In 1893 the NHA was formed. At that time Toronto began their quest for the vaunted Stanley Cup. Most aren't aware, but we weren't the Toronto Maple Leafs. Between 1899 and 1902 we were known as the Toronto Wellingtons. The team was re-named the Toronto Marlboros, licenced by name from a Duke of the British Isles, Sir Winston Churchill's Grandfather. They remained until 1910, when a Lacrosse organization within the city bought the team becoming the Toronto Tecumsehs (a.k.a the Toronto Indians) for the 1911 season. The very next year they were re-named the Toronto Ontarios, as the Tecumsehs went bankrupt. The next year they were known as the Blueshirts and we took home our first Stanley Cup. From 1915-1919 our Hockey Team was called the Toronto Arenas and the Cup was brought home again in 1918. In 1920 the organization was known as the Toronto St. Pats, until 1927, when Conn Smythe bought the club and re-named the team the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Throughout the proud
history of the Toronto teams, we have won the second most Stanley
Cups of all Franchises in NHA/NHL history (14 in total to date).
It was in 1931 that
Connie Smythe built Maple
Leaf Gardens,
and Charlie Conacher scored the first Maple Leaf goal in our new Arena. Maple Leaf
Gardens was considered a
remarkable achievement as the Arena was lavish and extraordinary, built during
the 'Great Depression'.
During the 1930's there
were many Maple Leaf greats. There was top notch coaching provided by Dick Irvin, there was the 'Kid' line of Busher Jackson, Joe
Primeau, and Charlie Conacher. Ace Bailey was likewise a star player with the
'Buds' at this time. The blue-line was anchored by King Clancy and Hap Day, with
Frank McCool as our Goaltender throughout the decade. All told Toronto took home the Stanley
Cup as the Maple Leafs for the first time in 1932. Ace Bailey lost his ability
to play the game in 1934, due to a bodycheck thrown by the great Boston Bruin defenceman Eddie Shore.
They shook hands publically, as Bailey forgave Shore (even though he couldn't
play Ice Hockey anymore). That year they held the All-Star Game in Ace Bailey's
honour, with the Maple Leafs hosting the best of the League.
At the start of the 1936
campaign Syl Apps came aboard, and he became perhaps the most iconic Leaf
Captain of all-time (being named such in 1940).
In the forties, the
Maple Leafs were led by Captain Syl Apps and new Head Coach Hap Day, alongside Defense-man Babe Pratt, Goalie Turk Broda, Harry Watson, Ted
Kennedy, Cal Gardner, Howie Meeker, Gordie Drillon, Sid Smith, and Bill Barilko among
others, and won the prized Stanley Cup 5 times over the course of the decade.
Former player Joe Primeau joined the Leafs brass during
the 50's as Coach and he brought in Dicky
Duff, Bobby Baun, Harry Lumley, Tim Horton, and Frank Mahovlich. Although the Leafs only won one
Stanley Cup during the 50's, Toronto
was still considered a powerhouse team. This of course was in the time of
Gordie Howe's' Detroit Red Wings, Maurice
Richard's' Montreal Canadiens, Bobby Hull's' Chicago Black Hawks, and Andy Bathgate's' New York Rangers (the Bruins were a little soft in the
50's).
In the sixties the Leafs caught fire, and were a dynasty with superstar #27 Frank Mahovlich, winning the Cup three years in a row, 1962-1964,
and in 1967 for good measure. Led by Hockey Guru Punch Imlach the team
featured George Armstrong as Captain, Johnny Bower and Terry Sawchuck as
netminders, and Davey Keon. They teamed alongside mainstays Tim Horton, Bobby
Baun, and Dicky Duff.
The Seventies saw
Jacques Plante come to Toronto in 1970, a year
in which we saw the emergence of future Captain Darryl Sittler. It is still a
sour taste in this writers' mouth that the Leafs traded Bernie Parent to the Philadelphia Flyers for Doug Favell (a swap of Goalies)
the next year. Norm Ullman was perhaps the best Leaf during this time, and led
alongside Captain Davey Keon until Sittler took over the reign. During the
1973/74 season, Toronto saw future Hall of
Famers Lanny McDonald and Borje Salming join the big club. Going into the 75/76 season Randy Carlyle joined the big club. At the start of the
76/77 year we saw the emergence of rookies Dave 'Tiger' Williams and goalie
Mike Palmateer. Our Leafs peaked in 77/78 and beat the future dynasty New York
Islanders in the Quarter-Finals, with the winning goal scored by Lanny McDonald
on a wrist shot on Chico Resch that went five-hole. Although the Leafs looked
primed to make a run for the Cup, the team was dismantled by Harold Ballard and
we went on a downside into the eighties.
It was in the early 80's that the
Leafs provided the fans of Toronto with our
first Maple Leaf to score 50 Goals. Rick
Vaive did so three times in fact and duly became the next Leaf Captain. The
1985/86 campaign saw Toronto with the first
overall pick - Wendel Clark. Robbed at winning the Calder Trophy, Clark became an early fan favorite as he scrapped and
scored goals at an alarming rate. His body-checks were revered by most Hockey fans Worldwide, and spoken highly by Don Cherry on the CBC. This of course were the Brophy days where we
saw three fights a game, yet rarely made the playoffs. The city loved to talk
about Head Coaches Brophy and Demers, with the inference of our mortal enemy,
the Toronto/Detroit rivalry. Late in the decade Wendel Clark was named our next
Captain, and many would say he was a true great of the game.
It was in 1991 that
Cliff Fletcher, our General Manager, traded away 50 Goal scorer Gary Leeman among others to the Calgary Flames for Dougie 'Killer' Gilmour, Jamie Macoun,
Rick Natress, and Rick Wamsley. This was
perhaps, the greatest Leaf trade to this point of Leafs history. We saw a
resurgence of Leaf dominance (although our Leafs couldn't bring home the Cup).
We made the Semi-Finals three times in the nineties, with Doug Gilmour as
Captain in 1992/93 and 93/94. A true leader, Gilmour took a slash in the face
from Wayne Gretzky in the Semi's of 1993, and everyone knows the rest. That
team was stacked with solid players in the likes of Goalie Felix Potvin, Dave
Andreychuk, Glenn Anderson, Mike Gartner, Wendel Clark, and Sylvain Lefebvre
among others. The 1992-1994 Leafs was run by coaching great Pat Burns and he
almost took us to ‘the promised land’.
As the nineties wore on
we saw Curtis (Cujo) Joseph lead us to another Semi-Final appearance, on a team
Captained by Mats Sundin. The Leafs of the late nineties and early 00’s showcased
Gary Roberts, Larry Murphy, and a young Tomas Kaberle, this being the Pat Quinn
era.
To start the 2002/03
campaign Eddie Belfour took over for Curtis Joseph in net (as Cujo signed with
the Detroit Red Wings) and Sundin remained our
Captain until 2007/08 - the longest reign of all Maple Leaf Captains of
twelve years from 1995/96-2007/08.
After Pat Quinn, came John Ferguson, and we put
too much trust in Darcy Tucker, Pavel Kubina, Bryan McCabe, and signed them
long contracts each with a no-trade clause.
Since Ferguson we’ve had to endure
through Brian Burke shannannagan’s.
Seeing the likes of Vesa Toskala, Matt Stajan, Jonathan Bernier, Phil
Kessel, Joffrey Lupul, Dion Phaneuf, we haven’t really succeeded in making the
playoffs since 2002/03.
In the 2016 off-season General Managers Brendan Shanahan and Sweet Lou Lamorillo were able to land the 1st
overall pick in the draft and chose big American Forward Auston Matthews. Then we proceeded to select Mitch Marner as the fourth overall pick. The prior year we were able to obtain William Nylander as the fifteenth overall pick. In the 2016/2017 and the 2017/2018 Stanley Cup Playoffs we bowed out early (once against the Capitals and last year in Seven against the Bruins). With the acquisition of John Tavares in the past off-season we look poised to contend for the prized Cup, and although Sweet Lou flew the coup we still have one the greatest hockey minds in Coach Mike Babcock (who won the coveted Stanley Cup with Detroit).
Alongside Morgan Rielly, Nazem Kadri, Patrick Marleau, Zach Hyman, Kasperi Kapanen, Calle Rosen, Andreas Johnsson, Garret Sparks, and Frederik Andersen, the Leafs look poised to emerge to at least a serious playoff threat out of the Eastern Conference.
The reality is that many of our current Leafs were farmhands at one point with the Toronto Marlies (who have played great Hockey over the last few years) and had enormous success in the American Hockey League culminated by a Calder Cup Win in 2017/2018. Time will tell if we can look as imposing as the rival Franchise 2017/18 Stanley Cup winning Washington Capitals of last year or as dominating as our modern day Pittsburgh Penguins, Chicago Black Hawks and Los Angeles Kings dynasties.
Alongside Morgan Rielly, Nazem Kadri, Patrick Marleau, Zach Hyman, Kasperi Kapanen, Calle Rosen, Andreas Johnsson, Garret Sparks, and Frederik Andersen, the Leafs look poised to emerge to at least a serious playoff threat out of the Eastern Conference.
The reality is that many of our current Leafs were farmhands at one point with the Toronto Marlies (who have played great Hockey over the last few years) and had enormous success in the American Hockey League culminated by a Calder Cup Win in 2017/2018. Time will tell if we can look as imposing as the rival Franchise 2017/18 Stanley Cup winning Washington Capitals of last year or as dominating as our modern day Pittsburgh Penguins, Chicago Black Hawks and Los Angeles Kings dynasties.
No comments:
Post a Comment