1936 Stanley Cup Finals
1936 Stanley Cup Finals | |||||||||||||||||||
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* – Denotes overtime period(s) | |||||||||||||||||||
Location(s) | Detroit: Olympia Stadium (1, 2) Toronto: Maple Leaf Gardens (3, 4) | ||||||||||||||||||
Format | best-of-five | ||||||||||||||||||
Coaches | Detroit: Jack Adams Toronto: Dick Irvin | ||||||||||||||||||
Captains | Detroit: Doug Young Toronto: Hap Day | ||||||||||||||||||
Dates | April 5 to April 11, 1936 | ||||||||||||||||||
Series-winning goal | Pete Kelly (9:45, third, G4) | ||||||||||||||||||
The 1936 Stanley Cup Finals was contested by the Detroit Red Wings and the Toronto Maple Leafs. This was Detroit's second appearance in the Finals and Toronto's sixth. Detroit would win the series 3–1 to win their first Stanley Cup.
Path to the Final[]
Detroit defeated the defending champion Montreal Maroons in a best-of-five 3–0 to advance to the Finals. The Leafs had to play a total-goals series; 8–6 against Boston Bruins, and win a best-of-three 2–1 against the New York Americans to advance to the Finals.
Game summaries[]
April 5 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 1–3 | Detroit Red Wings | Olympia Stadium | Recap | show |
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April 7 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 4–9 | Detroit Red Wings | Olympia Stadium | Recap | show |
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April 9 | Detroit Red Wings | 3–4 | OT | Toronto Maple Leafs | Maple Leaf Gardens | Recap | show |
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April 11 | Detroit Red Wings | 3–2 | Toronto Maple Leafs | Maple Leaf Gardens | Recap | show |
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Detroit won series 3–1 | |
Stanley Cup engraving[]
The 1936 Stanley Cup was presented to Red Wings captain Doug Young by NHL President Frank Calder following the Red Wings 3–2 win over the Maple Leafs in game four.
The following Red Wings players and staff had their names engraved on the Stanley Cup
1935–36 Detroit Red Wings
Players
- Centres
- 7 Marty Barry
- 9 Wally Kilrea
- 11 Gord Pettinger
- 14 Wilfie Starr†
- 4 Herbie Lewis
- 6 Larry Aurie
- 8 Syd Howe
- 10 John Sorrell
- 12 Hec Kilrea
- 14 Mordere Bruneteau
- 15 Pete Kelly
- 17 Art Giroux†
- 2 Doug Young (Captain)
- 3 Wilfred Bucko McDonald
- 5 Ebbie Goodfellow
- 16 Ralph "Scotty" Bowman
- Goaltenders
- 1 Normie Smith
- Les Tooke† (Spare goalie; did not play)
Coaching and administrative staff
- James E. Norris Sr. (President/Owner), James D. Norris Jr. (Vice President/Owner)
- Arthur Wirtz Sr. (Secretary-Treasurer/Owner), Jack Adams (Manager-Coach)
- Frank "Honey" Walker (Trainer), John Gilles (Business Manager)
- Carl Mattson† (Ass't Trainer/qualified)
Stanley Cup engraving
- Four Red Wings were included on the team picture, but left off the Stanley Cup: Wilfie Starr, Art Giroux, Les Tooke, and assistant trainer Carl Mattson. Tooke, who spent the season with the Windsor Shamrocks of the Michigan-Ontario Hockey League, was the Wings' spare goaltender; he never played in the NHL.
Detroit: "City of Champions"[]
When the Red Wings won the 1936 Stanley Cup, the City of Detroit was mired in the Great Depression, which had hit Detroit and its industries particularly hard. But with the success of the Red Wings and other Detroit teams and athletes in the 1935/36 sports season, Detroit's luck appeared to be changing, as the city was dubbed the "City of Champions".[1] The Detroit Tigers started the winning streak by winning the 1935 World Series, and the Detroit Lions continued the process by capturing the 1935 NFL Championship Game. When the Red Wings completed their own championship drive, the city had seen three major sporting league championships in less than a year.[Note 1] Detroit's champions also included Detroit's "Brown Bomber", Joe Louis, the heavyweight boxing titlist; native Detroiter Gar Wood, top unlimited powerboat racer and the first man to go 100 miles per hour on water; and Eddie "the Midnight Express" Tolan, a black Detroiter who won gold medals in the 100- and 200-meter races at the 1932 Summer Olympics.[citation needed]
See also[]
Notes[]
- ^ Detroit held all three titles for 178 days, from April 11 until October 6, 1936. The only other city to hold three major professional team titles at once was New York (Yankees, NFL Giants and Rangers) in 1927-28.[citation needed]
References[]
- ^ "Detroit is a hockey, baseball, basketball town". Sports.espn.go.com. June 17, 2008. Retrieved February 25, 2014.
Bibliography[]
- NHL (2000). Total Stanley Cup. Dan Diamond & Associates.
- Podnieks, Andrew; Hockey Hall of Fame (2004). Lord Stanley's Cup. Bolton, Ont.: Fenn Pub. pp 12, 50. ISBN 978-1-55168-261-7
- 1935–36 NHL season
- Stanley Cup Finals
- Detroit Red Wings games
- Toronto Maple Leafs games
- Sports competitions in Detroit
- April 1936 sports events
- 1936 in sports in Michigan
- 1936 in Detroit
- 1936 in Ontario
- 1930s in Toronto