The Rockets came within a few goals of winning their championship years later but had an otherwise fantastic season and rough series with their rivals from Boston.
The Ramblers winning the AHL championship is definitely one of the top moments. The Rockets came within a few goals of winning their championship years later but had an otherwise fantastic season and rough series with their rivals from Boston. And the Quaker City Hockey Club dominated their league in the 1890s, surprising many larger cities that Philadelphia even had a hockey presence — a great start to a great sport!
Speaking of rivals, the Philadelphia Flyers have quite a few traditional rivalries with other clubs. First and foremost with the Pittsburgh Penguins because both are in Pennsylvania. But also with New Jersey, the New York clubs and Boston. Which were predominant rivalries the Philadelphia clubs had before the Flyers era and are there any pertinent anecdotes or incidents on record?
Does your book cover teams that never materialized and why they didn't? I'm thinking of Len Peto's attempts to bring the NHL to Philadelphia after World War 2.
The book does cover Len Peto's attempt, for sure. It covers every attempt to bring NHL hockey to the city, but it does not cover every attempt to bring a professional team at any level (only those minor league teams that actually materialized), mostly because the stories from never-developed minor teams rarely made the news or any official documents. But the NHL attempts, if not in the papers, were certainly in the league's Board of Governor meeting minutes.