Monday, April 7, 2014

NHL Hockey Trivia: Maple Leaf Gardens In Toronto


toronto maple leafs gardens 1955-56 parkhurst hockey card
For nearly seventy years, Maple Leaf Gardens was the home of the National Hockey League’s Toronto Maple Leafs. The arena, known in short as MLG, was also home to several other teams over the years in the sports of indoor soccer, lacrosse and basketball. Test and expand your hockey knowledge of Toronto’s Maple Leaf Gardens with the following four hockey trivia questions.

Q. Besides the Toronto Maple Leafs, what other professional hockey team called Maple Leaf Gardens home?

A. The Toronto Toros of the World Hockey Association called MLG home for the 1974-75 and 1975-76 season after played their first year at Varsity Arena. The Toros began as a WHA franchise in Ottawa and moved to Birmingham for the 1976-77 season.

Q. In what season did the Toronto Maple Leafs win the first Stanley Cup in their new home?

A. The Maple Leafs began play at Maple Leaf Gardens in 1931-32. The team won the Stanley Cup that year with a final series victory over the New York Rangers. Toronto swept New York in the best of five series with the final game being played at MLG. Of the three games, only one was played in New York and Toronto each with the other played in Boston due to the Circus taking over Madison Square Garden in New York. Starring for Toronto that year were Busher Jackson, Joe Primeau and Charlie Conacher.

Q. What was the first NBA team to play home games at Maple Leaf Gardens?

A. The Buffalo Braves of the National Basketball Association played a total of 16 home games at MLG over four seasons between 1971 and 1975. The Braves are the predecessors of the current Los Angeles Clippers. The franchise played mainly out of the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium from 1970-71 to 1977-78. They then moved to San Diego where they took on the Clippers name for the first time. The franchise lasted in San Diego from 1978-79 until 1983-84 before moving north to Los Angeles.

The Toronto Raptors never called Maple Leafs Gardens home. The NBA franchise began play for the 1995-96 season and played home games at the SkyDome until the Air Canada Centre opened for the 1999-00 season.

Q. In what year did Maple Leaf Gardens host the first annual NHL All-Star Game?

A. In October of 1947, the first official NHL All-Star Game was played at MLG. 13 years earlier, in 1934, the first NHL All-Star game of any kind was played as a benefit for Ace Bailey. The 1947 game featured the defending Stanley Cup champion Toronto Maple Leafs against an All-Star team from the other five teams in the league. The All-Stars came out on top 4-3 before a crowd of 14,169 with Doug Bentley scoring the winning goal in the third period, assisted by Maurice ‘Rocket’ Richard and Milt Schmidt.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

NHL Hockey Trivia: Guy Lafleur


guy lafleur montreal canadiens o-pee-chee hockey card
Guy Lafleur was a huge part of the Montreal Canadiens dynasty during the 1970’s in the National Hockey League. He played with the Canadiens from 1971-72 until 1984-85. He came out of retirement and played three more seasons from 1988-89 to 1990-91.

Test and expand your hockey trivia knowledge of Guy Lafleur with the following four trivia questions.

Q. How many times did Guy Lafleur win the Art Ross Trophy as the NHL’s leading point-getter?

A. Lafleur won the Art Ross three times consecutively, 1975-76, 1976-77 and 1977-78. His point totals in those seasons were 125, 136 and 132 respectively. This was right in the middle of a six year stretch of 100+ point season for Guy that spanned from 1974-75 to 1979-80.

In 1975-76, Lafleur finished with a six point edge over Bobby Clarke of the Philadelphia Flyers. That year, he neither led the league in goals or assists. The following year, Guy’s cushion over second place increased to 14 points, this time finishing ahead of Marcel Dionne of the Los Angeles Kings. He once again did not lead the NHL in goals but did lead in assists. In 1977-78, Bryan Trottier of the New York Islanders was second best, nine points behind. Lafleur led the National Hockey League in goals with 60.

Q. Guy Lafleur finished his NHL career off playing for what team?

A. When Lafleur made his three year comeback from 1988-89 to 1990-91, he played his first year with the New York Rangers and his final two with the Quebec Nordiques. In the two seasons in Quebec, Lafleur managed just 39 and 59 games with twelve goals in each season.

Q. When Guy Lafleur was taken first overall by the Montreal Canadiens in the 1971 NHL Amateur Draft, who was second overall?

A. Always a rival of Lafleur’s in the scoring race, Marcel Dionne was selected second overall in the 1971 NHL Amateur Draft by the Detroit Red Wings. Lafleur came out of the QMJHL where he played for the Quebec Remparts. Dionne was a Quebec born hockey dissident, playing in the OHA for the St. Catherines Black Hawks. When Guy won his three Art Ross Trophies, Marcel Dionne was never very far behind. The bulk of Dionne’s success came while playing for the Los Angeles Kings. The two played together for the Rangers in 1988-89.

Q. What was the highest single regular season goal total during Guy Lafleur’s NHL career?

A. He scored 103 and 130 goals in his final two seasons with the Quebec Remparts of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. Guy Lafleur’s NHL single season best was not nearly as high as those totals but still quite respectable. Lafleur scored 60 goals in 1977-78. At the time, Guy was just the fourth player in NHL history to reach 60 goals in a single season. He was the second Montreal Canadien to reach the plateau with Steve Shutt scoring 60 the year before.

The 130 goals stood as a QMJHL single season record until 1983-84. That year, Mario Lemieux of the Laval Voisins topped the mark with 133 goals. Lemieux played in seven more games.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Frank Brimsek Of The Boston Bruins: Mr. Zero


frank brimsek boston bruinsHe was one of the great goaltenders of the National Hockey league in the 1940’s, yet it took 16 years after he retired for Frank Brimsek to finally get inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Brimsek spent all but one of his seasons in the NHL with the Boston Bruins, leading the club to a Stanley Cup championship in his rookie year.

Frank Brimsek – Minor Pros


Before his big break with the Bruins in 1938-39, Brimsek played a few years in the minor pros. In 1935-36 and 1936-37, he appeared with the Pittsburgh Yellowjackets of the Eastern Amateur Hockey League. The EAHL evolved into the EHL, a pro league that existed until the end of the 1972-73 season before splitting in to the NAHL and SHL.

In his first year with the Yellowjackets, the team placed second in the five team league and was led offensively by Gordie Drillon. Drillon would go on to be a scoring leader in the NHL with the Toronto Maple Leafs. The following year, the team fell to fourth as most of the star players had moved on.

In 1937-38, Brimsek played all 48 regular season games for the Providence Reds of the IAHL. The ‘I’ in IAHL was dropped as the league became the present day American Hockey League. The Bun Cook coached Reds were crowned Calder Cup champions with a win over the Syracuse Stars in the finals.

Frank Brimsek – NHL Career


‘Mister Zero’ played goal in the National Hockey League from 1938-39 to 1949-50 with the Bruins and Chicago Blackhawks. Shortly into the 1938-39 season, Boston shipped their number one goaltender Tiny Thompson to the Detroit Red Wings and relied solely on the rookie Brimsek.

Frank started the year with nine games in the AHL with Providence. Over 43 games with the Bruins, he posted a 1.56 goals against average and recorded ten shutouts. Brimsek won the Calder Trophy as the NHL’s rookie of the year. He also won the Vezina Trophy and was named First Team All-Star goalie.

The Art Ross coached Bruins placed first overall in the 1938-39 NHL. In the Stanley Cup playoffs, Boston ousted the Toronto Maple Leafs in the finals for the championship. Frank played all 12 playoff games, posting a 1.25 GAA.

Brimsek played every game for the Bruins in five different seasons between 1939-40 and 1947-48. He would do the same in his final year of NHL hockey in 1949-50 for the Chicago Blackhawks. He won his second and final Vezina Trophy in 1941-42, playing 47 games for the Bruins with three shutouts and a 2.35 GAA. His only other Stanley Cup championship came in 1940-41 when the Bruins swept the Red Wings in the finals after finishing first overall during the regular season.

After missing the 1943-44 and 1944-45 seasons because of military commitments during the Second World War, Frank stormed back into the NHL for the 1945-46 season. The Dit Clapper coached Bruins finished second overall in the six team league. Brimsek played 34 games during the regular season, sharing duties with Paul Bibeault.

In the 1945-46 Stanley Cup playoffs, Frank played in all ten games for Boston. The Bruins fell to the Montreal Canadiens in the finals, winning just one of the five games. The series was closer than it looked, though, with three of the five games going to overtime to decide a victor.

His final year in the NHL was Frank’s only year not with the Bruins. He played all 70 games for Chicago with five shutouts and a 3.49 goals against average. The Charlie Conacher coached Blackhawks finished last in the six team league, six points behind the fifth place Bruins. It was the only year during his NHL career that Brimsek did not compete in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Frank was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1966, along with eight others. The group included hockey greats Max Bentley, Toe Blake, Emile Bouchard, Ted Kennedy, Elmer Lach, Ted Lindsay, Ken Reardon and Babe Pratt. Brimsek was inducted into the U.S.A. Hockey Hall of Fame in 1973.