Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 League business  





2 Teams  





3 Regular season  



3.1  Highlights  





3.2  Final standings  







4 Playoffs  



4.1  Playoff bracket  





4.2  Semifinals  



4.2.1  (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (3) Boston Bruins  





4.2.2  (2) Montreal Canadiens vs. (4) Chicago Black Hawks  







4.3  Stanley Cup Finals  







5 Awards  



5.1  All-Star teams  







6 Player statistics  



6.1  Scoring leaders  





6.2  Leading goaltenders  







7 Coaches  





8 Debuts  





9 Last games  





10 Broadcasting  





11 See also  





12 References  





13 External links  














195253 NHL season






Čeština
Deutsch
Français
مصرى
Polski
Português
Русский
Slovenčina
Suomi
Svenska
Українська
 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from 1953 Stanley Cup playoffs)

1952–53 NHL season
LeagueNational Hockey League
SportIce hockey
DurationOctober 9, 1952 – April 16, 1953
Number of games70
Number of teams6
TV partner(s)CBC, SRC (Canada)
None (United States)
Regular season
Season championDetroit Red Wings
Season MVPGordie Howe (Red Wings)
Top scorerGordie Howe (Red Wings)
Stanley Cup
ChampionsMontreal Canadiens
  Runners-upBoston Bruins
NHL seasons

← 1951–52

1953–54 →

The 1952–53 NHL season was the 36th season of the National Hockey League. The Montreal Canadiens were the Stanley Cup winners as they beat the Boston Bruins four games to one in the final series.

League business[edit]

Black Hawks
Red Wings
Canadiens
Rangers
Maple Leafs
1952-53 NHL teams

The NHL almost had a seventh franchise, as the Cleveland Barons of the American Hockey League applied for a franchise. They were accepted with the proviso that they deposit $425,000 to show good faith, and prove they had sufficient working capital to consort with the other NHL teams. They could not come up with the working capital and transfer of applicants stock to Cleveland residents. As a result, the Barons were told to apply at a later date.

A big deal was made between Toronto and Chicago as the Maple Leafs shipped Al Rollins, Gus Mortson, and Cal Gardner for goaltender Harry Lumley.

Sid Abel was signed by Chicago to be player-coach.

What was rumoured became fact in September when Arthur M. Wirtz and James D. Norris became the new owners of the near bankrupt Chicago Black Hawks.

James E. Norris, owner of the Detroit Red Wings since 1932 and father of James D. Norris, Chicago owner, died of a heart attack on December 4, 1952, and his daughter Marguerite became the owner. She became the first female owner of an NHL franchise since Ida Querrie owned the Toronto St. Patricks in 1923 when her husband Charlie transferred his stock in the team to her to avoid paying Eddie Livingstone any money in Livingstone's lawsuit against him.

NHL on-ice officials changed to orange-coloured uniforms in March 1953. The officials had worn cream-coloured uniforms which were not distinguishable from some team's home-ice uniforms.

Teams[edit]

1952-53 National Hockey League
Team City Arena Capacity
Boston Bruins Boston, Massachusetts Boston Garden 13,909
Chicago Black Hawks Chicago, Illinois Chicago Stadium 16,666
Detroit Red Wings Detroit, Michigan Detroit Olympia 15,000
Montreal Canadiens Montreal, Quebec Montreal Forum 15,551
New York Rangers New York, New York Madison Square Garden 15,925
Toronto Maple Leafs Toronto, Ontario Maple Leaf Gardens 12,586

Regular season[edit]

For the fifth straight season, the Detroit Red Wings lead the league in points. Gordie Howe won the Hart Trophy over Al Rollins, but on the strength of Rollins' goaltending, Chicago made the playoffs for the first time since 1946.

The first television broadcast in Canada of an NHL game occurred on October 11, 1952. It was a French language broadcast of a game between the Montreal Canadiens and Detroit Red Wings with the Canadiens winning 2–1.[1] The French language telecast was produced by 24-year-old Gerald Renaud. On November 1, the first English language broadcast aired, with Foster Hewitt calling the action, starting in the second period because Conn Smythe was concerned that it would cut into the crowds at the arena.[2]

Highlights[edit]

Gump Worsley made his NHL debut October 9, 1952, in goal for the New York Rangers at the Detroit Olympia and lost 5–3, as Ted Lindsay scored in a tip-in on the power play for Worsley's first goal against him. The Production line scored 3 goals that night as Alex Delvecchio and Gordie Howe also had goals. Marty Pavelich scored what proved to be the winning goal.

On November 8, 14,562 fans were in attendance at the Montreal Forum when the Canadiens beat Chicago 6–4. Elmer Lach scored his 200th career goal. Fifty seconds later, after Emile "Butch" Bouchard fed him the puck, Rocket Richard rifled a puck past Al Rollins for his 325th goal, breaking Nels Stewart's record for career goals.[2] It was ten years to the day since Richard had scored his first NHL goal.[2] "Old Poison" sent the following telegram: "Congratulations on breaking record. Hope you will hold it for many seasons. Best of luck to you and rest of team."

When Terry Sawchuk was injured in practice, the Red Wings brought up Glenn Hall and he made his NHL debut on December 27 and played well in a 2–2 tie with Montreal. Hall then picked up his first career shutout January 7, blanking Boston 4–0.

Red Wings General manager Jack Adams got into some trouble on January 18 when, after a 3–2 loss to Montreal, he entered the officials room and argued with referee Red Storey. Dick Irvin, coach of Montreal, was very upset over this and NHL president Clarence Campbell agreed, fining Adams $500.

Gump Worsley got his first career shutout January 11 when the New York Rangers defeated the Canadiens 7–0 in Montreal.

Butch Bouchard Night was held on February 28 and he was presented with a car and a TV set. Detroit spoiled the night with a 4–3 victory.[3]

Ted Lindsay scored 4 goals on March 2 as Detroit pummeled Boston by a score of 10–2.

Gordie Howe scored 49 goals to nearly tie Rocket Richard's record. Howe was held off the scoresheet in the final game of the season by Richard's Canadiens. Howe set a new points record for the season with 95 points and won the Art Ross and Hart trophies.[2]

Final standings[edit]

National Hockey League[4]
  • t
  • e
  • GP W L T GF GA DIFF Pts
    1 Detroit Red Wings 70 36 16 18 222 133 +89 90
    2 Montreal Canadiens 70 28 23 19 155 148 +7 75
    3 Boston Bruins 70 28 29 13 152 172 −20 69
    4 Chicago Black Hawks 70 27 28 15 169 175 −6 69
    5 Toronto Maple Leafs 70 27 30 13 156 167 −11 67
    6 New York Rangers 70 17 37 16 152 211 −59 50

    Playoffs[edit]

    In a major upset, first-place Detroit was defeated in the semifinal by the Boston Bruins in six games. In the other semifinal, the fourth-place Chicago Black Hawks, making their first playoff appearance in seven years, took a 3–2 series lead after losing the first two games to the second-place Montreal Canadiens, but could not finish the job, losing in seven games.

    Playoff bracket[edit]

    Semifinals Stanley Cup Finals
          
    1Detroit 2
    3 Boston 4
    3Boston 1
    2 Montreal 4
    2 Montreal 4
    4Chicago 3

    Semifinals[edit]

    (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (3) Boston Bruins[edit]

    March 24 Boston Bruins 0–7 Detroit Red Wings Olympia Stadium Recap  
    No scoring First period 02:39 – Marty Pavelich (1)
    08:45 – Ted Lindsay (1)
    09:16 – Marty Pavelich (2)
    No scoring Second period 08:52 – Alex Delvecchio (1)
    No scoring Third period 05:54 – Metro Prystai (1)
    06:53 – Johnny Wilson (1)
    16:04 – Ted Lindsay (2)
    Jim Henry Goalie stats Terry Sawchuck
    March 26 Boston Bruins 5–3 Detroit Red Wings Olympia Stadium Recap  
    Fleming MacKell (1) – 07:56
    Dave Creighton (1) – 14:09
    First period 08:54 – ppGordie Howe (1)
    Joe Klukay (1) – 02:10 Second period No scoring
    Johnny Peirson (1) – 10:04
    Dave Creighton (2) – 12:58
    Third period 17:38 – Metro Prystai (2)
    18:08 – Metro Prystai (3)
    Jim Henry Goalie stats Terry Sawchuck
    March 29 Detroit Red Wings 1–2 OT Boston Bruins Boston Garden Recap  
    No scoring First period 11:27 – Ed Sandford (1)
    Tony Leswick (1) – 10:54 Second period No scoring
    No scoring Third period No scoring
    No scoring First overtime period 12:29 – Jack McIntyre (1)
    Terry Sawchuck Goalie stats Jim Henry
    March 31 Detroit Red Wings 2–6 Boston Bruins Boston Garden Recap  
    No scoring First period 02:45 – Ed Sandford (2)
    13:12 – Jack McIntyre (2)
    Metro Prystai (4) – 14:27
    Alex Delvecchio (2) – 15:48
    Second period 06:05 – ppMilt Schmidt (1)
    10:37 – Jack McIntyre (3)
    11:22 – Dave Creighton (3)
    No scoring Third period 12:55 – Ed Sandford (3)
    Terry Sawchuck Goalie stats Jim Henry
    April 2 Boston Bruins 4–6 Detroit Red Wings Olympia Stadium Recap  
    No scoring First period 00:23 – Ted Lindsay (3)
    00:55 – Bob Goldham (1)
    03:45 – Benny Woit (1)
    Ed Sandford (4) – 09:02 Second period 08:42 – Gordie Howe (2)
    11:32 – Johnny Wilson (2)
    Ed Sandford (5) – 01:54
    Milt Schmidt (2) – 11:57
    Milt Schmidt (3) – pp – 16:46
    Third period 09:54 – Glen Skov (1)
    Jim Henry Goalie stats Terry Sawchuck
    April 5 Detroit Red Wings 2–4 Boston Bruins Boston Garden Recap  
    No scoring First period 03:41 – ppEd Sandford (6)
    Reg Sinclair (1) – 18:05 Second period 11:36 – Johnny Peirson (2)
    Ted Lindsay (4) – 13:27 Third period 11:19 – Fleming MacKell (2)
    17:36 – Leo Labine (1)
    Terry Sawchuck Goalie stats Jim Henry
    Boston won series 4–2


    (2) Montreal Canadiens vs. (4) Chicago Black Hawks[edit]

    March 24 Chicago Black Hawks 1–3 Montreal Canadiens Montreal Forum Recap  
    No scoring First period No scoring
    Gerry Couture (1) – 13:34 Second period 14:55 – Bernie Geoffrion (1)
    No scoring Third period 04:29 – Butch Bouchard (1)
    17:54 – Paul Meger (1)
    Al Rollins Goalie stats Gerry McNeil
    March 26 Chicago Black Hawks 3–4 Montreal Canadiens Montreal Forum Recap  
    Jim McFadden (1) – 02:35
    George Gee (1) – 05:29
    Jim McFadden (2) – 06:58
    First period 05:17 – Floyd Curry (1)
    No scoring Second period 12:32 – Dickie Moore (1)
    18:08 – Bernie Geoffrion (2)
    19:02 – Dick Gamble (1)
    No scoring Third period No scoring
    Al Rollins Goalie stats Gerry McNeil
    March 29 Montreal Canadiens 1–2 OT Chicago Black Hawks Chicago Stadium Recap  
    No scoring First period No scoring
    Bernie Geoffrion (3) – 14:53 Second period No scoring
    No scoring Third period 18:03 – Bill Mosienko (1)
    No scoring First overtime period 05:18 – Al Dewsbury (1)
    Gerry McNeil Goalie stats Al Rollins
    March 31 Montreal Canadiens 1–3 Chicago Black Hawks Chicago Stadium Recap  
    Bert Olmstead (1) – pp – 11:12 First period No scoring
    No scoring Second period 02:57 – Bill Mosienko (2)
    No scoring Third period 12:28 – Vic Lynn (1)
    19:56 – Jim McFadden (3)
    Gerry McNeil Goalie stats Al Rollins
    April 2 Chicago Black Hawks 4–2 Montreal Canadiens Montreal Forum Recap  
    Fred Hucul (1) – pp – 04:00
    Bill Mosienko (3) – 06:59
    Gus Bodnar (1) – 11:26
    First period No scoring
    Gus Mortson (1) – 18:48 Second period 04:53 – Maurice Richard (1)
    No scoring Third period 14:36 – Tom Johnson (1)
    Al Rollins Goalie stats Gerry McNeil
    April 4 Montreal Canadiens 3–0 Chicago Black Hawks Chicago Stadium Recap  
    Bernie Geoffrion (4) – 05:59 First period No scoring
    Maurice Richard (2) – 03:23
    Ken Mosdell (1) – 16:20
    Second period No scoring
    No scoring Third period No scoring
    Jacques Plante Goalie stats Al Rollins
    April 7 Chicago Black Hawks 1–4 Montreal Canadiens Montreal Forum Recap  
    No scoring First period 01:38 – ppBernie Geoffrion (5)
    Bill Mosienko (4) – 14:16 Second period 15:36 – Eddie Mazur (1)
    No scoring Third period 04:51 – ppMaurice Richard (3)
    13:55 – Eddie Mazur (2)
    Al Rollins Goalie stats Jacques Plante
    Montreal won series 4–3


    Stanley Cup Finals[edit]

    In the finals, the Bruins could not continue their winning ways, and lost to Montreal in five games.

    After the finals, the Cleveland Barons of the American Hockey League applied to play a Stanley Cup challenge. The NHL governors turned down the challenge, stating that the Cleveland club operated in a league of lower standing.[5][2]


    April 9 Boston Bruins 2–4 Montreal Canadiens Montreal Forum Recap  
    Bob Armstrong (1) – pp – 02:08 First period 13:42 – Dickie Moore (2)
    No scoring Second period 02:37 – Ken Mosdell (2)
    16:05 – Floyd Curry (2)
    Johnny Peirson (3) – pp – 10:11 Third period 11:12 – Maurice Richard (4)
    Jim Henry, Gord Henry Goalie stats Jacques Plante
    April 11 Boston Bruins 4–1 Montreal Canadiens Montreal Forum Recap  
    Leo Labine (2) – 03:53
    Ed Sandford (7) – 18:13
    First period No scoring
    Ed Sandford (8) – 07:26 Second period 01:36 – Bert Olmstead (2)
    Milt Schmidt (4) – 15:43 Third period No scoring
    Gord Henry
    Jim Henry
    Goalie stats Jacques Plante
    April 12 Montreal Canadiens 3–0 Boston Bruins Boston Garden Recap  
    Tom Johnson (2) – 11:53 First period No scoring
    Paul Masnick (1) – 06:30 Second period No scoring
    Ken Mosdell (3) – pp – 11:27 Third period No scoring
    Gerry McNeil Goalie stats Gord Henry
    April 14 Montreal Canadiens 7–3 Boston Bruins Boston Garden Recap  
    Lorne Davis (1) – 03:23
    Maurice Richard (5) – 10:58
    Dickie Moore (3) – 16:40
    First period 18:22 – Dave Creighton (4)
    Bernie Geoffrion (6) – pp – 18:56 Second period No scoring
    Maurice Richard (6) – 05:33
    Calum MacKay (1) – 17:59
    Maurice Richard (7) – 18:27
    Third period 07:23 – Milt Schmidt (5)
    16:25 – Jack McIntyre (4)
    Gerry McNeil Goalie stats Gord Henry
    April 16 Boston Bruins 0–1 OT Montreal Canadiens Montreal Forum Recap  
    No scoring First period No scoring
    No scoring Second period No scoring
    No scoring Third period No scoring
    No scoring First overtime period 01:22 – Elmer Lach (1)
    Jim Henry Goalie stats Gerry McNeil
    Montreal won series 4–1


    Awards[edit]

    Prince of Wales Trophy:
    (Best regular-season record)
    Detroit Red Wings
    Art Ross Trophy:
    (Top scorer)
    Gordie Howe, Detroit Red Wings
    Calder Memorial Trophy:
    (Top first-year player)
    Lorne "Gump" Worsley, New York Rangers
    Hart Trophy:
    (Most valuable player)
    Gordie Howe, Detroit Red Wings
    Lady Byng Memorial Trophy:
    (Excellence and sportsmanship)
    Red Kelly, Detroit Red Wings
    Vezina Trophy:
    (Goaltender of team with best goals-against record)
    Terry Sawchuk, Detroit Red Wings

    All-Star teams[edit]

    First team   Position   Second team
    Terry Sawchuk, Detroit Red Wings G Gerry McNeil, Montreal Canadiens
    Red Kelly, Detroit Red Wings D Bill Quackenbush, Boston Bruins
    Doug Harvey, Montreal Canadiens D Bill Gadsby, Chicago Black Hawks
    Fleming MacKell, Boston Bruins C Alex Delvecchio, Detroit Red Wings
    Gordie Howe, Detroit Red Wings RW Maurice Richard, Montreal Canadiens
    Ted Lindsay, Detroit Red Wings LW Bert Olmstead, Montreal Canadiens

    Player statistics[edit]

    Scoring leaders[edit]

    Note: GP = Games played, G = Goals, A = Assists, PTS = Points, PIM = Penalties in minutes

    Player Team GP G A PTS PIM
    Gordie Howe Detroit Red Wings 70 49 46 95 57
    Ted Lindsay Detroit Red Wings 70 32 39 71 111
    Maurice Richard Montreal Canadiens 70 28 33 61 112
    Wally Hergesheimer New York Rangers 70 30 29 59 10
    Alex Delvecchio Detroit Red Wings 70 16 43 59 28
    Paul Ronty New York Rangers 70 16 38 54 20
    Metro Prystai Detroit Red Wings 70 16 34 50 12
    Red Kelly Detroit Red Wings 70 19 27 46 8
    Bert Olmstead Montreal Canadiens 69 17 28 45 83
    Fleming Mackell Boston Bruins 65 27 17 44 63

    [6]

    Leading goaltenders[edit]

    Note: GP = Games played; Min – Minutes played; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts

    Player Team GP MIN GA GAA W L T SO
    Terry Sawchuk Detroit Red Wings 63 3780 120 1.90 32 15 16 9
    Gerry McNeil Montreal Canadiens 66 3960 140 2.12 25 23 18 10
    Harry Lumley Toronto Maple Leafs 70 4200 167 2.39 27 30 13 10
    Jim Henry Boston Bruins 70 4200 142 2.46 28 29 13 7
    Al Rollins Chicago Black Hawks 70 4200 175 2.50 27 28 15 6
    Chuck Rayner New York Rangers 20 1200 58 2.90 4 8 8 1
    Lorne Worsley New York Rangers 50 3000 153 3.06 13 29 8 2

    Coaches[edit]

    Debuts[edit]

    The following is a list of players of note who played their first NHL game in 1952–53 (listed with their first team, asterisk(*) marks debut in playoffs):

    Last games[edit]

    The following is a list of players of note that played their last game in the NHL in 1952–53 (listed with their last team):

    Broadcasting[edit]

    The television version of Hockey Night in Canada made its debut on CBC Television. Regular season games were not broadcast in their entirety until the 1968–69 season, and were typically joined in progress at 9 p.m. Eastern Time, while the radio version of HNIC aired games in their entirety. Television coverage this season did not extend to the Stanley Cup playoffs.

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    Notes
    1. ^ CBC Archives. (May 29, 2009). "[1] Hockey Night in Canada." CBC. Retrieved November 10, 2009.
  • ^ a b c d e Dryden 2000, p. 55.
  • ^ "Crowds Demonstrate as Canadiens Lose to Detroit 4–3". The Montreal Gazette. March 2, 1953. p. 24.
  • ^ "Standings: 1952–1953". National Hockey League. Retrieved February 28, 2020.
  • ^ Mouton(1987), p. 117
  • ^ Dinger 2011, p. 149.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1952–53_NHL_season&oldid=1229678200#Playoffs"

    Categories: 
    195253 NHL season
    195253 in American ice hockey by league
    195253 in Canadian ice hockey by league
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Use mdy dates from August 2023
    Short description is different from Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 18 June 2024, at 03:37 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki