As I write this, I'm fighting with some sort of glitch that is freezing up the upload for the final of six videos featuring vintage hockey cards from the NHL's Original 6 teams. This is just a shout out to anyone reading 'Hockey History Hub' that these videos are nearly 100% online at YouTube. If you're reading something here and enjoying this site, then chances are you'll want to kill some time looking at some of the greatest in the game's history on some classic cardboard.
Each of the Original 6 team videos has at least 100 different vintage hockey cards and each video lasts between three and five minutes. Each is produced with what I think is some pretty great background music. So, if you're at work, yes - there is audio so turn it down...
Mostly, the cards are from the 1951-52 to 1979-80 range and come from sets produced by Parkhurst, Topps and O-Pee-Chee. There are cards from before and after the range in some of the videos but not a whole lot. Because it just didn't look right to have 'landscape' card fronts mixed with the usual 'portrait' fronts, some years have been left out. These would be your 1963-64 Topps, 1968-69 O-Pee-Chee and sets like that. Also, we didn't put in any of the 1964-65 Topps tallboys because they just wouldn't fit the format (yep, I'm a little anal about that stuff...).
All the cards are included in the Virtual Hockey Card Collection at Vintage Hockey Cards Report. This is what is becoming a fairly complete online collection of hockey cards (front and back). This is a project that I hope will expand beyond the NHL and the range of years given above. I plan to move into minor league, junior and even European sets in the relatively near future. It's pretty time consuming, though. The images have to be collected, straightened, cropped then added to a template and uploaded. I'm not the most technical so my method is pretty labour intensive (aka slow).
I've embedded one of the videos below to give you a taste. Hopefully you'll head over to the YouTube channel to check out the others. Links to each video are found in the index of the Virtual Collection. I've also grouped them into a clean and tidy YouTube playlist so they can be watched consecutively without having to keep hitting play...
The video below features the Chicago Blackhawks. Of course, there's a fair share of Bobby Hull, Glenn Hall and Stan Mikita cards but there's a lot more there, as well. Be sure to hit the Thumb's Up if you like it!
Showing posts with label original 6. Show all posts
Showing posts with label original 6. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Thursday, November 20, 2014
NHL Hockey Trivia: Pre Original 6 Era
When the ‘Original Six’ era of the National Hockey League is
mentioned, it gives the false impression that the league began with six teams
and that number wasn’t altered until the 1967-68 expansion season. This
couldn’t be further from the truth as franchises came and franchises went in
the early days of the NHL. At times, there were as many as ten teams in the
league. Test and broaden your hockey knowledge with the following four trivia
questions.
Q. The St. Louis Blues began play in the 1967-68 season but they are
not the first NHL franchise to play in the city. What is the name of the
original NHL team located in St. Louis?
A. For just one
season, 1934-35, the St. Louis Eagles played in the NHL. The Eagles were an
attempt to relocate the original Ottawa Senators franchise. The Eagles were
coached by Buck
Boucher and finished last overall in the nine team NHL with just 28 points
over 48 regular season games.
St. Louis was led in scoring by Carl Voss, member
of the Hockey Hall of Fame and Calder Trophy winner as rookie of the year in
1932-33. Syd Howe was also on the roster and ended up in the Hockey Hall of
Fame after moving on to a stellar career with the Detroit Red Wings.
Q. When was the first season that the NHL was reduced to the ‘Original
Six’?
A. 1942-43 was
the first year the NHL was reduced to six teams. The league would remain with
the same six members until the 1967-68 season when the league would double in
size. In 1942-43, the Detroit Red Wings finished first overall with 61 points
over 50 regular season games, just four points ahead of the Boston Bruins.
In the Stanley Cup playoffs, Detroit beat out the Toronto
Maple Leafs in six games while the Bruins ousted the Montreal Canadiens in
five. In the finals, it was no contest with the Red Wings sweeping the Bruins
in four, outscoring their opponents 16-5 on the series.
Doug Bentley of the Chicago Blackhawks led the NHL with 73
points, one ahead of Bill Cowley of the Boston Bruins. Interestingly, Cowley
started his career in 1934-35 with the St. Louis Eagles before spending the next
eleven years with Boston.
Q. What team left the NHL after the 1941-42 season to reduce the league
to six teams?
A. The Brooklyn
Americans called it quits after being in the league since 1925. Until that
season, they were known as the New York Americans. In the 17 seasons between
1925-26 and 1941-42, the Americans reached the Stanley Cup playoffs just five
times and won a series just twice. Ironically, the Americans came into the
National Hockey League a year before the New York Rangers.
Q. The Philadelphia Flyers are not the city’s first NHL team. What was
the name of the original team located in the City of Brotherly Love?
A. The Philadelphia
Quakers played just one season in the NHL, 1930-31. The franchise had been
located in Pittsburgh since the 1925-26 season and known as the Pirates. The
1930-31 Quakers won just four of 44 regular season games and tied four for 12
points. They finished dead last in the ten team NHL, 12 points behind ninth
place Ottawa.
Syd Howe
played this for this one season wonder, as well. It was Howe’s second year in
the league after playing 14 games for the Ottawa Senators in his rookie season.
Monday, September 2, 2013
1965-66 NHL Team Leaders
The Montreal Canadiens dominated the 1965-66 National Hockey
League season. The Habs finished first overall in the six team league, eight
points ahead of second place Chicago. Montreal then swept the Toronto Maple
Leafs in the opening round of the Stanley Cup playoffs before capturing the
championship in six games against the fourth seed Detroit Red Wings.
Bobby Hull – Chicago Black Hawks
Bobby Hull not only led the Chicago Black Hawks but finished
atop the whole NHL with 97 points, capturing the Art Ross Trophy. Hull’s 97
points set an NHL record for most points in a season, eclipsing the previous
mark of 96 set by Dickie Moore of Montreal in 1958-59.
Bobby Rousseau – Montreal Canadiens
Leading the Montreal Canadiens with a career high of 78
points and finishing tied for second in the league was Bobby Rousseau. Bobby
played in the NHL from 1960-61 to 1974-75 with the Canadiens, Minnesota North
Stars and New York Rangers. His next highest point total came in 1968-69 when
he totalled 70 with the Habs.
Gordie Howe – Detroit Red Wings
Gordie Howe occupied a familiar spot, leading the Detroit
Red Wings in points with 75. Howe was fifth in the race for the Art Ross Trophy
and had just three more points than teammate Norm
Ullman. However, Ullman proved more of a factor in the Red Wings reaching
the Stanley Cup final with 15 playoff points compared to Howe’s 10.
Bob Nevin – New York Rangers
The New York Rangers finished last in the NHL in 1965-66,
one point behind the Boston Bruins and 27 points out of a playoff position. Bob
Nevin led the club with 62 points. Nevin played in the NHL from 1960-61 to
1975-76 and would only total more points on one other occasion. In 1974-75,
with the Los
Angeles Kings, Bob contributed 72 points. Of course, the regular season was
ten games longer that year than in 1965-66.
Murray Oliver – Boston Bruins
The Boston Bruins had the least goals for and the most goals
against in 1965-66. Leading the way for Bruins was Murray Oliver with 60
points. Oliver played in the NHL from 1959-60 to 1974-75 with the Detroit Red
Wings, Boston Bruins, Toronto Maple Leafs and Minnesota North Stars. In fact,
Oliver and Bobby Rousseau were teammates with the North Stars for the 1970-71
season.
Frank Mahovlich and Bob Pulford – Toronto Maple Leafs
As was the way with the ‘Original 6’ era Toronto
Maple Leafs, individual scoring numbers were never exceptionally high. In
1965-66, Frank Mahovlich and Bob Pulford tied for the team lead with just 56
points each. Dave Keon
was just two points behind with 54. It was a career high for Pulford but a
mediocre season for Mahovlich.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)