1918, 1919)
IHL First All Star Team (1906, 1907)
NHA First All-Star Team (1917)
Art Ross (1906
*IHL*, 1915
*NHA*)
Maurice Richard Trophy (1906
*IHL*, 1915
*NHA*, 1916
*NHA*)
Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame (1963)
- #29 on the book 'Habs Heroes' list of Top-100 Best Montreal Canadiens players of All-Time
- Named the best shot of the 1910's by Ultimate Hockey
Didier Pitre was the early hockey's Bobby Hull. In 1914, chicken wire was installed in Victoria's arena to protect fans from his shot.
- Named the fastest player of the 1910's by Ultimate Hockey
Didier Pitre turned speed into a drawing-card feature. Today's practice of splitting up the ice before stopping is said to have been started by Pitre!
International Hockey League: [1904-1907]
[table="head;title"]Seasons|GP|G|A|PTS|PIM
3|58|77|11|88|63[/table]
No Data:
Assists: 1904-1906
Top-10 Scoring (1st, 5th)
Top-10 Goalscoring (1st, 9th)
Top-10 Assist (4th)
Top-10 Penalty minutes (9th)
Eastern Canada Amateur Hockey Association: [1907-1908]
[table="head;title"]Seasons|GP|G|A|PTS|PIM
1|10|3|1|4|15[/table]
National Hockey Association: [1909-1913; 1914-1917]
[table="head;title"]Seasons|GP|G|A|PTS|PIM
7|127|156|32|188|251[/table]
Top-10 Scoring (1st, 1st, 3rd, 5th, 5th, 9th)
Top-10 Goalscoring (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 6th, 6th)
Top-10 Assist (1st, 7th, 8th, 10th)
Top-10 Penalty minutes (3rd, 3rd)
Playoffs:
1916-1917
(Montreal Canadiens vs. Ottawa Senators)
1st in Scoring
T-1st in Goalscoring
T-1st in Assist
1st in Penalty Minute
Stanley Cup Dual:
1915-1916
(Montreal Canadiens vs. Portland Rosebuds)
T-2nd in Scoring
T-1st in Goals
T-3rd in Assists
5th in Penalty Minutes
1916-1917
(Montreal Canadiens vs. Seattle Matropolitans)
T-3rd in Scoring
3rd in Goalscoring
Pacific Coast Hockey Association: [1913-1914]
(*Didier Pitre played as a rover in 1913-14*)
[table="head;title"]Seasons|GP|G|A|PTS|PIM
1|16|14|2|16|12[/table]
Top-10 Scoring (11th)
Top-10 Goalscoring (9th)
National Hockey League: [1917-1923]
(*Didier Pitre played as a defenceman from 1921 up until his retirement in 1923*)
[table="head;title"]Seasons|GP|G|A|PTS|PIM
7|128|64|33|97|87[/table]
Top-10 Scoring (5th, 7th, 7th)
Top-10 Goalscoring (5th, 6th, 10th)
Top-10 Assist (3rd, 9th)
(*Didier Pitre played as a defenceman during the 1919 and 1923 Playoffs & Stanley Cup Dual*)
Top-5 Playoff Scoring (T-4th)
Top-5 Playoff Assist (T-1st, T-3rd)
Top-5 Playoff Penalty minutes (3rd)
Stanley Cup Dual:
1918-1919
(Montreal Canadiens vs. Seattle Metropolitans)
T-4th in Scoring
T-1st in Assists
---
Seventieslord Studies:
Goalscoring:
[table="head;title=list"]Name|Top-2 |Top-5|Top-10|Top-15|Top-20
Didier Pitre|2|3|7|9|9[/table]
Playmaking:
[table="head;title=list"]Name| Top-2|Top-5|Top-10|Top-15|Top-20
Didier Pitre| 1|2|3|3|4[/table]
[table="head;title=list"]Year|League|Team|Position
1903-04|FAHL|Montreal Nationals|D
1904-05|IHL|Michigan Soo Indians|?
1905-06|IHL|Michigan Soo Indians|RW
1906-07|IHL|Michigan Soo Indians|RW
1907-08|ECAHA|Montreal Shamrocks|?
1908-09|FAHL|Renfrew Creamery Kings |D
1909-10|NHA|Montreal Canadiens|D
1910-11|NHA|Montreal Canadiens|D
1911-12|NHA|Montreal Canadiens|RW
1912-13|NHA|Montreal Canadiens|RW
1913-14|PCHA|Vancouver Millionaires|Rover
1914-15|NHA|Montreal Canadiens|RW
1915-16|NHA|Montreal Canadiens|RW
1916-17|NHA|Montreal Canadiens|RW
1917-18|NHL|Montreal Canadiens|RW
1918-19|NHL|Montreal Canadiens|RW/D
1919-20|NHL|Montreal Canadiens|RW
1920-21|NHL|Montreal Canadiens|RW
1921-22|NHL|Montreal Canadiens|D
1922-23|NHL|Montreal Canadiens|D[/table]
Professional Career:
Originally Posted by The Montreal Gazette - January 22, 1908
The Shamrock defence again proved itself a good one, Pitre, Laviolette and Nicholson all in turn doing fine work in keeping down the score, especially when the line in front of them began to weaken.
Originally Posted By The Montreal Gazette - December 3, 1908
Pitre, the clever cover-point of the Shamrock team of last season, one of the best defence men in the league, will leave for Edmonton today, and will be on of the seven to come East after the Stanley Cup the last week of this month....
The loss of Pitre throws out Shamrocks' plans for their defence and may cause further delay in signing up a team. Tim Slattery stated last night that as yet they had no signatures to contracts. He regretted the loss of Pitre, whom the Shamrocks expected to land finally. The Shamrocks regarded Pitre as without a peer as a defence player in the ECHA last year.
Quote:
Originally Posted by The Toronto World: November 23, 1915
The Pacific Coast hockey magnate announced last night that he was going after XXXXXXX and Didier Pitre, two of the biggest stars in the eastern hockey circles. Pitre played out here some two years ago, and became famous as "the Bullet", owning to the fact that his shots at goal had the speed and damaging effects commonly attributed to the shells of six inch guns.
Quote:
I think this should diminish the notion that Pitre was out of shape and overweight for several reasons. One, you have a legit account of somebody who was around Pitre for many years and really the notion that he was overweight and out of shape tend to be from his final few seasons when he was in his late 30's. This to me shows that from at least 1917 and prior, Pitre was a hell of an athlete. How could a man so out of shape and heavy be the fastest in the league, logically? Or possess such acclaim nationally in lacrosse?
The other notion that he was soft should be re-evaluated. I think people tend to mislabel him as "soft" or "gentle" because he wasn't knocking people out with sticks or leading the league in PIMs. Much like a previous pick of mine, Hod Stuart, he seemed to have no trouble throwing his body around, but in a much cleaner manner than what was accustomed in that period.
Originally Posted by The Montreal Daily Mail: March 31, 1917
You've got to hand it to this big hearted deep chested Frenchman, Didier Pitre! He stands out as one of the athletic marvels of a decade. Hockey and lacrosse admittedly are nearer the extremes in physical tests than any other game, yet Pitre has been prominent at both, not for two or three seasons, but for the past twelve years. His record will, no doubt, shine out as one of the finest ever created.
Pitre first came under the spotlight as a member of the old National hockey club at Montreal, with which he and the other Canadien veteran, Jack Laviolette, starred away back in 1904.
Possessing a remarkable constitution, Pitre generally rounds into shape in fast time. A great skater, Pitre appears able to travel with equal speed backwards or forwards. He also has a terrifying shot and a reach that enables him to play havoc with all sorts of combination work. According to goalkeeper Clint Benedict, Pitre's shot is the most dangerous of any of the NHA snipers uncover. Didier is a veteran of the game, but this winter he probably played the fastest hockey of his career. According to George Kennedy he trains as faithfully as any athlete in the East, cuts out smoking in the winter time and always gives his best.
"Pitre earns every cent he gets." Kennedy recently remarked. "He would play until he dropped of sheer exhaustion. I consider him one of the greatest athletes in the country."
At lacrosse Pitre has won equal fame. He has figured on the National attack for about twelve seasons and is regarded as the best outside home in the National Union.....there is a touch of spectacular in everything he does, Pitre is the idol of every French lacrosse enthusiast in the East.
Pitre may have his faults, one of which is a mad temper, but he always plays the game fairly. If he hits a man it is usually with his fist and from the front. He takes and gives punishment without a murmur and never offers excuses. "Didier will never earn any medals for gentlemanly hockey because his checking is naturally hard and he is so big that everything he does appears glaring, yet despite his rather exciting record there is something like-able about the dark haired Frenchman. He goes on the ice or the lacrosse field full of determination; he comes of just as determined to succeed the next time out. The Canadien giant seldom smiles in the thick of play. He carries a frown from start to finish, and may have gained the impression that Pitre must be surly and cranky. Not so, however, for in his tallor mades Pitre is just as amiable a chap as one would possibly want to meet. In fact he is invariably the life of the Canadien and National squads.
George Kennedy attributes Pitre's remarkable staying power and preservation to the fact that he keeps in shape all the year around by playing lacrosse and hockey. Except for a few weeks in the spring, he is constantly training. Pitre himself thinks that his lacrosse has helped his hockey and contends that every man should remain in sport as long as he possibly can.
Many say Pitre is about forty years of age; Didier himself says that he will soon be thirty-two. However, be he thirty, forty, or fifty, the fact remains that on the lacrosse field or on the ice area he is just as fast and as flashy as the youngest recruit in the game.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Quebec Telegraph: March 31, 1917
Fans who follow both hockey and baseball differ in regard to whether a puck can be shot faster than a baseball can be throw. In other words, is Walter Johnson's ball faster than a shot from the stick of Didier Pitre? asks the Vancouver Sun.
For the first time an authority on the subject has submitted an opinion. Harry Cheek, who used to catch for the Vancouver Beavers, and who saw Pitre shoot, made some effort to time the shots. He has also seen Walter Johnson pitch and while he has no figures on Walter Johnson's speed, and was unable to get anything like accurate figures on Pitre's bullet shooting he declares that as far as he can judge he would rather, any day stand up and catch a ball from Walter Johnson than take Harry Holmes' place in the net and catch a shot from the stick of Pitre.
He argues that Pitre's shot is the faster traveller, because while can see a ball pitched by Johnson, you can't see a shot from Pitre until it is right upon you.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ottawa Citizen: January 26, 1946
....The road was very rough, but at home or away the Blueshirts never took a backward step and now in looking back Frank Nighbor says:
..."I was only nineteen years of age. When we met Canadiens I was opposing the late Didier Pitre, who tipped the scales at 190 and he could fly on those steel runners."
"Pitre was not a dirty player, but he was very foxy..."
Quote:
Originally Posted by The Manitoba Ensign: April 12, 1952
Young Geoffrion is still no Lalonde, Morenz or Richard, but he has the kind of shot that sends the hockey fans out of the rink buzzing with excitement. Montreal sports writers are already comparing him with the immortal Didier Pitre whose now legendary feats include splitting pine boards on the fence behind the net with his cannon-ball shot.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave Stubbs The Montreal Gazette
Nearly a century ago, this was the label perfectly worn by Didier (Cannonball) Pitre, the first Canadien in franchise history to sign a playing contract.
Pitre starred in the club’s first game, a 7-6 overtime win over the Cobalt Silver Kings at Montreal’s natural-ice Jubilee Rink on Jan. 5, 1910.
With Jean Baptiste (Jack) Laviolette and Édouard (Newsy) Lalonde, he was one of the club’s original Flying Frenchmen, so nicknamed by sportswriters, a defenceman turned forward whose speed belied his bulk in fledgling seven-a-side pro hockey.
Pitre was Bernie Geoffrion decades before the Boomer – his heavy, loud shot, reflected in his nickname, was romantically said to move the end boards.
Together, Pitre and Laviolette won the Stanley Cup with the Canadiens in 1915-16, the team’s first of 24. Pitre had four goals in five playoff games, bagging a hat trick against the Pacific Coast league’s Portland Rosebuds, well earning his $238 Cup-winner’s share.
He scored 219 times in 255 games through 13 seasons with the Canadiens of the NHA and, from 1917, the NHL. That included a career-high 30 in just 20 games in 1914-15, nearly half his team’s total output, when shifted from defence to forward.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Eyes on the Prize: 1911-12 Newsy Goes West
When it came to facing the Canadiens, Didier Pitre was now the man to stop. Since being converted from a defenseman to playing the rover position, his devastating shot began to terrorize opposition goaltenders. Percy Lesueur of the Senators, fearfull of the rising shots, asked permission of the NHA to begin wearing a mask to protect himself. Wanderers goalie Riley Hern, a four time Cup champion in the early 1900's, quit from fear of being dinged by one of Pitre's blasts. It was a common sight at games, when Pitre wound up, to see fans jumping behind seats to protect themselves.
Quote:
That Championship Season
The Story of the 1917
Seattle Metropolitans
The Pacific Northwest Forum
Volume VII, Number 2, Pages 29-53
Summer-Fall, 1994
by Gary M. Bernklow
On St. Patrick's Day, 1917, the Canadiens drew first blood in the series, winning the opening game easily. Led by the great goaltending of Georges Vezina, the Montreal team "skimmed over the ice like feathers floating down an airshaft." The aging winger, Didier Pitre, scored four goals for Montreal, all on fifty-foot shots that whizzed past Seattle netminder Hap Holmes "so fast that Holmes could not see them."(48) At 40 years old, Pitre was one of the oldest players in either league. But if his age slowed him down, he didn't show it. In the NHA, he was recognized as having the hardest shot in the league. "Whenever the whirlwind forward for the Frenchmen hooked his stick on the puck, 'Happy' Holmes folded his arms, closed his eyes, and prayed."(49)
Quote:
Originally Posted by The Montreal Canadiens: 100 years of Glory
Vezina stopped sixty-four shots, but in the eyes of many the night belonged to Didier Pitre, the last of the original Canadiens. By now, Pitre was thirty-nine. He had played eighteen seasons of professional hockey and scored 240 goals. Under Dandurand, he was a substitute, seldom used and frequently berated for being overweight. But on this occasion, he played of his finest games. "Didier Pitre was sensational on defense," La Presse reported. "One expected him to be exhausted after a few minutes, but he was like a wall against the Ottawa attack." Afterward, he announced his retirement.
Quote:
Originally posted by: Montreal Canadiens: Thrilling Stories From Canada's Famous Hockey Franchise
By Jim Barber
The original Flying Frenchman, Lalonde was the biggest prize for the Canadiens, aquired by team assistant manager Jack Laviolette. The concept of the Flying Frenchman was truly realized with the acquistiion of another speedster, the graceful Didier Pitre. Pitre, like Lalonde, was fast and talented, both as a stickhandler and shooter.
Pitre was also tough. Former Ottawa Senators defenceman Cy Denneny remembers how hard it was to check Pitre. "No matter what i did," he told a sportswriter, "Didier would get away for a shot on goal." Coach Eddie Gerard suggested that Denneny slash Pitre in the legs, in order to get him angry and off his game. It didn't work; Pitre continued his dangerous and often scoring rushes. So, Denneny decided to use a little pyschological warfare instead. He began taunting Pitre, repeatedly calling him every name in the book every time he stepped onto the ice. Again, no luck. "A little later, we discovered our mistake," Denneny reported. "Didier didn't fathom a word of English!"
Quote:
Originally Posted by HockeyGods.com
Pitre spent a year playing with the Vancouver Hockey Club / Vancouver Millionaires. Pitre returned to Montreal the next year. In 1916, Pitre led the National Hockey Association in regular season assists and points. He scored 24 goals, 15 assists (assists in those days were one per goal and only if the official scorer thought it contributed to the goal being scored) for 39 points. He also helped lead the Canadiens to their first ever Stanley Cup. He led the playoffs in goals as well. In the 1919 Stanley Cup playoffs, which were never completed due to the influenza epidemic, he led the playoffs in points. By 1921, the Canadiens had so much depth at forward, and an opening on defence due to the death of future Hall of Famer Joe Hall in the influenza epidemic, so they decided to try Pitre as a defenceman; not as difficult a transition as one might think, because he had previously been a "Rover" during the days of "seven man" Hockey. He remained with Montreal through the formation of the NHL and into 1923.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Eyes On The Prize 1915-16: The first of many Stanleys
Newsy Lalonde, who had played only 7 games for the Canadiens due to a contract dispute the previous season, returned to the team full time, satisfied with his new deal. He would center a line featuring Jack Laviolette on the left side and Didier Pitre on the right. Pitre would total 39 points ( 24 goals,15 assists ), but officially the scoring championship was won by Lalonde with 28 goals, as assists did not yet count in the scoring race.
Legends of Hockey said:
Didier "Cannonball" Pitre was generally credited with having the hardest shot of his day and there were more than a few times when his goals were contested because they had gone right through the net. He was a big man, as far as hockey players go, but was never a rough player in an era marked by rugged play. He was also noted as one of the fastest skaters of his time and it has been said that he could skate backward as fast as he could skate forward.
Greatest Hockey Legends said:
French Canadiens have a long storied history of producing great hockey talent. The long list begins with Didier Pitre.
Pitre was nicknamed "Cannonball" because of his dynamic wrist shot. His perfected shot and superior skating made Pitre a hot commodity in hockey's early days when pioneers routinely joined teams for even just one game. That was just how it was done in early frontier hockey.
Pitre, the man reported to skate as fast backwards as he could forwards, was coming to Montreal. Pitre's classy play graced Montreal until 1923. He played 13 seasons with the Canadiens, with a single season in Vancouver with the Pacific Coast League. Pitre was a large man at over 200lbs, and he learned to use his size to his advantage, especially when shooting. When he put every pound of muscle into his shot, players tried to get out of the way. He once had a goal contested because the puck went right through the net. Despite his size advantage, however, he was never a noted physical player.
Trail of the Stanley Cup said:
There were many players over the years who were rated as possesing a hard and accurate shot. It is doubtful if any player was better qualified than Didier Pitre in this regard. The goalkeepers of his day had bruises to attest this and fans were impressed by the resounding thump of his shots that might hit the boards. In consequence, he earned the nickname 'Cannonball'. He drilled the puck hard and accurately with a long sweep of the arms and twist of the wrists. There was no golfing of slap shot technique in his day.
Laviolette was moved up from defence to play left wing and the two speed merchants centred by Lalonde brought the Canadiens their first championship and Stanley Cup in 1916. Pitre was a star in the Cup series with Portland. They did so well that most of them were holdouts the next year and Kennedy had quite a job signing Pitre, Lalonde and Laviolette.
Pitre was having trouble keeping his way down and the fans would tease him when he began to puff. [...] In the unfinished Cup series with Seattle, he had Lalonde were the stars. In the fifth game when Joe Hall was taken sick and had to retire, this pair moved back to defence and held off the Mets as the Canadiens went on to win in overtime.
He had two more years on a line with Lalonde and Berlinquette but his weight then got the better off him and he was relegated to the bench as a substitute. The veteran had now compiled well over 200 goals and he is second only to newsy Lalonde in the number scored in the uniform of Canadiens.
His final bow came in the 1923 playoffs against Ottawa. In the first game at Montreal, Ottawa established a two-goal lead and Sprague Cleghorn and Couture the regular Canadiens defence men had been suspended for attacking Ottawa players. The situation looked hopeless for Canadiens in the return match at Ottawa. Didier and Odie Cleghorn were pressed into service to fill the vacant defence posts and the veteran Joe Malone took over Odie's regular position at centre. They played their hearts out and won the game 2-1 but lost on the round. It was a great finish for the veteran of nineteen years and he got a big hand from the fans.
1917 playoffs: The Canadiens scored a big surprise when they defeated Seattle 8-4 in the series opener played under western rules. Didier Pitre was the star, scoring four goals with his bullet shot on which Hap Holmes looked very weak.
1919 playoffs: - The first game was played under the western rules which the Canadiens found baffling and they made little use of their extra forward. Lalonde and Pitre were skating fast and showed some great stickhandling.
- During the overtime Lalonde and Pitre moved back on defence and proved impregnable.
1923 playoffs:With their regular defence men suspended it seemed that Canadiens would hardly make much of a showing in the final game at Ottawa. However, the veterans Didier Pitre and Joe Malone put on astonishing display. [...] Pitre was playing his last game and the veteran of nineteen years in hockey did a great job on defence.
---
Didier Pitre had a long and colorful career commencing with Nationals and Shamrocks andthen with the exception on one year in Vancouver, the balance of his time was with Canadiens. Didier was a right wing with a very hard shot that earned him the nickname Cannonball. Inclined to run overweight he had to be occasionally disciplined to get him in shape but when in form he was a star. A great scorer he was very popular with the fans and closed his career with an outstanding performance in the 1923 playoffs.
Habs Heroes said:
Pitre, though, is known better as an elite player, part of a small group of players who made up the first superstars ofthe game. Pitre was nicknamed 'Cannonball' and 'Bullet Shot' becasue of his devastating shot. And even though he battled a weight problem through much of his career, he was one of the fastest skaters the early pro game had seen.
It took some time for that first team to find his stride, but there is little doubt Pitre and Lalonde combined to give the Canadiens an offensive presence other teams simply could not match.
Pitre won just one Stanley Cup with the Canadiens, but his offensive panache was always on full display.
Montreal Canadiens CD-ROM from 1995 said:
A great defenceman when he got his start with the Canadiens in 1909, Didier Pitre showed so much speed that Canadiens coach George Kennedy decided to move him up to a winger slot the following season. Born in Sault-Ste-Marie, Ontario in 1884, Pitre possessed such a fearsome shot that it was known to leave welts and bruises on opposing goalies. The shot became known around town and round the league as the ''Cannonball''.
In 1915-16, Pitre, then 32, played a key role in winning the Canadiens first Stanley Cup, leading all Canadiens scorers during the series. The Canadiens won their first Stanley Cup. Didier Pitre was the star of the series, with four goals in five games.
[...] Didier Pitre sounded the charge on then lead the way for his Canadiens teammates in Game 3, with a hat-trick in a 6-3 shoot-out, putting the Canadiens ahead in the series.
Our History: Montreal Canadiens said:
ONE OF THE FIRST PLAYERS TO EVER DON A CANADIENS JERSEY, RIGHT WINGER DIDIER PITRE WAS AN EXCEPTIONAL SKATER, EARNING HIM THE NICKNAME “CANNONBALL” FROM HIS TEAMMATES.
“Cannonball” Pitre was an awesome offensive machine who could score almost at will.
One of hockey’s early speed merchants, legend has it that Pitre skated as fast backwards as he did forwards. He also had the hardest shot in the game. At 5-foot-11 and 185 pounds, Pitre generally avoided the rough stuff, although when trouble crossed his path he met it head-on.
A charter member of the Habs, Pitre could usually be found at or near the top of the heap in the scoring department. In his prime, the dominating right-winger scored better than a goal per game, registering five 20-goal campaigns with the Canadiens during the team’s NHA years.
Pitre’s 27 goals in 1911-12 put him in second place among all NHA skaters. The following season, he got 24 and, declaring himself a free agent, decided that the pastures were greener west of the Rockies. Pitre spent the 1913-14 season with the Vancouver Millionaires.
Rejoining the Canadiens in 1914-15, he proved that he hadn’t left his scoring touch on the West Coast, netting a career-high 30 goals. The following year, he continued his offensive productivity, notching 24 tallies during the regular season. He also became adept at feeding his teammates, picking up 15 assists in a time when assists were almost as rare as helmets.
The NHA folded after the 1916-17 season and a new league rose from the debris to fill the demand for high-level hockey. The 34-year-old Pitre had slowed down somewhat but he was still a potent offensive force, scoring 61 times in the NHL’s first four years of play.
Ultimate Hockey said:
Didier Pitre was the ''bullet shot'' of pre-modern hockey and one of the very first French-Canadian hockey heroes. Weighing upwards of 200 pounds, he had huge legs able to support a thick, strong frame. Those legs drove him along at a smashing clip, giving him the momentum he needed to drive the pucks with violence force. He could also stop on a dime, scraping a huge cloud of ice into the air as he dug his blade into the ice.
Ironically, Pitre shelled out most of his salary that year in fines for breaking training. Indeed, he was noted for deplorable training habits and missing practices. It has been said the burly Frenchman ''trained on champagne,'' and that was not just hyperbole: Pitre would indeed reinforce himself between periods with a pint of ice-cold bubbly.
Pitre was a rugged individualist on whom team play was often lost, but whom was highly valuable nonetheless. Picture the flame-red Canadiens uniform and his hair flying in the breeze ... a man moving with a grace uncommon in a man of his size.
BleacherReport said:
The 5’11” 190lb, muscular winger/blueliner was exceptionally fast for a man of his stature. The story goes that he could even skate just as fast backwards as he could going forwards.
His combination of speed and size, along with blistering shot that terrorized goalies, had earned him the nickname “Cannonball”.
Wikipedia said:
Pitre's French-Canadian heritage helped give his line-mates the nickname the Flying Frenchmen, brought upon by his exceptional speed.
By 1921, the Canadiens had so much depth at forward, and an opening on defence due to the death of future Hall of Famer Joe Hall in the influenza epidemic, so they decided to try Pitre as a defenceman; not as difficult a transition as one might think, because he had previously been a "Rover" during the days of "seven man" hockey. He remained with Montreal through the formation of the NHL and into 1923.
Quotes:
- ''He didn't take any bullshi't'' -
Ernie Fitzsimmons (With record from that era incomplete and sketchy, there is also some dispute over whether Pitre was a tough player)
- ''Didier was sensational on defence. One expected him to be exhausted after a few minutes, but he was like a wall against the Ottawa attack.'' -
Journal La Presse (The Canadiens lost the series by one goal. Despite the losing effort, being overweight and used as a substitute during most of his final season, the 39 year-old saved his best defensive effort for his last game)
- ''Pitre was a very loyal player with a generous heart. The fans liked his lively character, his engaging repartee, his extraordinary drive and the unbelievable speed of his rushes'' -
Unnamed journalist
- ''When you think of it, you could say that Didier Pitre and Newsy Lalonde were responsible for pro hockey as we know it today. If they hadn't stayed and the NHA had jumped around from place to place, I don't know what would have happened'' -
Ernie Fitzsimmons
- ''Many played brutally, but Pitre was not one of them. It is doubtful if the big, good-natured Frenchman ever did a mean, or unsportsmanlike thing in his whole career.'' -
Elmer Ferguson
- ''One of the fastest skaters of all time.'' -
Cy Denneny
- ''He was kind of the Bobby Hull of his era, just really fast with an amazing, hard shot'' -
Bob Duff
Signing, Trades & Injuries:
- On January 5th 1905, he signed with Michigan Soo (IHL)
- On December 15th 1907, he signed with Montraal (ECAHA)
- On December 3rd 1908, he signed with Edmonton (FAHL)
- On January 3rd 1909, he signed with Renfrew (FAHL) for 2000$
- On December 15th 1909, he signed with Montreal (NHA)
- On November 24th 1913, traded to Vancouver (PCHA) by Montreal (NHA) for Newsy Lalonde
- On November 18th 1914, signed with Montreal (NHA)
Fun & Interesting Facts:
- Pitre was a teammate of Laviolette’s with the Soo Indians of hockey’s first professional loop, the IHL
- In 1909, Pitre played defence with Lester Patrick with the Edmonton Cup Challengers
- Didier Pitre was the first player Jack Laviolette signed with the newly founded Montreal Canadiens
- Pitre was one of hockey's first high-priced stars, a man not averse to holding out ever-higher pay. One year, he signed for a whooping 3,000$, at a time the average salary was about 500$.
- In a January 16th, 1919 game against the Ottawa Senators, Pitre, with the Montreal Canadiens, and Jack Darragh, of Ottawa, each had natural hat tricks in a 10-6 win for the Canadiens. That feat was not repeated until Jonathan Cheechoo, with the San Jose Sharks, and Ryan Smyth, Edmonton Oilers, each did in a 6-4 Edmonton victory on October 19, 2006
- On November 30th 1923, he announced his retirement as a player and was added to the NHL officiating staff
- Pitre was a Coach and referee in Michigan Soo area after his retirement
- He was the uncle of Vic Desjardins, a member of the United States Hockey Hall of Fame
- Pitre played alongside 22 Hall-of-Fame players during his career
Miscellaneous:
- Montreal boss George Kennedy told a story of a game against the Montreal Wanderers, in which the star winger was being checked by Gordie Roberts. Roberts was tripping and butt-ending Pitre, sending him falling to the ice.
Kennedy screamed at Pitre, ''Are you afraid of Roberts?''
''No, sure not,'' was Pitre's surprised response.
''Well, why don't you hit him back?'' Kennedy snapped.
''How can I hit back?'' Pitre asked. ''Roberts, he is very polite, very nice. Each time I fall, he helps me get up and apologizes and says it is an accident ... can I hit a man who is apologizing to me? No, never, it is not done.''
- Laviolette sent for Pitre, who had been working the off-season in Sault-Ste. Marie via telegram. The key phrases of that telegram read: ''New League formed. New Canadien team formed. Big Money available. Come to Montreal.'' Pitre immediately quit his job and hopped a the first train available to unite with his longtime friend. Unbeknownst to Pitre, the Montreal Nationals of the CHA were also in the midst of recruiting him for their team. Pitre met up with a Nationals representative on the train ride to Ottawa. Thinking this was the team Laviolette spoke of, he signed on with them en route. Realizing his error on meeting Laviolette, Pitre signed with the Canadiens. His case went to court where, in a precedent setting decision, the judge ruled that under Quebec law no man could be forced to act against his will.
- It is even said that he was once criticized by his coach for apologetically helping an opponent up after he had knocked him to the ice.
Abbreviation:
ECAHA: Eastern Canada Amateur Hockey Association
FAHL: Federal Amateur Hockey League
IHL: International Hockey League
NHA: National Hockey Association
PCHA: Pacific Coast Hockey Association
Internet Sites:
http://www.sihrhockey.org/member_player_sheet.cfm?player_id=3012&CFID=1042741&CFTOKEN=76655908
http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=P196216
http://habslegends.blogspot.com/2008/07/didier-pitre.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Didier_Pitre
http://ourhistory.canadiens.com/player/Didier-Pitre
http://joueursducanadiens2.voila.net/Didier_Pitre.html
http://www.thewantlist.ca/all-time-greats/greats-didier-pitre/
http://dennis-kane.com/didier-pitre-looked-splendid-anyway/
http://bleacher report.com/articles/246663-the-habs-legend-they-called-cannonball
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