That's a bit of a simplification.
Hockey's connection to hat tricks is a bit more complicated than that.
Hat tricks are a combination of cricket's hat tricks and the culture within Montreal and New York at the time.
Hats were a big part of hockey culture at that time. It was customary to tip your hat to a great performance (in a performative way). Hat tipping was a big part of early NHL history, there was a lot of culture built around hockey and hats.
The Hat Trick (or Toronto Hat Trick) came from when a player wanted to buy a hat but couldn't afford it. The store owner, Taft, told the player he could have the hat if he scored 3 goals on the Leafs. That player, Alex Kaleta who was never a prolific scorer, went on to get 3 goals and the store owner started a promotion to give a free hat to any player who could score it. Toronto hat trick used the cricket term but also the double connotation of tricking the store. It spread pretty quick, first to Montreal where the Henri Henri hat company offered the same (throwing Hats on the ice started there, they printed cards to tuck into your hat to identify it so you could get it back) and then became quite established when the New York Ranger's junior team built much of their brand around the Hat Trick tradition.
So saying that it comes from cricket is an oversimplification for sure.
Explore the history of the Hat Trick in the NHL and Henri Henri's iconic role in this cherished tradition. Timeless elegance meets hockey milestones.
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If you were entertaining a visitor from Mars and brought your visitor to a hockey game, how would you explain all those hats thrown onto the ice by fans in the crowd after a player scores three goals in the game? Admit it, the hockey hat trick is an action that requires some explanation for those
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