BenchBrawl
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- Jul 26, 2010
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Legends of Hockey said:In his time, Charlie "The Big Bomber" Conacher had the hardest shot in hockey, a notorious blast that eluded goaltenders and dented rink boards. As a member of one of the most dangerous lines in hockey history, the Toronto Maple Leafs' Kid Line of the 1930s, right wing Conacher and left wing Harvey "Busher" Jackson were the beneficiaries of center Joe Primeau's slick passes as the threesome found itself near the top of the scoring lists for the better part of a decade.
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With his linemates' help, Conacher became the best right wing in the game over the next half-decade. He was a daring and explosive scorer who used his size 6'1" and 200 pounds in his heyday - to his advantage. He could beat goalies equally well with his booming shot or with a deft move from close range. Once he got moving, he was famous for bowling over anyone between him and the net - and then often the net itself as he crossed the goal line just a few seconds after the puck.
Five times between 1930 and 1936, Conacher either led or tied for the league lead in goal-scoring. He was a Second Team All-Star in his second and third years in the league and a First Team selection for three consecutive seasons beginning in 1933-34. He also helped the Leafs win the Stanley Cup in 1932.
Conacher's style of play - which featured all-out attacks - didn't lend itself to a long career and injuries began to wear the big man down.
The Trail of the Stanley Cup; vol. 2 said:Charlie was a big man and his hustling style netted him quite a few penalties as well as injuries while scuffling along the boards.
Hockey Stars: Today and Yesterday said:At Christmas of that year, 1926, Red Horner was moved up to the Maple Leafs, and hard-working Conacher took over the captaincy of the Marlboros. He may not have been the team's greatest player, at that time, but he displayed qualities of leadership to a marked degree.
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Throughout his career, Charlie Conacher was plagued by injury. Every season he was visited by what he termed the Conacher Jinx. I the summer of 1930 an old kidney condition, the result of strenuous play and his fall from the Huntley Street bridge, returned to haunt him. The doctors had only one remedy. They removed the kidney. But it wasn't as simple as that, for the medical men looked doubtful when Charlie spoke of playing hockey the following fall. "If you do, young man, we can't be responsible," they warned him.
But hockey was his life, and this strapping right-winger determined not to worry. "I'll just stick around for a while, Doc," he smiled, "and see how it goes." Conacher played for ten more seasons, off and on, and his weakened body took the strain of his rugged style of play. Always a marked man, he stood the stunning body-checks, the falls and the boardings which his frame brought upon him. As one friend expressed it: "The trouble with big Charlie is, he thinks he's a truck, so he takes on the other team in a personal, hand-to-hand battle!"
The Hockey News - The Top 100 said:Conacher, determination piled six-foot-one inches high, was the owner of the hardest shot in the league. A five-time all-star, the 'Bomber' delivered four seasons of more than 30 goals.
Legends of Hockey - Spotlight said:There was no doubt that Charlie was ready to play in the National Hockey League, and he debuted with the Maple Leafs on November 14, 1929, just shy of his twentieth birthday. By this time, he sported a powerful stride and a shot that was quickly considered the hardest in the league at that time. He was big, strong and fearless, and during an era when people were looking for heroes, Charlie provided fans with exactly that. In his first game, he scored on his first shift, causing newspaper accounts to state that he "made a splendid impression in his pro debut and was one of the best men on the ice."
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Dubbed 'The Big Bomber' for his booming shot, Charlie terrorized opposing netminders and, in the process, scored a league-best 31 goals in 1930-31, yet another season hampered by injury. This time, a broken wrist took him out of action during much of December that season. The brash twenty-year-old put up with little nonsense on-ice. "It was like that in the old days. You had to be able to take it," declared Ed Fitkin in his book, 'The Gashouse Gang of Hockey.' "What amazed the veterans was the fact that 20-year-iold Conacher not only could take it but he could dish it out, as well. They began to treat him with a respect seldom before afforded a newcomer." Long-time season ticket holder Tom Gaston, now deceased, recalled that "he was just like a tank. Chuck was big and strong – not many guys would mess with him."
CANADIENS WIN FROM SEATTLE
Newsy Lalonde gave a great exhibition of skating and scored all four of the Canadiens' points. Lalonde was the star of both teams. The leader of the visitors was a fiend on the defense and was impossible to stop when he gained possession of the rubber.
SEATTLE LOSE IN OVEARTIME: Canadiens Cut Down Threegoal Lead and Win 4 to 3 FRANK FOYSTON INJURED Lalonde Plays Sensational Game and is Main Factor in Victory
The Frenchmen are in much better shape, Corbeau being the only member of the visitors to show any effects. Cleghorn scored the first Canadien goal, but it was the great and only Lalonde who was responsible for the Montreal win. Urging his team on, Lalonde was not only a tower of strength on the defense, but he scored the second and tieing goals himself.
CANADIENS TO GO TO COAST: Beat Ottawa in Final Game of Play-off by Score 4 to 2 FOUR GAMES OUT OF FIVE Frenchmen Better Than Senators at All Stages of Game
Although Lalonde only scored once for his team, he engineered every attack and the goals scored by Cleghorn and Malone came from passes from Lalonde after he had stick-handled inside the opposing defence.
Niedermayer's Retirement Ceremony said:He could skate like no other who's worn the uniform. His resume validates a will to win. His effort - tireless. A team player, because the Devils know no other way. He takes the most pride in this moniker - champion.
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Scott Niedermyer combines supreme skill and character to forge one of the most successful careers by a defenseman in NHL history. One of the greatest skaters the game has ever seen, Niedermayer was a complete player who excelled at both ends of the ice. Alongside Scott Stevens and Ken Daneyko, he anchored a defensive core that was instrumental in the Devils' run to three Stanley Cup championships.
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He made an instant impression on his team mates, earning their resect with his work ethic and attitude.
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While Stevens delivered crushing hits, and Deneyko cleared the crease, Niedermayer possessed grace and speed as he rushed the puck up the ice and kept opponents in check.
Scott Stevens said:I wish I could skate like that... Just once, I'd love to see what it would feel like to fly around and be so smooth and effortless the way he skated.
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Just a great skater. Effortless skater. He could go all night - play all night, big minutes. I don't know if there's ever gonna be someone like that again, that can play the way he could.
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Big game player. The bigger the game, the better he played, and he always seemed to be the difference in a big game.
Sergei Brylin said:Probably the best skater I've seen in my life. So effortless and so smooth on the ice.
Ken Daneyko said:The guy was just a winner, and those things you don't teach. He's gonna go to the Hall of Fame. He's a legend already.
Lou Lamareillo said:He played the game with talent, skill, and intelligence. The one common denominator was that Scott never changed. Scott came to play every night.
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Scottie was integral in all aspects of the game - the offensive part of it, the defensive end of it, the shutdown end of it, and the taking chances end of it that you needed.
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Scottie was one of the most complete. His size was not indicative of strength. It was a pleasure to watch him play too because he could excite you and he could electrify you.
Jacques Lemaire said:He's a guy that could skate so freely, and was so quick, he could move up and come back and not make any mistakes.
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He had no fear of taking a chance.
Martin Brodeur said:The ability of skating was a big part of his game. He was able to create a lot of offense because of it, and it never really hurt his defensive game, because he was always able to get back. He was so quick, and so mobile that players had a hard time reading him.
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He took charge of games by himself and was able to be a good leader.
Colin White said:Everybody seen that he played both ends of the rink. He was a great team guy - always positive. He never got rattled. He kept everybody else calm and on track.
Larry Robinson said:Once he got the puck, nobody could get it off him because he was such a good skater, and so strong. He very rarely got knocked off his feet, and was in control.
This paper was poorly scanned, but it was about a proposed deal that when Lalonde was playing out West, Vezina would be traded straight up for him to bring Lalonde back to Montreal.The Calgary Daily Herald - Oct 30 1914 said:There ???(I assume "is a") strong possibility that the National Hockey assiciation will this year be without the services of its most brilliant goalkeeper, Vezina of the Canadiens.
This was from an a game where NHA all-stars played an army team. For the third period, the coach of the army team (Vezina's coach on the Habs.) snuck Vezina into the army teams goal. Here is the scoring per period:The Montreal Daily Mail - Dec 13 1915 said:During the intermission he hustled George Vezina, recognized as the best goal-keeper in the NHA, into one of the Guards uniforms.
The Montreal Daily Mail - Mar 17 1916 said:George Vezina, the brilliant goal-keeper of the Canadiens, often said to be as good as two men, jumped into prominence when he joined the Habitants in 1911. Born in Chicoutimi twenty-eight years ago, Vezina started playing goals when a youngster. Manager George Kennedy witnessed a game in which he was playing in 1910, and immediately signed him up. Ever since he has played in front of the nets for the Flying Frenchmen, and today is one of the highest payed goal-tenders in the business.
The Toronto World - Apr 5 1916 said:Vezina, George: Goalkeeper, 28 years old, and from Chicoutimi. Joined the Canadiens in 1910 and made good on the jump. The most consistent goalkeeper in the N.H.A. and as clean a player as the game knows. His success is largely consequent upon the fact that he attends stricktly to business all the time, and never tries to pull any funny stuff.
From a Regina paper, infers that Lehman is the class of the West and Vezina of the East.The Morning Leader - Feb 26 1919 said:...the goaltenders, who have demonstrated that they can stop the hard shots a la George Vezina and Hugh Lehman.
The Morning Leader - Mar 8 1919 said:Georges Vezina, goalkeeper of the Montreal Canadiens, who is conceded to be the best net guardian in the game.
The Border Cities Star - Nov 25 1921 said:Another development at Ottawa was the signing of Clint Benedict to occupy the nets for the Ottawa team during the forthcoming season Clint is generally regarded as the second best to George Vezina of the Flying Frenchmen.
The Senators and Benedict continued their roll into the 1920-1921 season. For the second consecutive year, Benedict was lauded as the best netminder in the NHL, even though Ottawa had dropped to second in the standings.
He certainly impressed a young rookie who joined the Senators before the 1921-1922 season – Francis “King” Clancy.
“He was superb. A lot of people say that Georges Vezina was the greatest goaltender in those early days of hockey, but if you look at the records you’ll see that Clint Benedict…had a better average.”
Number One Team- Goal, Georges Vezina; defence, Sprague Cleghorn and Hod Stuart (deceased); center, Frank Nighbor; right wing, Allan, Scotty Davidson; left wing, Tommy Phillips (deceased)"
Jack Adam said:When you talk about goaltenders, you have to start with Georges Vezina. By an almost unanimous vote of hockey people, he was the greatest the game has ever had. I remember him fairly well.
In 1918 when I broke into the National League with Toronto, Vezina was with Les Canadians. He was near the end of his career, but was still a marvel in the nets, as I found out the first time I skated in on him.
I thought I had him beat, I thought I had a cinch goal, but he had figured exactly what I was going to do, and brushed aside the shot, as easily as you'd strike a match.
Jack Adams said:Vezina was a big fellow... I'd say he was about five feet 11 inches tall, without his skates on and he looked even taller in uniform because he always wore a red and blue toque. He had big hands and he used an exceptionally long stick.
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He played a stand-up game, sliding from post to post, making save that seemed impossible by outguessing the puck carriers.
That was his strong point. Like all great goalers, he studied the styles of every forward in the league. He could sense what one of them would do under a given set of circumstances and was usually prepared. He guess wrong sometimes, of course, but not often.
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I played against Vezina for three or four years. Many times he broke my heart by turning back what looked like a certain score. He was a real master. He had perfect co-ordination and an uncanny instinct.
Adams was now striking at one of the legends of hockey. Marty Barry, sitting on a rubber table next to the Honey Walker, was startled. Never before had he heard anyone question Vezina's superiority. He was too surprised to interrupt and Adams went on (about the changes in the game making a goalie's job harder since Vezina's time)
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"I see what you mean," said Barry, only half convinced.
Jack Adams said he thought that the only old-timer who might measure up to the to the modern goalers was the immortal Georges Vezina himself.
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But Vezina played in the days of parallel passing and kitty-bar-the-door when a lot of shots were fired from far out. We doubt if he would be as successful today unless he changed his style. But we think that Vezina, Clint Benedict, George Haimsworth, Roy Worters, and other great goalers of the past would be about to adapt to the changing conditions. They were only as good as they had to be.
The boys were talking about goaltending greats in the aftergame discussion at Cornell last night and Jim McCafffrey was firm in his stand that Benedict was tops.... JP is willing to settle for Frank Brimsek among the present-day puck stoppers and calls Jack Crawford the best defenseman of all...
Geoffrion vs Bathgate "per-game" finishes
I find the idea expressed by others in this thread that Geoffrion was a better per-game player than his season-end point totals indicate because he was regularly injured in the regular season to be worth looking at further, especially since he generally was healthy in the playoffs and performed well there.
Anyway, here are Geoffrion's "per-game" finishes compared to Bathgate
Geoffrion points-per-game: 1st, 2nd, 2nd, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 8th, 10th
Bathgate points-per-game: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 3rd, 4th, 4th, 5th, 6th, 6th
*Their regular season points-per-game finishes are nearly identical*
Geoffrion goals-per-game: 1st, 1st, 1st, 2nd, 4th, 4th, 4th, 5th, 6th, 6th, 8th
Bathgate goals-per-game: 3rd, 4th, 5th, 7th, 9th, 9th, 10th
Geoffrion assists-per-game: 2nd, 2nd, 4th, 7th, 8th, 9th
Bathgate assists-per-game: 1st, 2nd, 2nd, 2nd, 3rd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 10th
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Conclusion: Perhaps it is not accurate to say that Bathgate was better in the regular season and Geoffrion better in the playoffs. It looks more accurate to say that Bathgate was healthier in the regular season and Geoffrion was better in the playoffs.
2 additional points:
Of course Geoffrion shouldn't get credit for games not played, but I do think that the fact that he generally always brought it in the playoffs is supporting evidence that his "per game" rates in the regular season were a good indication of his actual talent.
Bathgate should get some credit for remaining remarkably healthy. He only missed 5 games total in 10 seasons between 1954-55 and 1963-64.
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Bernard Geoffrion said:I was a natural as a stick-handler, I was a natural as a shooter, I could put the puck in the net, that's something I had as a talent. A lot of people are great hockey players but they cannot find the net. I could find the net every angle, I want to be humble when I say that. But I always did have confidence when somebody would score two goals, I would say to myself I'm gonna get three. I had to be not better, but I wanted to prove the public, my organization, my teammates that I can play this game of hockey, and you know what I think I did.
Greatest Hockey Legends said:With Maurice Richard headlining a who's who of hockey, the Montreal Canadiens had an outstanding power play for years. But when Bernie "Boom Boom" Geoffrion perfected his slap shot from the point, the NHL was forced to take action. With Richard, Jean Beliveau and Dickie Moore up front and Doug Harvey and Geoffrion on the points, the Canadiens often scored two or even three goals during a single minor penalty, so the rules were changed to allow the penalized player back on the ice after a power play goal was scored.
It was "Boom Boom's" dynamic shot that became his trademark. He perfected the now-common slap shot. Firing little discs of frozen rubber at speeds upwards of 100 mph put fear into the hearts of enemy goaltenders as never seen before.
Greatest Hockey Legends said:Geoffrion was more than just a heavy shooter. His all-out style of play and unquenchable desire to win enabled him to win the Calder Trophy in 1952 and the Hart Trophy in 1961. He led the league in scoring twice and was name to the First All Star Team in 1961 and the Second in 1955 and 1960. The fact that he made three post-season All Star teams is actually quite amazing. Geoffrion was a right winger in the same era as Maurice Richard and Gordie Howe.
ourhistory.canadiens.ca said:The number five holds a special place in the hearts of Montreal Canadiens fans who remember the late 1950s for two reasons: the number of consecutive Stanley Cup Championships and the flamboyant right winger with the thunderous shot who wore it on his back.
Drive and desire were the key elements of Geoffrion’s game. He played with his heart on his sleeve and thrived on pressure, coming up with highlight performances when the stakes were at their highest. Throwing caution to the wind, he played an “all-out, all the time†game, the only way he knew how.
While his legend was built around his nose for the net and his booming slap shot, Geoffrion was also a skilled passer and playmaker, usually picking up at least as many - if not more - assists as goals.
Geoffrion was almost voted captain (by his teammates) instead of Béliveau, indicating that he was seen as a leader.Legends of Hockey said:Bernie Geoffrion, nicknamed "Boom Boom," gained NHL fame for his hard shot and feisty temperament. Born and raised in Montreal, he played right wing for the Montreal Canadiens' dynasty teams in the 1950s and 1960s alongside Maurice "Rocket" Richard and Jean Beliveau. The powerful combination brought the Stanley Cup home to Montreal an amazing six times during Geoffrion's time there, and he also won the league scoring title twice and the Hart Trophy in 1961.
Many claim Geoffrion invented and perfected the slapshot - not bad for a kid who was once told by the assistant coach of a junior hockey team that he'd never make it in big-time hockey.
Red Fisher / nhl.com said:"So I'm in a cast when the boys are having the vote. Toe's fedora is being passed around the room, and we're dropping the little papers into it. You could vote for Dickie, for Boom (Bernie "Boom Boom" Geoffrion), for Tom Johnson or for me. By then, I had been 33 days in a cast. I never thought for a second anybody would vote for me. I voted for Dickie." (said Béliveau)
There was a tie for most votes into the fedora during the first ballot, a draw between Beliveau and Geoffrion. The next vote was just between those two Montreal greats.
Once again, the players tossed "little papers" into Blake's fedora. Minutes later, an exercised Geoffrion stormed out of the room and into my view.
"What's the problem?" I asked him.
"Those ******** picked Beliveau," he snapped.
"Yeah, Boom was a little upset," Beliveau said in his Longueuil home. "But ah, you know Boom. He was upset that day, but the next morning he was all right.
Le Devoir - Jan 8 said:Bernard "Boom Boom" Geoffrion a joué en dépit d'un ''charlie horse''.Il a compté deux buts...
Bernard ''Boom Boom'' Geoffrion played despite suffering from a charley horse (muscle spasm).He scored two goals...
Le Devoir - Mar 27 said:Titre: Bernard Geoffrion est la grande vedette des vainqueurs en participant à tous les buts de son club.
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Bernard Geoffrion a [...] trompé la vigilence de Lorne Worsley sur un lancer du revers et donner une avance d'un but au bleu-blanc-rouge.
Title: Bernard Geoffrion is the great star of the winning team by participating to every goals
[...]
Bernard Geoffrion scored against Lorne Worsley with a backhand shot to give the lead to Montreal
Le Devoir - Mar 27[COLOR=#ff0000 said:]...quand Geoffrion, après avoir accepté une passe de Doug Harvey, laissa partir un boulet d'une cinquantaine de pieds environ.[/COLOR]
...when Geoffrion, who accepted a pass from Doug Harvey, made a big slapshot from approximately 50 feets
Le Bien Public - Mar 29 said:Bernard Geoffrion continue d'être une constante menace pour les cerbères ennemis et il fabrique de très beaux jeux
Bernard Geoffrion continues to be a constant threat for goalies and he fabricates/makes some beautiful plays
The News and Eastern Townships Advocate - Nov 11 said: Bernie Geoffrion said:who hasn't had a bad year since he hit the NHL[/B], is heading for one of his greatest seasons in the game.He's scoring at the rate of a goal a game.
La Patrie - Dec 3 said:Geoffrion perd son temps
L'an dernier nous avions écrit que Bernard Geoffrion perdait son temps dans la ligue junior.Nous le répétons encore! Il déclasse complètement les autres juniors sauf Jean Béliveau peut-être, et la preuve est qu'il a compté sept buts en une seule partie cette semaine.C'est ridicule de faire jouer un homme avec des enfants.
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Bernard est un colosse; il est rapide, habile et ambitieux et il possède un des lancers les plus terribles du hockey tout entier.
Geoffrion is wasting his time
Last year we wrote that Bernard Geoffrion was wasting his time in the junior league.We're writing it again! He completely outclasses the other junior players except maybe Jean Béliveau, and the proof of that is that he scored seven goals in a single game this week.It's ridiculous to make a man play with children.
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Geoffrion is a strong/big man; he is fast, skilled and ambitious and he possesses one of the scariest shot in all of hockey.
CBC said:Legendary Montreal Canadiens forward Bernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion has died at the age of 75.
Word of his death came early Saturday, the exact date the Canadiens had set to raise Geoffrion's No. 5 to the rafters prior to their game against the New York Rangers at Bell Centre.
The Hockey News said:Owns very good scoring instincts and hockey sense. Is a world-class agitator and sparkplug type who plays way bigger than his 5-9 frame suggests. Is effective on special teams. Confident with the puck, he produces in the clutch. Plays over the edge sometimes.
Legends of Hockey said:Stapleton was voted to the NHL Second All-Star Team in 1966 and duplicated this honor in 1971 and 1972. He played with the Hawks until the end of the 1972-73 season and helped the squad reach the Stanley Cup finals in 1971 and 1973. His quick hands and lightning reflexes, combined with a hard, accurate shot, made him one of the more effective point men in the NHL. Defensively, he was a master of the poke-check and was able to consistently steer opponents away from the goal.
Stapleton and defense partner Bill White developed into one of the NHL's elite tandems. They were the key to the Hawks winning four straight West Division crowns, and in the 1972 Summit Series against the USSR they were teamed in seven of the eight games. Stapleton was on the ice when Paul Henderson scored the dramatic series-winning goal with 34 seconds left in the third period. Amid all the celebrations, he grabbed the historic puck, a treasure he preserves at home to this day. Stapleton and White were also known for their pranks that helped keep the Chicago and Canada teams loose.
Arthur Chidlovski said:He had become an outstanding defensive player, who did provided strong support for the Chicago goalies. "Whitey" was a very good puck handler who launched many Chicago offensive "counterattacks" with fast, accurate passes to the Black Hawk forwards.
He was named to Team Canada 1972 and went into the Canadian line-up to stay after the debacle of Game 1. Along with defensive partner Bill White, "Whitey" was probably Team Canada's finest defensemen during the series. He was always Head Coach Harry Sinden's first choice on defense when it came to protect a lead in the final minutes.
He was one of Head Coach Billy Harris's first choices for Team Canada 1974. Pat was named captain of the team and along with defensive partner J.C. Tremblay would be the defenseman Harris would use in almost every crucial situation. He played in every game of the Summit picking up 2 assists, and solidifying his reputation as being one of the finest players in the world.
Sports Illustrated - 5/7/1973 said:As Chicago opened hostilities with Montreal this week for possession of the Stanley Cup, it was perhaps fitting that some of the Black Hawks' largest hopes lay with the smallest defense-man on the ice. What Chicago could not accomplish in the same situation in 1965 and 1971 with the bullets of Bobby Hull it was now attempting with teamwork and defense and the breakaways that could develop through the alertness of that defense. In the Chicago scheme of things no man was more important than 5'7" Pat Stapleton, the team's unfrocked captain but a most conscientious worker.
Although Stapleton was a dominant force in the game, his contribution was largely missing from the statistics. He was credited with one assist; in fact, he initiated the passing plays that led to each Chicago goal. And though officially he scored only six points in the five games with the Rangers, he was on the ice when Chicago got 12 of its 15 goals.
"Finding the puck was never any problem," mumbled Captain Vic Had-field of the Rangers. " Stapleton always had it. Trouble was, we couldn't get it away from him," Stapleton and lanky Bill White have formed hockey's best defensive pair the last three seasons, and in cup games they always play at least 40 of the 60 minutes. White contentedly anchors himself to the Chicago blue line, but the irascible Stapleton roves throughout center ice on search-and-destroy missions, anticipating plays and then darting in front of opposing forwards to filch the puck from them. "We completed more passes to Stapleton than to any of our own guys," mourned one confused Ranger.
Once Stapleton steals the puck he either headmans it to one of his streaking forwards or cruises to the opposition blue line and fires it at the goaltender. "Most people think I'm an offensive defenseman, but I'm not," Stapleton says. "An offensive defenseman is someone like Bobby Orr who carries the puck in deep. Me? I rarely, if ever, take the puck more than a stride or two across the blue line before getting rid of it."
"If Stapleton plays against Montreal the way he played against us," says New York Coach Emile Francis, "the Black Hawks will beat the Canadiens." Stapleton did his part in Sunday's opener in Montreal by firing lead passes that were converted into three Chicago goals. The defensive part of the equation didn't quite work out, though. After being up 2-0 and 3-2, in the end Chicago was routed 8-3 because it could not cope with the Canadiens' speed and close-in passes.
Regardless of how the Black Hawks ultimately fare against the Canadiens, there is a strong possibility that the 32-year-old Stapleton will not play for them next season. His relationship with Chicago management deteriorated after Coach Billy Reay snipped the captain's C from his jersey three years ago when he had the audacity to hold out for a better contract.
Hoping that Stapleton would grow a few inches, Boston sent him to Portland of the Western League for two years. "I learned how to play the game out there," he says. "I had always tried to muscle people and, of course, it never worked. In Portland I learned how to finesse them, how to box them away from the goal without getting run over." In his second season with Portland, Stapleton scored 29 goals and 57 assists and was voted the league's top defenseman.
Then he was named captain of the Black Hawks, a move Bobby Hull applauded by saying, "He is our inspiration."
Stapleton was paying his price in stitches. Doctors have sewn more than 600 of them into his face. "When you're little," Stapleton says resignedly, "you get a lot of sticks in your face that other players get in their chest." Pucks, too.
The Windsor Star - 5/9/1973 said:Valery Kharlamov, the star forward on the Soviet Union's national hockey team, said Tuesday he was impressed with the work of defencemen Brad Park and Pat Stapleton in the Team Canada-Russia hockey series last fall.
...He then noted that both Stapleton and Park saw "all the ice very clearly."
Ion selects his all-star lineup
Ion explains that the following team is selected purely on a competitive basis....
MacKay is shifted to center.....
"The business of picking an N.H.A all star team
........Punch Broadbent of Ottawa and Gordon Roberts of the Wanderers are easily the pick of the wings....
"Checked to death" would be a fitting summing up of the disaster that befell the Frenchmen last night. A disaster which settles them more firmly in the cellar of the association, while at the same time giving the victors a clear lead in the race for the championship. Every man on the Wanderers team set out to hold his opponent and succeeded admirably, having enough speed to the good to score nine goals. In respect the work or Gordon Roberts was particularly credible. On the assumption that Canadiens were a one man team and that the key to their success was the work of Pitre, Wanderers deputed the big winger to put Didier in the bag. In this Roberts succeed, and kept the heretofore scorer tied up just as effectively as Marks did in the Quebec Game
Even in Montreal, in the ranks of the Wanderers Gordon Roberts a native of Ottawa, holds forth and shines like a meteor amongst a galaxy of stars. Toronto saw in Ottawa material that would make them holders of the Stnaley cup, and immediately tried to transplant half the available surplus hockey material to the cultured banks of the Don
Roberts and Hyland were the most effective of the forwards. The former while he tallied but one goal proved a stumbling block to the Toronto defence. His consistent back-checking spoilt may Toronto rushes.
Gordie Roberts strikes official with his stick
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Wanderers played great hockey at times. With Odie and Sprague Cleghorn and Roberts as the outstanding stars, while Ottawa were off colour apparently suffering from the effects of the Saturday game against the Canadiens.
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Gerard scored for Ottawa from ...... side shot but Wanderers disputed the goal and Roberts struck Umpire Butterworth on the chin with his stick inflicting a nasty gash. He was not penalized....
Then minutes after the start of the first half Ray Millar and Roberts mixed things up, other joining in. Millar and Roberts were balanced for the remainder of the match
Gordon Roberts was easily the best of the visitors. His shooting was deadly and Hebert in goal was caught napping several times on long shots from the side which lodged in the corner of the net. He was played on the defence by the Montrealers and even under this disadvantage was a decided improvement over several Wanderer defence men seen in action this season
The Border Cities Star - Jun 17 said:Gordie Roberts as he was known in the bygone days of hockey was probably the greatest left-hand shot the game ever knew. Some say Babe Dye or Harry Cameron were just as good as Roberts when with Toronto St. Pats. Others say Roberts stood alone.
Baz O'Meara said:All hockey addicts and who isn't, remeber Gordie Roberts who carried more smoke in his left hand than probably any hockey player that ever laced on a skate. Roberts was a great left wing, one of the greatest that ever shuffled down the left side and let fly without telegraphing at some hapless goal tend who crossed his path.
The Border Cities Star - Jun 17 said:Clint Banadict once swore by the beard of his grandfather that Roberts could curve a puck and he always had that reputation.
The Border Cities Star - Jun 17 said:He had a swaying style of skating and he hunched his shoulders as he loomed up before the defence and just let blaze a shoulder high shot that had a habit of streaking down below the waist.
The Border Cities Star - Jun 17 said:Malcolm Brice, one of the brightest little men that ever tapped a typewriter in sport and a sport editor who stood at "tops" when he ran the old Free Press sheet here, always maintained Roberts had the hardest and most deceptive shot in hockey.
Ultimate Hockey said:Montreal boss George Kennedy told a story of a game against the Montreal Wanderers in which Pitre was being tripped and butt-ended by rugged winger Gordon Roberts.
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."
The Trail of The Stanley Cup said:(1911 NHA season) After the Wanderers' poor performance, their new owner Sam Lichtenhein was quoted as saying he would fire some of the players. Nobody was fired but Art Ross was signed and Gordon Roberts added some strength.
The Trail of The Stanley Cup said:(1916 NHA season) Gordie Roberts continued his rough work and drew a match penalty and a $15 fine for cutting Frank Nighbor over the eye when the Senators defeated the Redbands on Feb 23rd. Roberts was greeted by a shower of bottles from Ottawa fans on his next visit to the Capital.
The Trail of The Stanley Cup said:(1918 PCHA season) Ernie Johnson still played a rugged game that drew many penalties. In a game against Seattle, Roberts charged him and drew a penalty. Ernie automatically joined Roberts in the box and was more than surprised when referee Ion waved him back on the ice.
Ultimate Hockey said:Horse-strong... one of the original power forwards... In a word: Fighter.
seventieslord said:Roberts - A Power Forward?
A source of discussion in recent drafts has been whether Gord Roberts was a pre-merger power forward. Here is the evidence supporting this:
(quotes provided above)
Players who we call "power forwards" are usually bigger players, and they tend to put up more PIMs than the average finesse player. Let's look at Roberts' size and PIMs compared to other pre-merger star forwards:
Drafted pre-merger star forwards who played against Gord Roberts:
This was a sum of all PIMs earned in all regular season games in the ECAHA, ECHA, CHA, NHA, NHL, PCHA, WCHL, WHL, and playoff games for those leagues and Stanley Cup matches.
The "Top-3 in goals" column was added just as an indication of how many truly elite goal-scoring seasons each player had.
Conclusion: Roberts was 2 1/2 inches taller and 15 pounds heavier than the average star forward in his leagues. He also took 39% more PIMs than the average star forward. Only two star forwards matched his height (Pitre and Crawford) and only three (Cleghorn, Broadbent, Pitre) exceeded his weight. Known "power forwards" Lalonde, Dunderdale, Broadbent and Adams had more PIM/GP than Roberts as well as the surprisingly gritty Harry Hyland. Roberts still finished 6th/20 in this category. (the chart is sorted by PIM/GP)
Aside from Lalonde, whose toughness is legendary despite his average size, Roberts' combination of size, physicality and goal-scoring prowess are unequalled among pre-merger star forwards.
wikipedia said:Ottawa was the defending Stanley Cup champions and, during the season, were challenged for the trophy by the Alberta champion Edmonton Hockey Club in January 1910.[5] The Ottawa Citizen described Roberts as being the star of the first game. The paper praised his defensive checking in addition to his four goals scored in an 8–4 victory.[6] He added three goals in the second game as Ottawa retained control of the Stanley Cup by a 21–11 aggregate score.[7]
Ottawa Citizen - Jan 19 said:Every time the Westerners broke away they found either Walsh and Ridpath or Roberts and Stuart skating between them to intercept the pass or take the puck away. Coupled with this wonderful following back of the Ottawa forwards...
Ottawa Citizen - Jan 19 said:Gordon Roberts, the former Emmett player, however, was the real sensation of the night. Roberts stacked up against the great "Hay" Millar, and what he didn't do to the curly haired broncho buster from the wild and wooly isn't worth mentioning. Suffice to say that Roberts checked Millar to a standstill, and in addition notched no less than four of the Ottawa goals-a phenominal performance for a youngster. Roberts' stickhandling, his shooting and following back were beautiful, he driving two of Ottawa's goals past Winchester in the last half from very difficult angles.
Calgary Daily Herald 2-3-1938 said:Breaks Up Line
Even before the fans had a chance to howl, Smythe had decided to do something about the Leafs' lack of back-checking, particularly on its high-scoring line of Harvey Jackson, Syl Apps and Gordon Drillon.
He has broken up the combination that has scored 39 of the Leafs' 96 goals this season, the trio that bagged almost half the Leafs' markers last season. Jackson is being dropped back to a line composed of the big left winger, Buzz Boll and Bill Thoms. Bob Davidson will move up to work with Apps and Drillon.
It is emphasized that Jackson is not the only culprit on the highest scoring line and that the only reason he is being dropped back is that a right wing substitute wasn't available for Drillon. It seems Drillon, the league's leading point scorer, is no more a two way man than Jackson.
....
But Apps, Drillon and Jackson were never quite the back-checkers Smythe wanted, and while they scored plenty of goals, the opposition got many, while the Dynamiters were on the ice. The shift will give the No. 1 line back-checking and add scoring punch to the 2nd line.
The Ottawa Citizen 22 Mar 1941 - Weiland Picks Apps Over Cowley In Selecting His Own All-Stars said:Cooney Weiland, chosen by newspapermen of Canadian and Unitet States National Hockey League cities as coach for The Canadian Press all-star team released yesterday, said tonight he had been given a great - if mythical - team with which to work. Then he confessed that it differs a little from the squad he would have picked himself.
The Boston coach said he is an Apps-man. Throughout the balloting Bill Cowley of Boston and Syl Apps of Toronto monopolized attention in their battle for the center position. Cowley eventually was chosen, with Apps placed on the second squad, but Weiland said he would have reversed that order. "Both are marvelous attackers, but Apps is a little bit better back-checker." he explained.
Muncie Evening Press 06 Feb 1942 -Clapper 'Tops' In Ice Hockey - Harry Grayson said:...
Syl Apps, the Maple Leafs' brilliant center, is a three-way player- on the attack, setting up plays and scoring. On defense, Apps is a remarkable back checker."
Two years ago, Art Ross, manager of the Bruins, called Milt Schmidt of the sauerkraut line the greatest center of all time. He is Apps size and type, exceptionally fast, a dangerous scorer.
Legends of Hockey said:In his first NHL season with the Leafs, he won the Calder Trophy, the first Leaf so honored, and his career continued to flourish. During that first year, many players thought he was too nice and not tough at all. Flash Hollett discovered this belief was mistaken one night when he high-sticked Apps, knocking out two teeth. Apps dropped his gloves and pummeled Hollett, but he got into only two other skirmishes in his whole career.
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle 22-Mar-1938 said:...
Coilville Impervious to Ice Bumping-off
That may be the A's plan tonight; but even if they could hold battered Johnson and little Ramrod Murray intact long enough to keep it up Dutton and his plotters would not have much faith in such tactics. Neil Coilville, like his rugged contemporary, Syl Apps of the Leafs - another high scoring pivot - can really take it.
...
Dick Irvin Edmonton Journal 22 Nov 1939 - Irvin Joins Jack Adams said:Morenz was a forceful, driving skater with just enough meanness in him to work his way in for a lot of extra points. Apps is more complacent. Morenz used to leave a couple of men sprawled behind him and everybody else sore at him. The other night Apps went through to score a goal against Detroit with blood streaming from his face. I looked over to the Detroit bench and just about every player there work an expression that indicated he liked the remarkable way Syl performed the play.
The Leader-Post 12 Mar 1943 - Charlie Edwards Presents - Sport Snapshots said:This National league season may see the anomalous circumstance of a player awarded the Hart tropy because he missed the last half ot eh schedule. The player is Syl Apps of Toronto, out with a broken leg since Jan 30. During the past three or four seasons Apps has been probably the most publicized player in the major league.
Many expert observers have said he is the best player in hockey today and some rate him with the all-time greats. Yet Apps has never won the Hart trophy, awared annually to the player voted the "most valuable" to his club. Last year, for example, Syl was an inspirational leader as Toronto won the Stanley Cup but the Hart trophy when to Tommy Anderson of the last-place Brooklyn Americans. Not that Cowboy Anderson didn't deserve recognition. He did.
Some voters may not consider Apps eligible for the trophy because he didn't finish out the season, but Baz O'Meara of The Montreal Star, says he cast his vote for Syl and explains: "We couldn't get away from Apps after noting the state of collapse that overtook the Leafs when he was forced to the sidelines."
Detroit Free Press 02 Nov 1941 said:...
Adams ranks the Maple Leafs as the most dangerous team after the Bruins. They finished second last season and their two youthful finds, Center Billy Taylor and Defenseman Walter Stanowski, will have the benefit of an additional year of experience. Of course they will not be harmed by the presence of Syl Apps, who Mr. Adams regards as the best hockey player he ever saw.
The Ottawa Citizen 27 Dec 1939 - Syl Apps Suffers Fractured Collarbone - CP said:...
The loss of Apps is a serious blow to the Leafs. Named to the center position in the Canadian Press All-Star NHL team last season, he was on the way to an even greater winter and already had provoked a heated discussion among coaches and newspapermen about whether he is the best center of all time.
Edmonton Journal 22 Nov 1939 - Irvin Joins Jack Adams said:Maple Leafs' Coach Also Says Apps Greatest Player - Gives Judgement
Silver-thatched Dick Irvin, who played hockey against both Cyclone Taylor and Howie Morenz contended Tuesday night that "Syl Apps goes by the players faster than either of those centres ever did."
Irvin is Apps' coach with the Toronto Maple Leafs. He played centre opposite Taylor in Western Canada and opposite Morenz in the National league.
So Irvin deserves a voice in the controversy inspired by the declaration of Jack Adams, manager of Detroit Red Wings, that Apps is "the best player who ever had skates on."
"Here's my judgement," Irvin said, "and Taylor and Morenz have both gone by my in my day."
Means Something
"Syl Apps goes by the players of today faster than Taylor and Morenz went by me. That isn't the whole argument but it's something. As for comparing Apps directly with Taylor, that's almost impossible because conditions are entirely different. In Taylor's day there were seven men to a side and that made an entirely different sort of game. But anyone who is comparing Apps with Taylor and Morenz may be doing it a little prematurely. I'm sure Apps hasn't reached his peak. He is 10 pounds heavier today than ever before and is playing the best hockey of his career. Just give him another year, when he's 25, or two more, and watch him then." He called Apps the "picture player" and Taylor and Morenz great individualists. Those fellows weren't in it with Syl as a playmaker," Irvin contended. "Aurel Joliat got a lot of passes from Morenz, but nothing like the plays that Apps works with Gordon Drillon.
Morenz Standout
"I like to bring Morenz into the argument because he was such a standout among modern centres. Morenz was a forceful, driving skater with just enough meanness in him to work his way in for a lot of extra points. Apps is more complacent. Morenz used to leave a couple of men sprawled behind him and everybody else sore at him. The other night Apps went through to score a goal against Detroit with blood streaming from his face. I looked over to the Detroit bench and just about every player there work an expression that indicated he liked the remarkable way Syl performed the play."
At Boston Manager Art Ross of the Bruins went to bat for Eddie Shore, his great defenseman who is ending his playing career this season. "Shore, in my opinion, was the greatest hockey player of all time," Ross asserted. The Boston manager disputed claims of other National Hockey league managers that Syl Apps or Cyclone Taylor were the greatest as he came to bad for his mighty defence player. "I have seen most of the players others label as the greatest of all time," he said, "but none of htem could top Shore in any department of the game."
Eddie Greatest
"During the past 13 seasons I have seen Eddie do everything possible in hockey much better than any of the other 'greatests' could do. He was the fastest, the most aggressive, and on top of all his many other hockey gifts, he had a natural instinct to do the right thing at exactly the most opportune time."
Old timers, who saw Ross play at the beginning of the century, often have described him as the greatest defenceman of all time. Ross' stock answer has always been: "We had great hockey players in my day, much better than are around today, but when I compare myself with Shore, I am convinced I couldn't carry his stick, and I never saw anyone who could."
Lester Patrick Still Faithful to Taylor
Lester Patrick, manager of New York Rangers, took issue Tuesday with the statement of Manager Jack Adams of Detroit Red Wings that Syl Apps is "the best player who ever had stakes on."
Patrick said the Toronto centre undoubtedly is "the greatest in hockey today" but for an all-time ranking he still picked on top Fred "Cyclone" Taylor, the former Ottawa and Vancouver star now president of the Pacific Coast Hockey league. He mad that choice several years ago and Patrick said he had seen nothing to make him change his mind.
"When I pick Taylor ahead of Apps I'm taking into account not only their playing ability but their color on and off the ice," the Range boss added. "Taylor was just as fast, he was a great scorer and there was no comparison in the box-office appeal between the two. Taylor was one of the greatest drawing cards the game ever had. I don't think Adams ever say Taylor play. When Adams was playing, Taylor's career was finished. I think Adams' statement would have been more correct if he had said 'Apps was the greatest player he ever saw.'"
Legends of Hockey said:Perhaps never has a finer man played in the NHL than Syl Apps. A remarkably skilled hockey player, he was big and strong and possessed one of the best shots in the league. He never drank or smoked, never swore and was as loyal to his boss, Conn Smythe, as to his team, the Toronto Maple Leafs.
In his first NHL season with the Leafs, he won the Calder Trophy, the first Leaf so honored, and his career continued to flourish. During that first year, many players thought he was too nice and not tough at all. Flash Hollett discovered this belief was mistaken one night when he high-sticked Apps, knocking out two teeth. Apps dropped his gloves and pummeled Hollett, but he got into only two other skirmishes in his whole career. In 1941-42, he went the whole season without getting a single penalty and was awarded the Lady Byng Trophy for his gentlemanly play. At the end of that season, he led the Leafs to the most improbable Stanley Cup win in NHL history, a series against Detroit that he calls his career highlight. The Leafs lost the first three games of the finals to the Red Wings but somehow won the next four in a row to win the Cup, the only time this has happened.
Apps played on a line with Gord Drillon and Bob Davidson, and this unit quickly became the team's best line. He teamed with Harry Watson and Bill Ezinicki after the war, once again forming a powerful offensive unit. Watson and Ezinicki were ideal linemates for Apps because they could score goals and take advantage of Apps' ability to draw players to him before passing the puck.
Apps once crashed into the goal post during the 1942-43 season, breaking his leg. He missed almost half the season, and one day during his time off for his injury he went into owner Conn Smythe's office with a check for $1,000. "He was getting $6,000 for the season," Smythe recollected, "and he came to me and said, 'Conn, I'm making more than I deserve. I want to give you this check.' Well, I almost died of heart failure. Of course, I refused his check. I felt that anyone who thought in such terms was bound to square off what he thought was a debt the following season." At the end of that season, while in the prime of his career, he left the team to join the Canadian Army. There he stayed for two years until the war was over. When he resumed his career, he put the captain's "C" back on his sweater and promptly picked up where he left off.
NHL.com 100 Greatest Players said:"Apps had more to do with the image the Leafs in the 1940s as Canada's team - the good guys, the very good guys - than any other player," author Jack Batten wrote in his book "The Leafs in Autumn." "He looked so dashing on the ice, all that speed and skill. And off the ice, he was the last word in pure vessels, a teetotaler, a non-smoker, a Baptist steeped in moral propriety, the model team captain."
Legends of Hockey - Spotlight (Pinnacle) said:While there were several astonishing moments that spring, there was no surprise in the leadership of Syl Apps. He led the playoffs with 9 assists and tied with Don Grosso of the Red Wings with 14 playoff points. In the final alone, Apps scored 3 goals, assisted on 4 others and collected 7 points.
While the Conn Smythe Trophy was still more than two decades away from being introduced, a group of hockey historians with the Society of International Hockey Research (SIHR) judged that had there been such a trophy in 1941-42, it would have been presented to Syl Apps. He was named one of the Three Stars in four of the six semi-final games against the New York Rangers and helped turn the Stanley Cup final around with a goal and an assist in the pivotal fourth game and then scored two goals and added three assists in Toronto's 9-3 laugher over Detroit in Game Five.
Syl Apps enjoyed many pinnacles, but no finer moment than accepting the Stanley Cup on behalf of his Toronto Maple Leafs in the most dramatic comeback series ever to be played in the National Hockey League.
Edmonton Journal 22 Nov 1939 - Irvin Joins Jack Adams said:He (Irvin) called Apps the "picture player" and Taylor and Morenz great individualists. Those fellows weren't in it with Syl as a playmaker," Irvin contended. "Aurel Joliat got a lot of passes from Morenz, but nothing like the plays that Apps works with Gordon Drillon.
The Gazette 03 Apr 1939 - Leafs Take Series Against Red Wings - CP said:...
Some of the critics have laid Drillon's great goal-getting feats in the past to passes provided by his team-mates, particularly his cenreman, Syl Apps, one of the game's great playmakers. This was in spite of the fact that Drillon has been improving steadily as a back-checker and a maker of plays himself.
The Ottawa Citizen 15 Mar 1941 said:...
The big question mark of the Leafs' hopes remain attached to the possibilities of Syl Apps taking his place between Gordie Drillon and Nick Metz to complete the line which has proved a nightmare to NHL goalies all season.
Who's Who in Hockey said:Syl Apps was the Bobby Orr of the pre-WWII era (except of course, that Bobby was a defenseman), and for some time beyond...long and lean, Syl developed a graceful skating style...thanks to Syl's crisp passes, Drillon led the NHL in scoring...
BraveCanadian referencing the Globe and Mail article said:Apps and Lynn Patrick were the last two standing in a speed competition in the NHL in 1942. Apps ended up just barely beating Patrick.
Their times around the rink?
Lynn Patrick
Lap 1: 15s flat, Lap 2: 14 4/5s, Lap 3 (tiebreak): 15s flat
Syl Apps
Lap 1: 15s flat, Lap 2: 14 4/5s, Lap 3 (tiebreak): 14 4/5s.
Howie Meeker said:I met a lot of important people: Winston Churchill, the Queen twice. But if anybody in this world had the right to think they were a little bit better than anybody else, Syl Apps did. But he didn’t. He was one of us. What a man.
Vince Lunny in Sport Magazine said:"He's a Rembrandt on the ice, a Nijinsky at the goalmouth," Vince Lunny wrote in "Sport Magazine." "He plays with such grace and precision, you get the impression that every move is the execution of a mental image conceived long before he goes through the motions."
Red Wings coach/general manager Jack Adams said:the greatest center I have ever seen
Teeder Kennedy said:as fine a man as ever lived.
Syl Apps: My Grandfather's Leafs said:When you get into the stories of most players, they basically come off as human. They have their strengths and their faults, some tending more to one side than the other, as we all do. Syl Apps, though, reads as though he was something dreamed up by a comic-book writer. Tall, athletic, a beautiful skater with fantastic hands, he captained one of the most famous hockey teams on the planet to multiple championships. At the same time, he's the sort of ramrod-straight character who never so much as utters a curse word. He's Clark Kent as well as Superman. Jack Batten described him as "the Stainless Hero."
Maple Leafs Top-100 said:The six-foot, 185-pounds centre had a determination to go to the net. Apps was a clean player and would rarely display any temper, but woe to anyone who dared to challange him too strongly. His leadership skills were never more evident than when he led the Leafs back from a three-game-to-none deficit against Detroit.
Trail of the Stanley Cup said:Jack Adams, the Detroit manager, was particulary impressed with Apps whom he rated as even greater than Howie Morenz.
Great Centremen: Stars of Hockey's Golden Age said:When one mentions the “prototypical” captain of a NHL team, the first name that often comes to mind for long-time hockey fans is Syl Apps…similarly, although Bobby Orr, Guy Lafleur and Dave Keon are contenders for the title of the best skater in league history, once again, the choice of most experts is Syl Apps…Apps was a hard working but clean player, seldom putting his team at a disadvantage by taking penalties…in contrast, with that one do-or-die win under their belts, and Syl Apps’ highly focused leadership, the Maple Leafs were on fire…Apps’ skating abilities were legendary around the league. He was not only a graceful skater, he was also very fast…to raise funds to help him out, the Leafs held a contest at Maple Leaf Gardens to see who was the fastest skater in the league. Each NHL team sent their fastest skater to compete. Apps easily defeated great skaters like William “Flash” Hollett and Doug Bentley, to claim the crown as the NHL’s fastest man.
Jim Dorey said:He represents what pro athletes should be. He was the Jean Beliveau of English Canada.
Ted Kennedy said:Everyone who ever wanted to play for the Leafs looked to Syl as their inspiration. He was a great, great man.
Conn Smythe said:He is the greatest player ever to wear a Leafs uniform.
Milt Schmidt said:Syl Apps was probably the greatest player I ever played against. Syl was a player that you could concentrate on the game of hockey - you never had to worry about any dirtiness or anything like that.
Red Kelly said:I didn't realize how fast he could skate, the first time I played against him, and he got the puck at center ice and he came down, and he went by me on defense. Fortunately somebody went offside. He could really skate.
Frank Orr said:The Beliveau of his time - a smooth-skating, elegant player of extraordinary athletic ability, who had no fear of Smythe, and although he was highly skilled offensively, he spoke the defense-first gospel of coach Hap Day to his mates.
The Victoria Daily Times 31 Dec 1935 said:...
There's the case of Paul Thompson, now considered the greatest left-winger in the National Hockey League. A few years ago, when the Cooks, Bill and Bun, and Frank Boucher were at the peak of their form, Paul was a member of the New York Rangers. He saw little action, only getting into games occasionally. Paul finally persuaded Patrick to sell him, and a deal was completed by which he went to Chicago. Ever since then, due to more action, he has been improving, until to-day he is an outstanding star.
Joe Pelletier said:Paul Thompson was one of the top players in the National Hockey League during the tough days of the 1930s. He led the Chicago Blackhawks in scoring six times in his eight seasons in the Windy City.
Often toiling on the second line notably with Murray Murdoch and Butch Keeling and sometimes with Alex Gray and Reg Mackey, Thompson's line always played second fiddle to the Frank Boucher-Bill Cook-Bun Cook trio that dominated the entire league in those days.
It wasn't until Thompson joined the Chicago Blackhawks that his offensive numbers took off. Traded for Art Somers and Vic Desjardins, Thompson slotted in nicely on the Hawks top line with Doc Romnes and Mush March. Thompson would twice top the 20 goal mark. In both of those seasons, 1934 and 1938, he led the Hawks to Stanley Cup championships.
A two time all star, Thompson totaled 153 goals and 179 assists for 332 points in his 582 game career. He would turn to coaching the Hawks in retirement, lasting 6 seasons.
"Paul Thompson was an excellent player," recalled former teammate Cully Dahlstrom. "He was great around the net and shooting the puck."
Legends of Hockey said:Paul Thompson was a skillful left-winger during his 13 years in the NHL beginning in 1926-27. He was a well-rounded player who could check as well as contribute on offense in a career that yielded three Stanley Cups. The slick forward was also the younger brother of star netminder Tiny Thompson.
He was a solid role player for five years and helped the club win its first Stanley Cup in 1928. In October 1931, he was traded to the Chicago Black Hawks for Art Somers and Vic Desjardins.
Thompson hit the 20-goal mark twice during his eight years with the Hawks. In 1933-34, he formed an effective line with Doc Romnes and Mush March when Chicago won its first Stanley Cup. Four years later, he scored a personal-best 22 goals and notched four post-season markers to help the club win its second Cup of the decade. He retired during the 1938-39 season to coach the Hawks for the last 27 games of the schedule.
DAL MacDonald - The Gazette 06 Mar 1936 (making his allstar picks) said:"Left wing goes to Paul Thompson of the Black Hawks. No doubt someone will ask, "Have you see the scoring averages lately?" Yes, Schriner is leading in both sections in scoring, but he's still a long way from being the hockey player that Paul Thompson is, to our way of thinking."
Elmer Dulmag in The Vancouver Sun Feb 8 1936 regarding Thompson in relation to Conacher said:SWEENEY RISES
So it has come to a point where the names don't count. A sophomore from Calgary, Sweeney Schriner, of New York Americans, moved up to the head of the scoring in mid-January, although critics are hesitating to call Shriner a great player. They concede readily that he is a fast thinker, a deadly shot from close range.
Showing scant respect for the super-stars, Paul Thompson and Doc Romnes of Chicago Black Hawks, Bill Thoms and Buzz Boll of Toronto, Leroy Goldsworthy of Montreal Canadiens and other have come to establish themselves as equals. Little Aurel Joliet of Canadiens, veteran of 13 seasons is up with the leaders.
Only a year ago, Charlie Conacher was hockey's No. 1 individual. today he is top-salary man of the Leafs who is finding the going pretty tough. He shoots harder than anyone else, but he's checked harder than anyone else, too. He isn't as good a back checker as, for instance, Thoms, Boll, or Thompson.
In the Times Union on 27 Feb 1936 said:"...it must be said that the selections of Cecil Dillon, Dave Schriner and Paul Thompson have been made only out of deference to their scoring records. Of the three, Thompson comes closest to being a team player, while Schriner is still a hockey player in the making. Of the three, Thompson is also the only one who gives conscious thought to his shots."
Calgary Herald 09 Mar 1938 said:Not the easiest thing in the world to do is select a player to patrol the left wing when it is necessary to confine the selection to one and "Toe" Blake, Lyn Patrick, "Busher" Jackson, "Sweeney" Scheriner and Paul Thompsom loom up as candidates. The veteran of this group, and our choice for all-star rating is Paul Thompson, in his 12th year in the big time and spearhead of whatever attack the Chicago Black Hawks can be said to possess. A great team player, and a brilliant soloist when the occasion demands, Paul gets the call over the others for his day-in and day-out consistently good play.
Star Phoenix 04 Apr 1934 - CP said:Black Hawks exhibited a close, backchecking game as the first period opened. XXX and Paul Thompson fired long shots and then broke up Wing attacks with accurate pokechecks.
Murray Murdoch said:Conacher thought that when he went into the locker room between periods that I was going to go with him. [Along with linemates Paul Thompson and Butch Keeling] We shadowed them pretty good. When that line came on the ice, we had to go on against them.
The Boston Globe 12 Feb 1936 - Babe Siebert Leads Bruins to 7-1 Win said:...
Shore moved into step alongside "Dit" and when Paul Thomspon poke-checked the puck away from Aubrey Victor at the Chicago blue line, the Boston leader swooped on it.
http://blackhawkup.com/2014/08/01/blackhawks-top-100-69-paul-thompson/ said:Thompson scored 20 goals twice in Chicago and he scored 15 or more goals in 7 out of his 8 season with the Blackhawks. Thompson was a 2-time all-star but his biggest contribution during his playing days was being on both the 34 and 38 Stanley Cup winners in Chicago. Thompson was an all around good player that didn't shy away from any aspect of the game. He played physical, played in front of the net, and still had an excellent shot.
Calgary Herald 08 Jan 1943 said:Hextall One of the Best Two-way Players
Coach Frank Boucher of New York Rangers calls his right wing star, Bryan Hextall, one of the greatest two-way hockey players to hit the National Hockey League in years. He points out that "Hexie" not only does a fine sniping chore, but is one of the toughest and most effective back-checkers in the game.
The Morning Call 09 Jan 1944 - Bryan Hextall Is Iron Man of Hockey - AP said:As any hockey player or fan who is the toughest fire-eater on ice today and they answer: "Bryan Hextall of the New York Rangers."
This Hex, as his friends call him, is really somthing in puck circles. Not only is he one of the National Hockey League's greatest right wings, but he is the most consistent scorer, and the leading "iron-man."
Bryan plays no favorites. He hands out more body-checks in a night than 99 per cent of the defense men. Nothing pleases him more than to get an opponent, preferably a well-proportioned one, in a corner and battle for the puck. Should the opponent choose to get rough you will invariably see Hextall skate out of the corner with the puck on the blade of his stick as his opponent slowly picks himself up from the ice.
There is no compromise in Hextall's makeup. He plays to win always. And he shoots just as hard as he checks. Bryan is the only player now in the game who has scored 20 or more goals in five conseecutive seasons, a feat comparable to batting .300 in baseball. He's well on his way to repeat the stunt for the sixth year.
Hex turned professional in Februrary, 1934, with the Vancouver Lions of the Pacific Coast Hockey league, and from his first start he has never missed a regular game, play-off, exhibition or practice.
The iron-muscled wheat farmer has played more than 550 NHL games. When the current campaign ends, he hopes to have worked in at least 580 skirmishes. That will mean his appearances in the first 21 contests next season will break Murry Murdoch's record of 600 consecutive league performances. "Mr. Durability" weighs 183 points, stands 5 feet, 10 inches tall and has particularly large bones, and he's plenty tough. Ask any pro hockey player.
The Gazette 18 Mar 1944 said:...
Hextall, though playing on a club that has been hopelessly out of the running all seasons, is one of the truly great forwards in the NHL.
The Gazette 20 Jan 1942 - Playing The Field - Dink Carroll said:...
"That's when a power play is on," Lynn (Patrick) explaind. "Bryan gets a lot of his goals that way because he can really blast the puck without having to take much time to get set."
Philadelphia Daily News Nov 16 1986 said:At 5-10, 195 pounds, Bryan Hextall Sr. was a bullish winger who could skate over an enemy defenseman without breaking stride. He played tough, but seldom fought. He didn't feel a man had to drop his gloves to prove himself on the ice.
overpass said:Hextall was the best player on the best line in the league. Like Maurice Richard after him, he played his off wing, a LH shot on the right wing.
He had a late start, making the NHL at age 24. And he wasn't a star after 30 - he took two years off because of the war, and like many players his age had trouble getting back up to speed in the faster post-war NHL. As a result, he didn't have as many years as a star as some others - especially Bucyk and Shanahan - but he was a consistent scorer and an iron man during his short prime.
Hextall became a star in 1939-40 on the Rough House line with Phil Watson and Dutch Hiller. They played against other team's top lines all season, famously shutting down the Kraut line in the 1940 playoffs. Hextall led the league in regular season goals, and scored an overtime Cup-winning goal in the playoffs. He continued his scoring success in the next three seasons, forming the most dangerous scoring line in the league with Watson and Lynn Patrick.
overpass said:1939-40 - The Rangers had three strong lines that played together all season. The team was incredibly healthy so changes weren't required because of injuries. All three lines scored at least 35 goals.
Hiller - Watson - Hextall (44 goals and checked top lines)
Shibicky - N Colville - M Colville (37 goals)
L Patrick - Smith - Macdonald (35 goals)
The lines were the same for the first half of the 1940-41 season, except that Alf Pike was in the lineup as a 10th forward and was in the mix with the third line. Phil Watson, who had been second to Cowley in league scoring for much of the first half, missed 8 games to injury and the lines became
Shibicky - Smith - Hextall
Patrick - N Colville - M Colville
Hiller - Pike - MacDonald
After Watson returned, he was back with Hextall on the top line, with first Shibicky and then Patrick. Hiller had a poor second half to the season and was banished to the third line and traded after the season.
Patrick played with Watson and Hextall in each of 1941-42 and 1942-43.
The two constants for the Rangers lines in Hextall's prime were:
1. Neil and Mac Colville played together
2. Bryan Hextall and Phil Watson played together.
Everything else changed at various times.
It's interesting that Watson was a RHS and Hextall a LHS, but Hextall played on his right. Can anyone think of any other great C-W combinations where they were on each other's backhands on the rush? Edit: I got one - Ovechkin and Backstrom.
Who's who in hockey said:He had a terrific burst of speed , was appropriately tough , and could stickhandle with the best of them.
Joe Pelletier said:Bryan Hextall was one of the highest skilled and most respected players ever to grace a sheet of NHL ice.
He was also one of hockey's hardest hitters. Herb Goren, a long time reporter for the New York Sun once said "He was the hardest bodychecking forward I had seen in more than forty years of watching hockey."
He scored 20 goals in 7 consecutive seasons back in the days when 20 goals was a benchmark of a very good player.
Hex may have continued on as the best right winger in hockey had his career not been interrupted by World War II. Hextall served in the Canadian military during the 1944-45 season. He would miss most of the 1945-46 season as well due to a serious stomach and liver disorder
The most famous goal Bryan scored immortalized him in New York sporting history forever, although he didn't know that at the time. Bryan scored the overtime winning goal of game six of the 1940 Stanley Cup game against Toronto
In 1939-40 and 1940-41 Hextall led all NHL snipers in goals scored. In 1941-42 he captured the Art Ross trophy as the league's leading point scorer. On four other occasions he was in the top ten of scoring. With three selections to the First All-Star team and another to the second All-Star team, it is obvious that Bryan Hextall was the dominant right winger of the era directly before the arrival of Rocket Richard and Gordie Howe.
Hockey Legends said:He would become a permanent fixture with the Blueshirts the following year playing on his "off wing," many years before the tactic was to become common practice in the league. Hextall found that he had a better shooting angle, as a left-handed shot, by cutting in on goal from the right wing
Hextall was considered the dominant right winger of his day
NYHistory said:Bryan Aldwyn Hextall was a key piece in the superb Rangers teams of the pre-World War II era that won the Stanley Cup in 1940
Dennis Hextall said:Bryan Sr. scored 20 or more goals in seven of his 12 NHL seasons. "A 20- goal season then was the equivalent of a 40-goal season today," Dennis Hextall said. "It was a different game. If you scored 20 then, you were a helluva player."
"Our father never talked about his career," said Dennis Hextall, now a manufacturers representative in Detroit. "He was a modest guy. If he had pushed himself (in the press) he could have been an NHL coach. But it wasn't his nature. He was low-key.
"Our father would come to our junior games," Dennis said, "and he'd curse us out if we fought. I had 20 goals and 20 major penalties (fighting) in one season. My father said, 'You'd have 30 (goals) if you didn't spend so much time in the box.'
"I told him, 'Dad, if something happens out there, I'm not gonna back away.' He understood, he just didn't like the cheap penalties. He said there was a difference between being tough and being dumb."
Ron Hextall said:"He told me to quit taking dumb penalties," the Flyers' goalie said. "He told me to leave the fighting to the other players. I had a pretty short temper back then."
James Dunn said:"He is a very clean-living individual and an excellent ambassador for professional hockey."
Bryan Hextall Jr said:"I never realized how great my father was until I got to the NHL," Dennis Hextall said. "That's when I saw what it meant to be a first-team All-Star. He was the Gordie Howe of his era.
"I saw him play in a senior league back home (Manitoba). He was strong even then. He never slapped the puck, everything was with the wrists. He'd come in, snap those wrists . . . boom."
The Trail of the Stanley Cup said:Bauer was almost identical in size to Cooney Weiland and the play of the slick and tricky winger resembled that of the former member of the "Dynamite Line" in many ways. He was a favourite of Art Ross who rated the "Krauts" line as tops.
Although a small player compared to his six-foot linemates, he could hustle and kept out of trouble as his penalty record shows.
Ultimate Hockey said:Even though he was a skater, stick-handler, and play-maker par excellent, critics saw him as being a tad small for upper-level play.
Eddie Shore: and That Old Time Hockey said:The "Krauts" worked ideally together, despite being outwardly different. The eldest, Bobby Bauer was twenty-two years old, personable, poised, and the least self-conscious of the three when off the ice. Bobby was also smallest Kraut, at five foot eleven and 150 pounds, but this did not stop him from becoming the line's goal-getter, and his first season with the Bruins he netted twenty of them.
Boston Bruins: Greatest Players and Moments said:It was hard not to like Bobby Bauer, even if you had he misfortune of playing against the Kitchener Kid.
Bauer played the game according to Hoyle or whoever is was who wrote the rules that said THIS is the proper way to work in the National Hockey League.
He was an exemplary performer whose skill only was overshadowed by the fact that he played on the same line as his childhood chums, Mitl Schmidt and Woody Dumart.
....
Bauer emerged as the cleanest player of the group and had the silverware to prove it. He won the Lady Byng Trophy for good sportsmanship in 1940, 1941 and again in 1947.
Legends of Hockey said:Bobby Bauer successfully fused skilful play and sportsmanship during his 10 years with the Boston Bruins, earning much acclaim as the right winger on the famed Kraut Line with Milt Schmidt and Woody Dumart.
Legends of Hockey - Spotlight said:The Kraut Line helped the Bruins dominate the NHL during the late-thirties and early-forties. Dumart, the line's leftwinger, owned a heavy shot. Schmidt, the centre, was a tenacious worker, equally adept at scoring, checking and leading the Bruins. Bauer, small by NHL standards at 5'6" and 155 pounds, was the clever playmaker.
Vancouver Sun said:Bobby Bauer was many things to many people. To his opponents of the late 30s and the early 40s, he was a gnat, a buzzing, flying, stinging gnat - too fast to swat, too tiny to hate and too skilled to ignore. To the Boston Bruins, he was the thinking part of the Kraut line.
Milt Schmidt said:He was always thinking and a very clever playmaker. Bobby was our team. He was my right arm.
....
I always maintained Bobby was the brains of our line. It's like winning the Stanley Cup all over again to have all three of us in there (the Hall of Fame).
Woody Dumart said:He had a knack for getting between the boards and the opposing winger and making a play. He had a good shot, was a good skater and stickhandler and he had a way of finding holes. He and Milt would pass the puck back and forth. I got a garbage goals.
Babe Pratt said:If you dumped him into the boards he bounced back at you like a rubber ball.
Jack McGill said:Bauer was the little professor, the guy whose brains made the link click.
Greatest Hockey Legends.com: Ed WestfallGreatest Hockey Legends said:With his strong defensive background he quickly established himself as a top defensive forward, combining intellect and speed to shut down the opposition's top gunners. Later on his career, the Bruins added a feisty face-off expert in Derek Sanderson. Sanderson centered Westfall as the two combined to be one of the greatest defensive checking units of all time. The two especially excelled as penalty killers, something that was very necessary on the old Big Bad Bruins teams.
The Milwaukee Journal Apr 27 1970 said:(The Bruins make it into the Finals by defeating the Hawks)
...
The Bruins' Ed Westfall had another outstanding game guarding Bobby Hull of the Black Hawks. He held Hull to only 4 shots on goal and Hull failed to score. For the series, Hull, who had 38 goals in the regular season, was held to nine shots, no goals and two assists.
...
The Tuscaloosa News - Google News Archive SearchThe Tuscaloosa News said:The Boston Bruins are in last place in the National Hockey League, but they appear to have found a formula to stop scoring leader Bobby Hull of the Chicago Black Hawks.
The formula: assign Ed Westfall, a converted defenseman, as Hull's virtual skating partner whenever the Bruins play the first-place Hawks.
...
Boston coach Milt Schmidt assigned the rugged Westfall to shadow Hull in a desperation move early in the season. In the last four games, Hull hasn't been able to score when Westfall has been on the ice.
...
Hull who leads the NHL with 32 goals and 55 points in 31 games, became irritated with Westfall's defensive tactics and received three minor penalties in the second period.
...
Reading Eagle - Google News Archive SearchReading Eagle Dec 22 1976 AP said:(as a veteran captain of the young up and coming Islanders)
...
"Good old 18," he said, motioning towards a teammate. "I don't think there's anything that shakes the old guy. Sometimes he looks like he's just floating out there; he's so smooth."
Trottier referred to Ed Westfall, a right winger who was playing junior hockey when the 20-year-old center was born.
...
"The old guy's still got some jets, doesn't he? Can you believe the way he broke away for that second goal?" Trottier asked.
SI - No Room At The Top For Me - Oct 19 1970 - Harry Sinden - Mark Mulvoy said:...
We had Eddie Westfall to stop Hull, something Eddie does better than anyone in the NHL. Eddie is smart. He doesn't aggravate Bobby. He doesn't stay too close to him. He circles around, but always is in position when Hull gets the puck.
...
Lewiston Evening Journal - Google News Archive SearchLewiston Evening Journal May 15 1972 said:...such ace penalty killers as Derek Sanderson and Ed Westfall...
SI - Waiting for Bobby - 10.09.72 said:...And they lost Eddie Westfall, who with Sanderson formed the best penalty-killing unit this side of Valeri Kharlamov and Vladimir Petrov...
The Complete Handbook of Pro Hockey 1972 said:A handyman who can play either defense or up front...Teams with Sanderson to give Bruins an expert penalty killing team that set a league record for shorthanded goals last season...A fine checking forward who often inherits defensive assignments against high scorers like Chicago's Bobby Hull...Not a fast skater but is always working...Enjoyed his best scoring season last year with 25 goals-seven more than he ever had before-and 59 points, 17 more than ever before...Likes his role as a defensive specialist on the power-packed Bruins
The Complete Handbook of Pro Hockey 1973 said:One of the best penalty killers in NHL and not a bad right wing when taking his regular turn either...Vital cog on two Stanley Cup champion teams in last three years at Boston...Surprisingly left exposed in expansion draft when Bruins chose to protect youngsters instead...Came up to Bruins as a defenseman and can still take a turn there if needed...Defensive specialist who does a workmanlike checking job
The Complete Handbook of Pro Hockey 1975 said:A two-way player who is always a two-way captain, as Islanders' leader and pilot of his own plane...Takes pride in being club's elder statesman, although he says, "I look at all these kids we have and wonder where the last 12 years went,"...Scored seven shorthanded goals with '70-71 Bruins, has six Stanley Cup shorthanded goals.
The Complete Handbook of Pro Hockey 1978 said:Smart, poised veteran of 16 NHL seasons...Respected by teammates and rivals alike as true professional...Leads by example...Gave up Islanders' captaincy last season..."I felt I was being a good captain by stepping down because we're a young team and need a young captain," he says...Outstanding penalty killer, faceoff specialist, defensive forward...Can play right wing, center or defense...Has no immediate plans to retire..."When the top of the hill seems too far to climb, then I'll know it's time to retire," he says...
The Complete Handbook of Pro Hockey 1979 said:Class guy who has been described with every positive adjective...Remarkably conditioned despite 17 NHL seasons behind him...Still a superb penalty killer and more than an occasional right wing...Also top player at getting faceoffs...Has played every position but goal during career
SI - Changing Of The Guard - May 19 1975 - Mark Mulvoy said:...
Islander Captain Eddie Westfall and penalty-killing mate Lorne Henning shut out the vaunted Philadelphia power play...
SI - NHL - Oct 18 1976 said:With the emergence of Potvin, who scored 31 goals and 67 assists and won the Norris Trophy as the NHL's best defenseman; the dazzle of the young line of Billy Harris, Clark Gillies and Rookie of the Year Bryan Trottier; the goaltending of Resch and Smith, who together yielded only 190 goals, second to Montreal; and the steadiness of Hart, Bert Marshall and Eddie Westfall, the once-abominable Islanders moved into the 100-point class last season. "People think we need a 50-goal scorer to win the cup," Hart says, "but I'm not so sure. We've got guys like Harris and Gillies who can score a lot—and a lot of guys who can score a little. The key is how we react now that we're no longer an underdog."
SI - Cup Play: A Whole New Game - Apr 25 1966 Martin Kane said:...Hull is pretty much accustomed to being followed about the rink. All season long he had been shadowed by experts like Claude Provost of Montreal and Ed Westfall of Boston....
ESPN said:The 22-year-old Swede signed a 10-year, $67 million deal Monday, a major investment in a player who has rapidly developed into one of the best centers in the NHL.
Washington Post said:So how to evaluate someone’s season without the input of that someone himself? Numbers seem a reasonable place to start. For the first time in his career, Backstrom led the NHL with 60 assists. His 78 points ranked sixth, his 1.96 points-per-60 minutes at even strength led the Capitals and 53.9 percent shot-attempt rate graded second on the team, his best personal total since 2010-11.
He recorded Washington’s only hat trick of the season, against current Eastern Conference finalist Tampa Bay on Dec. 13 at home. He moved into first place on the Capitals’ all-time assists list, passing both Alex Ovechkin and Michal Pivonka with two on March 15 against Boston. On the same day he skated in his 500th career NHL game, he logged his 500th career NHL point, a milestone only five active players have reached faster. He did not, however, earn his first All-Star Game appearance.
Barry Trotz said:“What doesn’t he do well?” Trotz said in March. “Not a whole lot. He’s one of those guys that’s so under-the-radar, he’s so efficient that sometimes you wonder, he just blends in, then he gets the puck and good things happen … He’s very efficient and very good. He’s quietly one of the leaders of our hockey team that doesn’t get a lot of praise.”
Backstrom is the only active player in the NHL that has recorded at least 50 assists in six consecutive seasons. Last season, he became the 26th player in NHL history and one of two active players (Joe Thornton, San Jose) to accomplish this feat. Of the 25 other players to reach this mark, 23 are in the Hockey Hall of Fame. The other two, Thornton and Henrik Sedin, are not yet eligible for the Hall of Fame. Additionally, Backstrom is the only player in the NHL to record at least 20 goals and 50 assists in the last four consecutive seasons. Backstrom's 0.69 assists per game mark since 2014-15 are tied for fourth in the NHL among players with at least 100 games played during that span. In addition, his 668 career assists rank fourth among active players.
Since his NHL debut on Oct. 5, 2007 against the Atlanta Thrashers, Backstrom leads the NHL with 668 assists despite ranking 17th in games played during that span. Additionally, Backstrom's 295 power play assists rank first during that span and his 368 power play points rank second only to Ovechkin's 389. Backstrom's 295 power play assists are tied for 40th on the NHL's all-time list. Backstrom has assisted on a franchise-high 255 of Ovechkin's 686 goals (37.2 percent). Only three players in NHL history have set up a teammate more: Wayne Gretzky (364; Jari Kurri), Bryan Trottier (310; Mike Bossy) and Henrik Sedin (280; Daniel Sedin).
In 60 international games for Sweden, including the World Championship (2006, 2007, 2008, 2012, 2017) and the Olympics (2010, 2014), Backstrom has recorded 42 points (12g, 30a) to help Sweden win two World Championship Gold Medals and an Olympic Silver Medal. He ranks fifth in NHL history in assists among Swedish-born players and seventh in points.
The Hockey News - 2014 Season Preview said:Ranked 23 among all players and 6 among defensemen
The 2013 Norris Trophy winner won on the strength of his offensive and physical tools. Now he has to show he can play the truly hard minutes like the penalty kill and log big ice time.
The Hockey News - 2015 Season Preview said:Ranked 13 among all players and 4 among defensemen
His ability to make a difference in games has been well documented. Nobody soaks up the limelight better than Subban, and few players excel in it as spectacularly as he does.
The Hockey News - 2016 Season Preview said:Ranked 22 among all players and 6 among defensemen
Nobody embraces celebrity in the fishbowl that is Montreal better than Subban. What's even better is he wants to be a difference maker on the ice and relishes the challenge of big games.
The Hockey News - 2019 Season Preview said:Ranked 24 among all players and 4 among defensemen
He hits hard, shoots hard and skates effortlessly. Subban is one of the biggest personalities in the game, be he backs it up with his play in both ends.
Rafik Soliman said:P.K. Subban is a spectacular puck-moving defenseman who can take big influence on a game with his end-to-end rushes. Is a very good skater and is able to shake of fore-checking forwards with quick stops or sharp turns and decent puck-control. Possesses a hard and accurate slap-shot, which is especially on the power play a weapon. Battles hard on every shift, but discipline is an issue as he takes stupid and often badly-timed penalties.
The Hockey News said:Has outstanding skating ability and excels at rushing up ice with the puck. Can quarterback a power play and also initiate a lot of contact. Displays a flair for the dramatic. Shoots the puck with aplomb and also gets under opponents' skin. Is adept at playing a shutdown role. Needs to simplify his game, since he has a tendency to run around in his own end from time to time. Also tries to do too much with the puck. On-ice antics may at times annoy his own teammates and the coaching staff. Could stand to become a bit more disciplined on the ice.
The Hockey News - 2019 Season Preview said:Panarin is deadly thanks to his shot, his creativity and his intelligent two-way play.
The Hockey News said:Is a supremely skilled winger who oozes creativity and is equally adept at setting up linemates and finishing off plays himself. His puck skills are off the charts and his shot is wicked. Is a true game-changing talent in the NHL. Does not have ideal size for the National Hockey League game, so he could stand to add more bulk and get physically stronger in order to continue to thrive at the highest level over an extended period of time.