Benedict in the Cup Finals
1920 Finals
Ottawa wins 3-2 off two goals from Nighbor, who receives high praise
Senators 1 - Metropolitans 0
The Toronto World - March 23, 1920
The players were exhausted, Ottawa were outplaying the westerners, who drove long shots at Benedict.
Ottawa shuts out Seattle 3-0. Lots of complaints about ice quality
Senators 2 - Metropolitans 0
The Montreal Gazette - March 25, 1920
Seattle had several chances, but the defence of the Senators proved invulnerable and they failed to penetrate the nets behind Benedict.
The ice was heavier in the second period. Benedict saved two in a row off Morris and Riley. Walker came down and Benedict caught his offering.
Riley fooled Nigbor and Gerard but Benedict knocked down his drive.
Foyston took a whack at the disc and Benedict had to work fast to catch his shot.
Morris was robbed of a sure goal when Benedict when to his knees.
Seattle wins 3-1 on the back of Holmes and two goals from Foyston. Nighbor and Darragh leave the game halfway through due to exhaustion.
Senators 2 - Metropolitans 1
The Montreal Gazette - March 29, 1920
Seattle clearly outplayed the Senators Saturday night and had it not been for some miraculous work on the part of Clint Benedict in the Ottawa nets the score would have been larger in favour of the Pacific Coast club.
Foston kept bombarding Benedict.
Seattle finished strong again and were driving shot after shot at Benedict as the period drew to a close.
Benedict was probably Ottawa's best man on the night's play. Some of the lanky goalkeeper's saves bordered on the miraculous.
Seattle wins 5-2. Foyston and Nighbor get 2 goals each
Senators 2 - Metropolitans 2
The Saskatoon Phoenix - March 31, 1920
Benedict and Gerard were not as steady as usual and they failed to fathom Seattle's cleverly executed forward pass.
Sens win 6-1 on a Darragh hat trick. Bobby Rowe gets high sticked by Gerard in the second and leaves the game. Boucher gets very high praise
Senators 3 - Metropolitans 2
The Toronto World - April 2, 1920
Foyston wiggled in and Benedict cleared cleverly.
A lively session resulted at the Ottawa end with Benedict going down on the ice for over a minute stopping shot after shot.
The famous Ottawa four-man defence came into being again.
1921 Finals
Vancouver wins 3-1
Senators 0 - Millionaires 1
Saskatoon Phoenix - March 22, 1921
Gerard, Nighbor, and Denneny were particularly brilliant.
Vancouver had much the better play in the closing minutes of the period and Benedict had his hands full.
Nighbor and Gerard were the pick of the easterners so far, both performing well.
Sens wins 4-3 after a late game goal by Punch Broadbent. Lehman gets high praise.
Senators 1 - Millionaires 1
Benedict doesn't get any positive comments
Sens win 3-2
Senators 2 - Millionaires 1
The Montreal Gazette -March 29, 1921
The long followed passing of the goal-keepers again was a feature, Benedict using it at first experimentally, but finding it very useful, made it a very effective part of his game.
Vancouver wins 3-2 after a big game from Alf Skinner, who missed the first period while sick in hospital
Senators 2 - Millionaires 2
The Saskatoon Phoenix - April 1, 1921
The Ottawa Senators showed themselves capable of the greatest skill attainable in the game.
The Ottawa goalie was playing his own game, and cleared with precision, snapping the rubber to the wings with ease.
The Millionaires, however, made more rushes than their opponents and managed to send in about two for every one sent in on Lehman. Very few of those shots were dangerous, being checked by the Ottawa defence men before they received any strength or precision. The Millionaires were almost through many times, but each times their sticks were struck at the crucial moment of shooting.
Vancouver wins 2-1 after another big game from Darragh. The Senators are called the "Greatest Team Ever"
Senators 3 - Millionaires 2
The Saskatoon Phoenix - April 5, 1921
Ottawa is, without a doubt, one of the greatest teams ever collected, and many who were members of the famous "Silver Seven" of Ottawa say the old team has in its successor an even greater exponent of the fastest game being played today.
The Ottawa goalie made good use of the long forward pass allowed by the coast rules and even took to throwing the rubber by hand until stopped by the referee.
Ottawa, with a goal up, played more and more on the defense toward the closing moments while the Millionaires left their defence wide open, all hands being clustered around the Ottawa goal in an effort to gain a goal which would tie the tally. Once Lehman skated out to the blue line after a loose puck and sent in a long shot which got through as far as Benedict.
1923 Finals
Ottawa beats Edmonton 2-1 in OT. Hitchman tied the game late to force OT. Both Nighbor and Benedict get high praise
Senators 1 - Eskimos 0
The Vancouver Sun - March 30, 1923
Speculation as to the relative merits of Keats and Nighbor as claiments to the title of centre-ice emperor was definitely settled, as far as this writer is concerned, in favour of the Ottawa performer. Keats skated a lot more than Nighbor, and did more fancy stick-handling, but the latter made every stroke of his blades and ever motion of his stick count. Known as the greatest defensive forward in the game, he was the savior of the Ottawa citadel times innumerable.
Benedict Again Excels.
For Ottawa, Benedict was more the white-haried boy in goal, and came through with another exhibition that stamped him as the equal of anything ever seen in these parts.
Time and again Edmonton got through the defence, only to have a back-checking forward carry man or puck or both to the corners, or to have Benedict pull off one of his copyrighted saves.
Benedict gets the shutout in a 1-0 victory. Play stopped twice as Benedict got hit in the face with a puck. Broadbent scored early and Ottawa "closed in" the rest of the game. Joe Simpson gets high praise
Senators 2 - Eskimos 0
The Calgary Daily Herald -April 2, 1923
Edmonton played hockey that was good to watch, until they encountered the phalanx directed by Frank Nighbor.
Summarizing the game is an easy task. Ottawa made the game look exactly as they desired. They were masters all the way and when they banged in a goal and dug themselves in for the defence it was Edmonton's only hope to break through.
Trapp came down left wing and drove a hard one at Benecit, the Ottawa goalie saving but the puck dropped on the line and spun like a top before it fell outside.
A rush by Trapp and Morrison succeeded in penetrating the Ottawa defense but Benedict broke up the play.
1926 Finals
Benedict recorded his first of three shutouts as the Maroons win 3-0
Maroons 1 - Cougars 0
The Calgary Daily Herald - March 31, 1926
Benedict is Solid
Patrick sent on relays of subs who tried every combination known to hockey to break down the barrier that Noble and Stewart reared in front of them, but I was all to no purpose. Frederickson played desperately and once or twice tested Benedict, but the Maroon goalie was as solid as a rock.
Victoria were unable to pierce the Montreal defence and the shots that did get to Benedict were all drive from far out.
For a time Benedict was given some work to do and had to skip lively in order to ward off the Victorians' threats.
Another 3-0 victory for the Maroons
Maroons 2 - Cougars 0
The Leader - April 2, 1926
Benedict, in the Maroons' goal, was given considerably more to do than on the previous meeting. The early play was featured by dashes on the part of Waker and Frederickson who kept Benedict busy staving off some burning shots.
Halderson repeated his attacks on the Montreal goal, only to find Benedict still doing business.
Towards the close of the session the Cougars gathered strength for a great effort and in the last minutes kept Benedict busy, but try as they might they could not score.
The fans shrieked when Benedict saved brilliantly from Walker.
Benedict made a sensational save from Walker who had rushed in on a pass from Frederickson.
The Cougars rebound 3-2
Maroons 2 - Cougars 1
The Leader - April 5, 1926
Frederickson, speedy centre of the visiting team, clinched the game by completely tricking the Maroon defence and outguessing Benedict.
The game ended with Benedict being forced to make brilliant save to prevent Russell Oatman from adding to the Coasters' margin.
Frederickson and Walker were giving Benedict many anxious moments, but without result.
Benedict gets his third shutout in four games and Nels Stewart scores twice in a 2-0 victory
Maroons 3 - Cougars 1
The Calgary Daily Herald - April 7, 1926
A superior defensive system, coupled with an unceasing attack, gave the locals their third victory.
Out of the fray Nelson Stewart emerged the star.
Benedict had a comparably easy time in the final minutes of the game.
Frederickson almost scored when he sped through the Maroon defence and burned one from close in on Benedict.
Benedict had to stretch his legs far to block a sizzling shot from Broadbent.
I don't want Benedict to get reduced to a Brian Elliott behind an elite defensive system. While he had "easy" games to play, he also was the star several times on the dynasty. I'm thinking of something like Game 3 in 1920, where he is the best Senator on the ice. His praise is consistent and he succeeds even in 1926 without Nighbor/Gerard.
That being said, it's also very clear he had an "easy" time from 1919-1923 for a goalie. The Ottawa defensive system gets extremely high praise and Nighbor in particular is repeatedly singled out. They played a very defensively sound system and relied on wingers to get goals in tight games. Nighbor formed a trio with Gerard and Boucher to shut opposition down. Broadbent, Darragh, and Denneny were given free reign to play up because the defense was so tight.
In a lot of ways I'm reminded of the Dryden Habs. Multiple HHOF defensemen that would punish you. Defensively elite centres. Offense flowing through speedy wingers. And an all-time great goalie that was elite when needed, but was often not needed to be elite. The key difference, of course, being the Nighbor factor.
Benedict didn't have nearly this level of support in 1926, though I will point out the team's defensive system is frequently highlighted. 3 shutouts in 4 games is something else. And it shows he was not just a body behind a dynasty.
There are a lot of comments about Benedict being a "passing" goalie who would take dump ins and pass the puck up to his skaters. I don't want to read too much into it, but he gets more praise for this than any contemporary.
All in all, I do think Vezina was the better goalie. And Lehman's name jumps off the page repeatedly. But for pre-Gardiner goalies, I'm pretty confident on a top three of Vezina and Benedict/Lehman.