Showing posts with label Cecil Hart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cecil Hart. Show all posts

Saturday, July 26, 2008

1924-25 The Forum And Two New Rivalries





















When the defending Stanley Cup champion Canadiens took to the ice for the 1924-25 season, both the NHL and the Montreal hockey landscape had a very different look.

To suggest the business of hockey was booming would be an understatement, and the changes in the NHL perfectly reflected the growth of the game.

Since the NHL began eight seasons earlier in 1917-18, it had existed as a four team league that had struggled financially to get through the first World War unscathed. With strong teams in four cities now existing on financially solid ground, the NHL decided it was time to spread itself out.












There would be two new NHL franchises added this season, including a renewed Montreal rivalry, a new building, a longer schedule, and a long standing league doormat - the Hamilton Tigers - rejuvenated into a first place team.

THE FORUM OPENS

A new arena was contructed in Montreal, the Forum, and it was built to house the new Montreal team, and instant Canadiens rivals, the Maroons. In an odd and foreshadowing twist of fate, it would the Canadiens who played first in the Forum.

Sir Edward Beattie, president of the Canadian Pacific railway is cited as first having the idea to build the Forum in 1923, long before the Maroons were envisioned as possible tenants. A need for a new arena in the city of Montreal was created in the absence of the Jubilee and Westmount Arena fires in recent years.

William Northy, owner of the 4,300 seat Westmount that burned to the ground in 1918, and a builder with the Canadian Arena Company, was himself looking to build a new arena in the city. After the CAC successfully built the Arena Gardens in Toronto, Northey and Liberal Senator Donat Raymond began to develop plans for 12,500 seat capacity rink for the city of Montreal.
















Plans were scaled back due to financing questions during the Depression and a 9,300 seater was designed. After more money trouble, a backer by the name of H.L. Timmins financed the final project.

The historically significant site at the northeast corner of Atwater and St. Catherine St. West was chosen as the location as it had been home to an outdoor rink earlier in the 1900's, where future hockey legends Frank and Lester Patrick, and Art Ross learned their craft.

















At the time contruction began, the building on site was a roller skating rink named the Forum. Northey decided to keep the name.

At a cost of $1.5 million, contruction of the Forum began in the summer of 1924, and was finished in an incredible 159 days. The building would see two major upgrades in it's lifetime, one in the early 1950's and a second in 1968.

The Forum hosted it's first hockey game on November 29, 1924, and surprisingly, the Maroons were not the home team. Against the wails of both Forum and Maroons management, the Canadiens season opening contest against the Toronto St. Patricks was moved to the new building by the NHL - once again because the Mount Royal Arena couldn't produce ice on a natural surface so early in the season.

The Canadiens went on to beat the St. Patricks 7–1 in the opener, with Billy Boucher scoring a hat trick.

BRUINS BECOME FIRST U.S. BASED NHL TEAM

The NHL's other new franchise, the Boston Bruins, was the first granted outside of Canada.

In 1923, First National Stores grocery tycoon Charles Adams fell in love with the game of hockey, after wirnessing the Stanley Cup playoffs. He persisted in convincing NHL governors to grant him the first U.S. based franchise and the league decided it was time to explore American hockey markets.














Adams sought out the Ottawa Senators Art Ross as his manager, and Ross proceded to put his imprint on the club. Ross, on Adams advice, was directed to choose a nickname that portrayed an untamed animal displaying speed, agility, and cunning. The Bruins moniker he choose fit perfectly in line with colours of Adams chain of stores. Ross would remain on the Bruins front near 30 years, in every capacity from player to manager to four separate coaching stints.

More American franchises would in the Bruins wake, but few would have the rivalry with the Canadiens that the Bruins would enjoy, or regret, in years to come.

In this eighth season of NHL hockey, the league decided it would begin it's schedule earlier and expand it from 24 to 30 games. The additional games were gravy for the owners, but not all the players were as enthused.

TIGERS FINALLY SPROUT CLAWS

The improvement of the Hamilton Tigers can be traced to the previous season when owner Percy Thompson signed the Green brothers, Red and Shorty, from the Sudbury Wolves of the NOHA in November 1923. The brothers were placed on a line with emerging star Billy Burch.

Two other Wolves players, Alex McKinnon and Charlie Langlois were also added, and the players acquired from the Canadiens in the Joe Malone trade, Bert Corbeau and Edmond Bouchard, helped sturdy the team considerably. The final piece was the hiring of former Montreal Wanderers guru Jimmy Gardner as coach. The former NHA and NHL star transformed the once hapless Tigers into winners almost immediately.

CANADIENS SET TO DEFEND THEIR TITLE

Still recognizable within all this, were a very strong Canadiens squad that would have it's best regular season ever.

While the Canadiens altered the look of their red, white, and blue sweaters with a globe logo befitting their World Champion status, the men who wore them were for the most part an unchanged core group.

Back were Georges Vezina, the Cleghorn brothers, Sprague and Odie, their three young offensive stars - Morenz, Joliat, and Boucher, solid defenseman Sylvio Mantha and Billy Coutu, as well as coach Leo Dandurand. Not returning this season were Bill Cameron, who would be back in the NHL in two seasons time, and Bobby Boucher, who went on toplay with the Vancouver Maroons. Billy Bell and Joe Malone both retired from hockey.





















Despite having shared in the success in Montreal, only 61 days after his arrival, Boucher was traded to the WCHL Maroons on the very day the Habs were celebrating their Stanley Cup win. Team owner Leo Dandurand felt Bobby was too small a player, and traded him for prospect Charlie Cotch, who never appeared with the team.

The new faces on the Canadiens were mainly spares, part timers, and late season aquisitions and they included John Matz, a 33 year old center who had last played with the Saskatoon Crescents, and Fern Headley, a 23 year old defenseman who was on loan from the Bruins 13 games into the season. Dave Ritchie, who was previously acquired from Hamilton during the 1920-21 season, appeared in five games with the Canadiens after being signed as a free agent on January 28.

THE OTTAWA THREE COME AND GO

On November 17, three Ottawa area players from the OCHL were signed as free agents to brief tryout contracts, and they were Roland Lafleur and goaltender Eugene Decosse of the Ottawa Royal Canadians, and René Joliat, Aurel's brother, from the Ottawa New Edinburghs.

It is unclear exactly why Decosse and the relatively average fellow Ottawa players René Joliat and Roland Lafleur all got a chance with the Habs at the same time. The "Ottawa Three", as they were known at the time, all dressed for the team to open the season against the St. Patricks on November 29. Only Decosse did not play, as Vezina was in fine form, and backstopped the Habs to an easy 7-1 victory.

The very next day, the french language Ottawa newspaper Le Droit painted Decosse's return to Ottawa as a good thing, claiming the conditions offered by the Canadiens contract were not worth throwing ones future away. The paper did not elaborate on what those expectations were, but they were presumably equally unacceptable to René Joliat and René Lafleur, who also returned to the Ottawa area following their lone games in the NHL.

DANDURAND SEES DOLLAR SIGNS

Canadiens owner and manager Leo Dandurand, knew a thing or ten about how to make a cash register ring. As a horse racing afficianado and promoter extraorinaire, Dandurand had firm ideas upon his purchase of the Canadiens hockey club three seasons prior, on what endeavors could maximize his investment.

With Montreal being a hotbed of hockey madness, and recalling the interest and dollar generating fury of the Canadiens - Wanderers rivalry of years gone by, Dandurand put up no qualms when it came to sharing the city's territorial rights with a second NHL franchise. In fact, his asking price was so low, the demand almost seemed foolish.

Dandurand charged a mere $15,000 to allow a rival team to set up shop within the city limits, knowing full well that his bank account would benefit. He would later claim that it was no generous offer on his part to allow a second city team into the picture.

Once assured by the NHL governors that a second Montreal club would only be allowed to dress english speaking players, the offer took on the form as an investment into what would become a bitterly fought cash generating rivalry.

At the time, many followers of the game where surprised when Dandurand stepped forth to second the motion by Ottawa manager T.P. Gorman that a second NHL franchise be admitted for the city of Montreal.
















The Maroons $15,000 fee later became the source of controversy when several NHL factions claimed that the money was destined for league pockets, as was the Bruins fee. Dandurand sternly disagreed, claiming successfully that it had previously been agreed to that the fee was payment for allowing the Maroons onto the Canadiens turf. From this point on, Dandurand made certain the minutes of NHL meetings were written down and signed by all parties.

CECIL HART GETS MAROONED

The Canadiens man for all purposes, Cecil Hart, who had made the winning bid for Dandurand, Cattarinich and Letourneau when they purchased the team from the Kennedy family, and who had signed Howie Morenz one season prior, was tabbed as the man to be in charge of the Maroons. Hart's loyalties are divided when it comes to parting ways with the Canadiens, but he remains on good terms with the Canadiens team.

The Maroons owners however, fail to relinquish the desired complete control of the team's players to Hart, and disagreements ensue to the point where he is let go by the organization on February 9. Not long after, he is rehired by the Canadiens as a scout once more, and along with Morenz, he would scour the Ontario side of the border for hockey talent.

The new Forum was also of a concern to the Canadiens, as the home of the Maroons held close to 10,000 seats. The building had owners of the Mount Royal Arena worried about losing the Canadiens as tenants, and they offered Dandurand and company $50,000 to purchase the club. The offer was refused.

The first Canadiens and Maroons contest took place at the Mount Royal on Wednesday, December 10, and was won 5-0 by the Canadiens in front of 5,000 fans. The teams met again 17 days later and played to a 1-1 draw at the Forum before 11,000 spectators. The tie ended a Canadiens six games winning streak and left them with a 7-1-1 record to start the season.

SPRAGUE BEING SPRAGUE

Sprague Cleghorn continued to be a sideshow, much to the detriment of Dandurand. On January 24, Cleghorn kept up his one man war against the Ottawa Senators by getting involved in a fiery battle with the George Boucher. After the Ottawa player levelled a Montreal player into the boards, Cleghorn was helping him up when he was clocked by a Boucher roundhouse. Cleghorn retaliated and pled innocent, but was still suspended along with Boucher for the incidents that followed.

Late in the season, on February 28, the Canadiens were in Ottawa for a game against the Senators, when both players and fans felt what was explained away as an explosion at the time. In Montreal, as the Maroons hosted Hamilton, a similar sensation was felt. What occured, was an earthquake centered in Charlevoix, Quebec near the Saguenay River. It shook all the way to Ottawa, scattering fans temporarily in both buildings. While Billy Boucher and the Senators Ed Gorman were exchanging fists in the penalty box area, scribes in the press box above were gripping their typewriters so that they would not drop onto spectator's heads down below. The quake did not shake the Canadiens, who lost the game 1-0.

BRUTE CLEGHORN INSPIRES THE LADY BYNG

The NHL introduced another new award in 1924-25, the Lady Byng trophy, named in honour of Marie Evelyn Moreton, the wife of the Viscount Byng of Vimy, a Vimy Ridge war hero who was the Governor General of Canada from 1921 to 1926. Lady Byng, who was an avid hockey fan, decided to donate the trophy to the NHL in 1925.

The Governor General's wife was said to quite appauled by players the likes of Sprague Cleghorn and sought to reward cleaner play with her donation to the game.

Lady Byng decided the trophy's first winner would be the Ottawa Senator's Frank Nighbor. Late in the season she invited Nighbor to Rideau Hall, showed him the trophy, and asked him if the NHL would accept it as an award for its most gentlemanly player. When Nighbor said he thought it would, Lady Byng, much to Nighbor's surprise, awarded him the trophy.

CANADIENS SET TEAM RECORDS

The Canadiens finished the season with a record of 17-11-2 and their 36 points placed them third in the NHL. Hamilton led with 39, followed closely by Toronto with 38.



























Joliat, Morenz, and Boucher finished third, fourth, and seventh, respectively in the scoring race. Morenz's 30 goals were bested only by Toronto's Babe Dye with 38.

The Canadiens as a team scored 93 goals, the most in this season, while also allowing the least, with 56 in 30 games. The 38 year old Georges Vezina was again the best goaltender in the league, with a miniscule 1.81 goals against average and 5 shutouts.
























In the six contests with the cross town rival Maroons, the Canadiens held a 4-0-2 edge. The NHL's two newest teams, the Maroons and Bruins, finished fifth and sixth in their initial NHL campaings.

With a 3-2-1 record against the Toronto, the Canadiens were all set for the two game total goals series against the St. Patricks. Implemented under the NHL's new playoff format, the second and third place teams would battle for the right to take on the first place squad for the O'Brien Cup. The winner of that series would then move on to challenge the WCHL champions for the Stanley Cup.

TIGERS PLAYERS REVOLT

The Canadiens were about to begin the series when it was learned that the first place Tigers players were revolting against the terms of their contracts. The players demanded to their owner, Percy Thompson, that they would not participate in the NHL finals unless they received an additional $200 each for the extra six games played that year. Under their contracts the Tigers players were to receive the same amount of money no matter how many games they played from December 1, 1924 to March 31, 1925.

Upset at having to play an additional 6 games in the schedule for no extra pay, the Hamilton players went on strike figuring they had NHL President Frank Calder over a barrel.

Calder was furious, stating that the Tigers players would be fined or suspended if they did not play in the final series, but the players stated that they would rather retire than be taken advantage of.

The Canadiens meanwhile, had won the first playoff game on March 11 in Montreal by a score of 3-2. They travelled to Toronto for the second game and learned that a tie game would be all that was needed to achieve the Stanley Cup finals.

On March 13, the day of the final game of the semi final between Toronto and the Canadiens, the Tigers Red Green met with president Calder and attempted to iron out an agreement to no avail. There was little negotiating, as Green told that the players stood firm.

All Tigers players were then suspended by the NHL and fined $200 each, and their season and playoffs cancelled. Calder declared that the winner of the Canadiens / St. Patricks series would then advance to the Stanley Cup challenge.

That evening the Canadiens shut out the St. Patricks 2-0, and they were off to the Stanley Cup finals for a second season running.

WESTERN HOCKEY MERGED INTO ONE LEAGUE

Western league hockey had undergone its share of changes as well in 1924. Prior to the start of the season, the PCHA folded and two of its best teams, the Vancouver Maroons and the Victoria Cougars, joined the WCHL. This meant that after three seasons of having three leagues compete for the Stanley Cup, the final would once again have only two competing teams.
















The Cougars followed much the same path to the final as did Montreal. They were also a third place finisher, and they topled the Calgary Tigers and Newsy Lalonde's Saskatoon Crescents to earn their way into the final.

CANADIENS LEAVE STANLEY BEHIND

The Canadiens were perhaps a little overconfident as the left for Victoria, and purposely did not bring the Stanley Cup with them, assured it would still be theirs upon their return.

The games were played at the Victoria Arena in this best of five series were the first broadcast on radio, and it was Dr. Clem Davies who called the play by play.
The series began on March 21, and the Canadiens dropped game one by a 5-2 score. In a supersticious move prior to the start of the game, the Cougars players hurried to leave the pre-game warmup first for good luck. The trick worked well for them again in game two, as they put the Canadiens in a hole with a 3-1 win.

INNOVATIVE PATRICK DUPES CANADIENS

Montreal, as did most of the NHL teams, still used its six best players for the majority of the game, substituting them as they each tired. Cougars manager Lester Patrick, perhaps hockey's greatest visionary, employed two lines in constant rotation during games. His reasoning was that even fresh second tier players had more to give energy wise over the course of a game that the tired players the opposition would counter with.

For game three, the Canadiens thought they would pull the Cougars trick of leaving the warmup first. It likely had no bearing on the final score, but the stunt seemed to work, as they Canadiens went on to win 4-2.

The Canadiens backs were again against the wall on March 30, and Victoria handed them a firm 6-1 routing. There would be no Stanley Cup in Montreal this season.

Montreal scored eight goals in the series, with all of them coming from their top line of Morenz, Boucher and Joliat. Victoria countered with a more balanced attack with eight different skaters combining for 16 goals. There was something to be learned from Lester Patrick's method.




















The next day, on April 1, the mayor of Victoria hosted a banquet for the team without the Stanley Cup being present. It would be mailed by the Canadiens organization to the Cougars upon their return to Montreal.

With a host of changes still to come on the hockey horizon, this series would mark the closing of an era and the dawning of a new one. The Victoria Cougars would become the last non NHL team to win the Stanley Cup.





1926-27 Hainsworth Revives Canadiens















The sudden illness and passing of Georges Vezina in March of 1926 was a shock that threw the Montreal Canadiens for a loop. Very strong elements remained on the team, and a search had been undertaken to find a goaltender who would help the team reinstate its position among the NHL's better clubs.

The business of the NHL, and the collapse of the Western Hockey League would greatly assist the Canadiens in this task.

EXPANSION, 1920's STYLE

Due in part to the extinction of it's strongest professional rival league, the NHL was able to expand from 7 teams to ten in 1926-27. The WHL had been having trouble competing with NHL salaries, and folded under such pressure. They sold off the entirety of it's player assets to the NHL for a whopping $258,000.

The NHL board of governors ruled over the purchases in a meeting on September 25, 1926, transferring two WHL franchises into NHL squads. The Portland Rosebuds were rechristened the Chicago Blackhawks, and were owned by Major Frederic McLaughlin. The Victoria Cougars became the Detroit Cougars, and were owned by Charles A. Hughes.



























McLaughlin was a Harvard grad who had served in the U.S. Army during World War I, achieving the rank of major. He named the team after his army unit, the 86th Infantry Blackhawk Division. Major McLaughlin made a deal with Frank Patrick to acquire 14 players from the Rosebuds for $100,000. The Major's story would intersect with that of the Canadiens owners in a few years, when he would need financial assistance to keep the Blackhawks afloat.

In all, there were enough quality players left over from the WHL sale to create a tenth team, that would become the New York Rangers.

These swooping changes left the NHL in sole possesion of not only the Stanley Cup, but also the greatest professional players in the game.

A committee made up of Frank Calder, Leo Dandurand and James Strachan would distribute the remaining players amongst the ten NHL teams.

The Toronto St. Patricks themselves would purchase all but one player from the Saskatoon Crescents.




HAINSWORTH SLIPS THROUGH THE LEAFS FINGERS

That one player, goaltender George Hainsworth would become property of the Montreal Canadiens. The St. Patricks (soon to be renamed the Maple Leafs in mid season) believed they had Hainsworth in the deal, but the goalie had reached an agreement prior to the team sale and the NHL board ruled in the favor of the Canadiens.



























A further assembling of NHL heads on October 26 decided the league would be split into five team Canadian and American divisions. Oddly, the New York Americans, much to the dismay of their owner, were placed in the Canadian Division.

The playoff format was also greatly altered and would feature the top team from each division meeting the winner of a total goals series between the second and third place teams from their divisions. The winners of those total goals series would then meet in a best of five series for the Stanley Cup.






















The face of other NHL franchises were evolving as well, and the Toronto St. Patricks were purchased by Conn Smythe and renamed the Maple Leafs during the course of the season.

However, the team was contracted under the St.Patricks name for the 1926-27 season. They would become known as the Maple Leafs from the following season on.



























Smythe began the season as the Rangers GM, but was replaced after a falling out with team owners. He did a commendable job in assembling a strong team for New York, and was ably relieved by Lester Patrick, who became as synonymous with Ranger success thereafter as would Smythe with the Maple Leafs.

A TROPHY IN VEZINA'S NAME

Georges Vezina was very much still on the minds of the Montreal Canadiens brass six months after his passing. Dandurand recalled that Vezina spoke highly of George Hainsworth from exhibition games, and had been impressed by his play. It is told that the Crescents goalie was his own suggested heir apparent. A further recommendation by former Canadiens star Newsy Lalonde sealed the Canadiens interest in Hainsworth.

The Canadiens owners also brought forth the idea for a trophy in Vezina's memory honouring the NHL's best goaltender each season.

In a unanimous vote, the NHL agreed the trophy would be awarded annually to the goalkeeper with the best goals against average.

Vezina thus became the first NHL player to have a trophy named for him.

NEWSY PLAYS HIS FINAL NHL GAME

With the folding of the western hockey leagues, several former NHL star players made their way back to the league in 1926-27 - and former Habs star Newsy Lalonde was no exception. Lalonde, who would have preferred to continue playing on in his twilight years, accepted the position of coach with the lowly New York Americans.

The Americans never got going under Newsy, and even though he suited up for one final NHL game, Lalonde might have been the first prime example of a former star player not being able to translate his on ice understanding into a coaching capacity. The Americans finished fourth in the Canadian Division, seventh overall, with a 17-25-2 record. Lalonde would move on to coaching positions in the Can - Am league before resurfacing behind the bench of the Senators in the years ahead.

NINE NEW CANADIENS SUIT UP

Not unlike the season before, 9 new players would join the Canadiens in 1926-27, only this time, it had more to do with the surplus of talent around the NHL rather than weaknesses on the Canadiens team. New faces such as Ambrose Moran, Athur Gauthier, Peter Palangio, Carson Cooper, Arthur Gagné, Gizzy Hart, and Léo Lafrance would play for the club in 1926-27.

Gagné, perhaps the most talented of the lot, was born in Ottawa, and had last performed with the Edmonton Eskimo's of the WHL in 1925-26.

He'd had a career season with 35 goals, and contributed 14 for the Canadiens in this season. Gagne was on the Chicago roster and was acquired for cash on October 18, 1926.

Gagne would play three seasons for the Canadiens before being traded to Boston for cash on May 13, 1929.

Cooper was a 27 year old right wing who appeared in 14 games with the Canadiens, notching a very worthy 9 goals and 3 assists. He was in his third season with the Bruins when the Canadiens sent Billy Boucher to acquire him in a deal where either squad had the right to recall the players.

Cooper was worth the gamble, as had scored 28 goals for Boston in 1925-26. Both players did end up returning to their original teams on May 22, 1927.





















Left winger Gizzy Hart was acquired from Detroit for cash on December 12, 1926, and later traded to Providence of the Can-Am league for cash, October 17, 1928. In his years with the Canadiens, Hart would score 6 goals, while appearing in 84 games.




















Peter Palangio was an 18 year old prospect who had played with the North Bay Trappers of the NOHA in 1925-26, scoring 25 goals in 11 games. His production did not translate into the NHL, where he went scoreless in six games with the Canadiens. He signed on with the Canadiens as a free agent late in the season in February, and while he disappointed scoring wise, Montreal managed to get all kinds of mileage out of his trade wise. After going goalless in 4 playoff games with the Canadiens, Pelangio was traded twice to Can-Pro league teams for cash and a player, before being shipped a final time to London of the IHL for more cash on November 11, 1929.

BILLY COUTU BANNED FOR LIFE

The Canadiens paid a hefty price for Ambrose Moran went they exchanged Billy Coutu for him in a pre-season deal with Boston on October 22, 1926. The 31 year old Moran had been a sturdy backlimer with the Vancouver Maroons over the past two seasons and didn't last long with the Canadiens, as they returned him to the Bruins on December 23 in a cash transaction. Coutu actually fared worse. After 40 games with Boston, he was involved in an altercation with an official, and became the first NHL'er banned for life from the league.

Leo Lafrance appreared in but 4 games with the Canadiens in 1926-27 after being acquired from Duluth of the AHA for cash on November 10, 1926. He was suspended by the Canadiens two weeks later for leaving the team. Somehow, Montreal would hold onto his rights until 1936. In the interim, his rights were dealt a half dozen times for cash and loans.

Arthur Gauthier was a 22 year old prospect who had been playing with the Galt Terriers in the OHA Sr. League when he signed with the Canadiens as a free agent on February 9. He went pointless in 13 games with Montreal and was traded to London of the Can - Pro league a year later.

GARDINER AN INSTANT MVP

The two biggest additions in 1926 to the Canadiens were Hainsworth and defenseman Herb Gardiner.

Hainsworth was no greenhorn when he joined the Canadiens. He was a veteran of 11 years with a pair of OHL Sr. teams - Berlin Union Jacks and the Kitchener Greenshirts - and had most recently been a standout with the Crescents of the WHL for three seasons.

At 31 years of age, he was in the prime of his career. He would play 7 seasons with the Canadiens and fittingly became the first winner of the Vezina Trophy, and award he owned for the first three seasons of it's existence.

Gardiner was so adept at his position that he almost singlehandedly filled the voids left by both Coutu and Sprague Cleghorn one season earlier. A dominant defensive defenseman that the Canadiens were well aquainted with from battles with the Calgary Tigers in the 1924 Stanley Cup final, they acquired his right just prior to the big WHL sell off in a cash deal with Calgary on October 20, 1926.

In his first season in a Canadiens sweater, Gardiner so impressed with his play, that he was awarded the Hart Trophy as the NHL's MVP. Prior to his third season with Montreal, he was loaned to Chicago where he was named playing coach of Black Hawks in August of 1928. The Canadiens recalled the valuable veteran for the 1929 playoffs before trading his right to the Bruins for cash that spring.

THE FLYING FRENCHMAN LEGEND TAKES ROOT IN THE U.S.

Perhaps the "Habitants" nickname helped spread a public curiosity of the team, with Howie Morenz on the verge of becoming the NHL first veritable superstar. The Canadiens "Flying Frenchman" myth was beginning to take hold and grasp the imaginations of American hockey fans, and Montreal were a big draw in every arena they appeared in. Both the Canadiens and the Maroons had the best home attendance in the NHL, but it was the fast skating Morenz and crew that fans turned out in large numbers to see on the road.

The Montreal Daily Star, catching onto the team's speed mystique, sponsors intermission speed skating contests between Canadiens stars such as Morenz and Gizzy Hart verus the opponants fastest movers. Hundreds of dollars are at stake, often pocketed by the speedy "Stratford Streak".

Morenz enjoyed a very good season with the Canadiens, scoring 25 goals, second only to the Rangers Bill Cook with 33.












A NEW COACH AND CAPTAIN

Above all the changes in the team's makeup, the look of the Canadiens behind the scenes was also given several unexpected facelifts.

After Coutu was traded to Boston, the Canadiens named Sylvio Mantha the new team's captain. The team also had a new man behind the bench in Cecil Hart. After several seasons in the Canadiens organization, Hart took over from Leo Dandurand, who, on the advice of his doctors, relinquished the stressful duties. Dandurand had been a man for all purposes since taking co-ownership of the team, and he decided it would be better to focus his energies all in one place.

REDS AND HORNETS BECOME THE HABS FIRST FARM TEAMS

Keeping Dandurand busy, was the establishing of the Canadiens first feeder teams in Providence and Windsor. The Reds and Hornets, respectively, played in the Can - Am league and Dandurand made agreements with each team that the Canadiens could sign their two best prospects annually. In exchange, Montreal would supply the Reds and Hornets with players, whether they be up and coming prospects or aging players that no longer fit their plans.



















Gradually, this practice would evolve into the full fledged sponsorship of entire teams filled with Canadiens hopefuls.

HABS MOVE INTO FORUM AS MOUNT ROYAL ARENA SUES

The Canadiens finally left behind the old Mount Royal Arena for good in 1926. Renovations at the old arena ran into financial snags and delays, causing the team to begin playing its home games on the Maroons Forum ice. The Mount Royal offers the Canadiens $50,000 in damages for the inconvenience of renting the Forum while work is finished, but the team demands double the fee.
















When no agreement is reached and the Canadiens sign a full time lease with the Forum, the Mount Royal counters with a $180,000 lawsuit for breaking their contract. The courts first favor the Mount Royal, but the Canadiens appeal the decision, which will later be settled in their favors.

With the NHL now playing a 44 game schedule, seasons begin in mid November and stretch until the final days of March.

CANADIENS START SLOW BEFORE HITTING THEIR STRIDE

The Canadiens might have had an even better season had they started off stronger. Three consecutive losses in which the team managed only one goal in each against Boston, Ottawa, and the Maroons set the tone for what would be an up and down first half of the season.

After 11 games, the Canadiens were a very ordinary and disappointing 4-6-1. As they hit the road for a three game swing, they began winning the close games, and mounted a four game winning streak that took them above the .500 mark for the first time. Just when it looked as though the team had turned the corner, another extended road trip saw them fumble four more games.

Nearing the mid season point with a record of 8-10-1, the Canadiens needed an injection of confidence only a winning streak could provide. It perhaps bode well for the club that it's next four games were against perceived weaker opponants. With the Americans, Maroons, Cougars, and St. Patricks all on the menu, the Canadiens settled into a groove for good with four stright wins.














From this point on, the Canadiens were practically unstoppable as they won 20 of their final 25 games. A 3-2 loss to the Rangers on January 27 was but a roadbump as Montreal went on to win the next three. They were 2-2-1 over the next five before finally hitting their stride from February 24 to March 24 with 11 straight wins.
A highlight was a 4-1 dumping of the Senators on March 15. Montreal had been unable to beat Ottawa in five meetings thus far and it looked as though there was no road around the Senators should the Canadiens wish to get back to the Stanley Cup.

HABS SET NEW TEAM MARKS

The Canadiens would finish the regular season, one of their best, with a record of 28-14-2 for 58 points. They are second in the Canadian Division, and overall in the league, behind the Senators who end with 64 points. The Canadiens 99 goals scored proved to be the second highest total in the 1926-27 season, behind the Blackhawks with 115.



























Contrary to Chicago, who allowed one more goal than they scored over the course of the season, the Canadiens were excellent at keeping the puck out of their net. Montreal allowed a league low 67 goals against in 44 games, thanks in no small part to Hainsworth's amazing 13 shutouts and a tight defense led by Gardiner and captain Sylvio Mantha.

CANADIENS WIN BATTLE OF MONTREAL

While the first place Senators awaited a winner, a second versus third place battle of Montreal was underway between the Canadiens and Maroons. The two teams with the same home rink played a close two game total goals series and the stingy Maroons gave the Canadiens quite the fight. After the teams fought to a 1-1 knot, everything was on the line two nights later.









Howie Morenz capped a fine 25 goal season, by scoring the overtime winner against the cross town rivals to give the Canadiens a 1-0 win and the right to advance against Ottawa in another two game showdown.

SENATORS TOO STRONG

The Senators of the day boasted a lineup of stars with a wealth of experience. Cy Denneny, King Clancy, a young Hec Kilrea, Frank Finnigan, Hooley Smith, Frank Nighbor, Georges Boucher and Jack Adams, with Alec Connell in goal, were worthy of a Hall Of Fame lineup. The Senators, bevied by much Stanley Cup experience, stolled into the Forum and thumped the Habs 4-0. The 1-1 tie in Ottawa two evenings later was merely anticlimactic.






















Ottawa went on to meet the champions of the American Division, the Boston Bruins in a best of five series for the Cup. Oddly, the Senators claimed Lord Stanley's mug without the benefit of gaining a third win. They'd won the second and fourth games of the hard fought series, while tying the first and third. Sudden death overtime would have only come into play in a fifth and deciding game.























HAINSWORTH WORTHY OF VEZINA

The Montreal Canadiens were hardly dispirited by the outcome of their season. One year prior, they were a seventh place team in a 7 team NHL, and were now a second place team in a much stronger 10 team league. The Canadiens were young and gaining in experience for the most part, and with all things taken into consideration, the one team they could not beat in this season won the Stanley Cup. Clearly better days were ahead.

Much of the credit for the Habs resurgence in this season belonged to goalie George Hainsworth. The 31 year old puckstopper exceeded all expectations with an impressive 28-14-2 record in 44 games. His 14 shutouts led the league, and were one off from the NHL record set by Ottawa's Alex Connell one season prior.

Hainsworth was quite stingy in his first NHL campaign, allowing a league low 67 goals, for a goals against average of 1.47. Had Habs defenseman Gardiner not been named as the league MVP, Hainsworth would have merited the award.

Perhaps it was only fitting that he be named the inaugural winner of the Vezina Trophy, as he helped the Canadiens and their fans over the loss of their fallen hero. Hainsworth would have a stranglehold on the trophy for the coming seasons, as his play would set standards so high for netminders, that the NHL would step forth and adjust the rules of play in order to increase scoring.