Pittsburgh Pirates (NHL)

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Pittsburgh Pirates
Pittsburgh Pirates Logo.svg
DivisionAmerican Division
Founded1925
HistoryPittsburgh Yellow Jackets
1915–1921 (independent)
1921–1925 (USAHA)
Pittsburgh Pirates
19251930
Philadelphia Quakers
1930–1931
Home arenaDuquesne Gardens
CityPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
ColorsBlack, gold, white, orange
       
MediaPittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pittsburgh Press
KDKA (AM)
Stanley Cups0
Conference championships0
Division championships0

The Pittsburgh Pirates were an American professional ice hockey team in the National Hockey League (NHL), based in Pittsburgh from 1925–26 to 1929–30. The nickname comes from the baseball team also based in the city. For the 1930–31 season, the team moved to Philadelphia, and played one season as the Philadelphia Quakers.[1]

Franchise history[]

Early days[]

The Pittsburgh Pirates are traced back to the Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets of the US Amateur Hockey Association. The Yellow Jackets' owner was Roy Schooley, a former referee. Even though the team won the USAHA Championship in 1924 and 1925, Schooley encountered financial problems. His team was then sold to attorney James F. Callahan. Pittsburgh was granted a franchise by the National Hockey League on November 7, 1925. The move came after Eddie Livingstone, the former owner of the Toronto Shamrocks and the Toronto Blueshirts of the National Hockey Association saw Pittsburgh as a possible member for a proposed rival league to the NHL; Pittsburgh had, in the 1890s, been the first metropolitan area to professionalize the game of ice hockey. In order to thwart the new league, the President of the NHL, Frank Calder, negotiated to put a franchise in Pittsburgh, which become the seventh team to join the NHL as well as the league's third US-based team. Callahan then renamed his team the Pittsburgh Pirates, after he received permission from Barney Dreyfuss, the owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team.[2]

The Pirates were assigned to what would later be called the NHL's American Division, with the Boston Bruins and the New York Americans. These two franchises were the only other American teams in the NHL at the time. The Duquesne Gardens, located in the city's Oakland neighborhood, served as the team's home arena. The Pirates, dubbed the "Mighty Steel City Sextet" in the Pittsburgh Press, were mostly leftovers from the former Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets. Ten former Yellow Jacket players would play for the Pirates.

The inaugural season[]

The Pirates began play during the 1925–26 NHL season. On November 26, 1925, Thanksgiving night, the Pirates defeated the Boston Bruins, 2–1, on the road in their very first NHL game, which was held at Boston Arena. Defenseman and captain Lionel Conacher scored Pittsburgh's first-ever NHL goal. Conacher beat Boston goaltender Charles Stewart at the 17:50 mark of the second period to tie the game at 1–1. Pirates' left winger Harold Darragh notched Pittsburgh's first game-winning goal 9:20 into the third period, while Pittsburgh goaltender Roy Worters stopped 26 of 27 shots to record the first NHL win in franchise and city history.

Two nights later, on November 28, the Pirates stunned the Montreal Canadiens, defeating them 1–0. The 1–0 loss to the Pirates marked the final game for legendary Canadiens' goaltender Georges Vezina. Vezina started the game with severe chest pains and left the game during the first intermission with a high fever. He died four months later from tuberculosis. Meanwhile, the first NHL game ever played in Pittsburgh was on December 2, 1925, in which 8,200 fans paid $1.00 each to see the 8:30 p.m. faceoff at the Duquesne Gardens. The Pirates lost to the New York Americans in overtime, 2–1. Conacher scored the lone goal for Pittsburgh at 9:15 of the second period.

In 36 games, the Pirates posted an impressive 19–16–1 record for third best in the league. With a .542 winning percentage, that first season would arguably be the team's best. During the playoffs, the Pirates faced the Montreal Maroons in a best-of-three, semifinal Stanley Cup playoff series. However the team lost the series to Montreal in two straight games at the Duquesne Gardens. The Maroons would then go on to win the 1926 Stanley Cup Finals.[3]

1926–1928[]

In the next season, the Pirates missed the playoffs after finishing in fourth place. Their third season saw the team post a 19–17–8 record and earn a playoff spot. This playoff series would be based on a two-game total goal series format. In the playoffs, the Pirates were defeated by the New York Rangers, 6–4. The Pirates lost 4–0 in game 1, and won game 2, 4-2, but could not overcome New York's lead in goals. This marked the second time the team lost in the first round to the eventual Stanley Cup winner. It would also turn out to be the last playoff game in the Pirates' history.

Decline[]

In 1928, financial problems forced James Callahan to sell the team to an ownership group which included Bill Dwyer, an early Prohibition gangster and bootlegger, and Benny Leonard, a fight promoter and ex-lightweight boxing champion, as his front man. Despite the sale of the team, things did not improve on the ice for the Pirates. The team's coach, Odie Cleghorn left the team at the end of the 1928–29 season to become a referee. Frank Fredrickson was then named the team's coach. Another major change came with the team's uniforms, as the Pirates' color scheme changed to black and orange.

The 1929–30 season was their fifth season in the NHL, and what would eventually be their last. The season saw the Pirates achieve their worst win-loss record with 5–36–3 record. With the Wall Street Crash of 1929, followed by the Great Depression, the owners found themselves in financial difficulties. Attendance for games was down and the owners tried selling off their star players in order to make ends meet. The team was $400,000 in debt by the end of their final season and in need of a replacement for the aging Duquesne Gardens.

Relocation[]

On October 18, 1930, at the NHL Board of Governors' meeting, Leonard moved the team across Pennsylvania, to Philadelphia, and renamed them the Philadelphia Quakers. However, Leonard's intention was to return the team to Pittsburgh as soon as a new arena was built. Thirteen players from the Pirates were transferred to the Quakers after the Pittsburgh franchise relocated. These players were Cliff Barton, Harold Darragh, Herb Drury, Gord Frasier, Jim Jarvis, Gerry Lowrey, Rennison Manners, Johnny McKinnon, Hib Milks, Joe Miller, Rodger Smith, and Tex White. Frank Fredrickson was also transferred to the Quakers, but he was released by Philadelphia two days later. The Quakers posted a poor 4–36–4 record in the 1930–31 season. The team then received permission from the NHL on September 26, 1931, to temporally cease operations as they sought a new permanent arena, located in either Pittsburgh or Philadelphia.

Meanwhile, the poor economy was taking a toll on the entire league. The Great Depression devastated the NHL as four teams were forced to fold, leaving behind just six teams. When a new Pittsburgh arena failed to materialize, Leonard surrendered his franchise in 1936. As it turned out, a new arena in Pittsburgh would not be built until the Pittsburgh Civic Arena opened in 1961. The NHL would play with six teams for 25 years before deciding to expand. The expansion in 1967 brought the Pittsburgh Penguins to the NHL and the city of Pittsburgh and the orange and black-uniformed Philadelphia Flyers to Philadelphia.

The last active Pirates player was Cliff Barton, who played his final NHL game in 1940.

Historic firsts[]

The Pittsburgh Pirates have left their mark in the NHL record books and NHL history with many firsts and other notable achievements.

  • Odie Cleghorn, the Pirates' coach (and occasional player) for the first four seasons, was the first NHL coach to change his players on the fly. This article from the December 21, 1925, Pittsburgh Press describes how Cleghorn would change the forward line halfway through each period with another set of attackers, who would play for "six or eight minutes". The first line would then come back on to finish the period. The defencemen were not changed.
  • Cleghorn was also the first coach to use three set forward lines, which was a huge change from the standard, which was to simply leave the best players out for as long as possible.[4]
  • The Pirates set an NHL record in salaries by signing defenceman Lionel Conacher to a three-year deal worth $7,500 a year. Conacher was later named Canada's athlete of the half-century.[4][5]
  • On December 26, 1926 the Pirates and the New York Americans combined for what still stands as the NHL record for most shots in one game. The two teams combined for 141 shots in a 3–1 New York win. Roy Worters made 70 saves for the Pirates and Jake Forbes made 67 saves for the Americans.[3]

Logos and uniforms[]

The Pirates were one of the first teams in Pittsburgh to use the black & gold color scheme, basing their colors around the Flag of Pittsburgh's colors. They were predated in that regard by their own predecessor, the Yellow Jackets,[6] as well as the 1912 Pittsburgh Filipinos[7][8] and 1924 Pittsburgh Pirates[6][9] baseball teams. Decades after the team folded, the colors have become the team colors of all three of Pittsburgh's major sports teams. However, during the team's existence, they would be the only team in the city with the colors, as the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team, like all other baseball teams at the time, had a more patriotic red, white, and blue color scheme and wouldn't permanently adopt black & gold until 1948. Meanwhile, the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers would not exist until 1933, three years after the team left town and two years after the franchise folded altogether.

The team not only borrowed the official city colors displayed on its seal, flag, fire hydrants, fire trucks and police cruisers, but literally "borrowed" their first logos from the city. In 1925, the Pirates founder and owner James Callahan was researching new uniforms and logos for the new team. He later called on his brother, a Pittsburgh Police officer, who provided him with old and surplus emblems, seals and patches for the Pirates to wear, all of them in the official city colors of "black and gold".[10][11]

The Pirates would later have a connection with Pittsburgh's next NHL franchise; the Pittsburgh Penguins. In January 1980, the Boston Bruins protested to the NHL over the Penguins proposed change in team colors, from blue (in light and dark shades) and white to black and gold (colors present on the Penguins' logo). The Penguins used the Pirates as an example of a NHL team, other than the Bruins, that used the black & gold color scheme; in addition, black and gold was not even the Bruins' original color scheme, as they wore brown and gold (the colors of Bruins founder Charles Adams' First National grocery stores) until 1934. The NHL allowed the Penguins to change their colors as a result of the Pirates using these colors.

The Pirates wore bright yellow wool jerseys with black trim stripes with a "P" on the front of their jerseys during the 1925–1926 season. The team used the Pittsburgh's city crest emblems from older police jackets on the uniform sleeves. The first year jerseys appear to have been inherited from the Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets old jerseys. The Pirates featured new jerseys in 1928–29 that were gold with blue striping. The word "Pirates" written in arched, blocked lettering. The city crest on the sleeves was replaced with a "P".[12]

In 1929–30, the Pirates switched to black and orange uniforms for their fifth and final season. The wool jerseys featured a chain-knit logo of a pirate face with an eye patch and hat with skull and cross bones. The jersey featured double striping on the sleeves and a diagonal background behind the crest. The orange and black remained when the Pirates moved across the state to become the Quakers, Philadelphia's first NHL team, adopting script lettering like the original Pirates' uniforms. When the Philadelphia Flyers joined the NHL in 1967, they adopted the orange and black colors first worn by the Pirates and Quakers.

Personnel[]

Owners[]

Head coaches[]

Captains[]

  • Lionel Conacher (1925–1926)
  • Harold Cotton (1926–1929)
  • Gerry Lowrey (1929–1930)

Hall of Famers[]

Olympic winners[]

1920 Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium:

1924 Olympics in Chamonix, France:

  • Bert McCaffrey won a gold medal with the Canadian national hockey team
  • Herb Drury won a silver medal with the American national hockey team

Season-by-season record[]

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes

Season GP W L T Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs[13]
1925–26 36 19 16 1 39 82 70 264 third in NHL Lost Semifinals (Montreal) 6-4
1926–27 44 15 26 3 33 79 108 230 fourth in American Out of Playoffs
1927–28 44 19 17 8 46 67 76 395 third in American Lost Semifinals (New York) 6-4
1928–29 44 9 27 8 26 46 80 324 fourth in American Out of Playoffs
1929–30 44 5 36 3 13 102 185 384 fifth in American Out of Playoffs
Relocated to Philadelphia
Total 212 67 122 23 157 376 519 1597  

See also[]

  • Philadelphia Quakers
  • List of Pittsburgh Pirates (NHL) players
  • Head Coaches of the Pittsburgh Pirates (NHL)
  • List of NHL seasons
  • List of defunct NHL teams
  • List of NHL players

References[]

  1. ^ Enright, Greg. "Pittsburgh's First NHL Team: The Pirates". Let's Go Pens. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  2. ^ Christman, Paul. "The NHL continues to inch south; Pittsburgh second U.S. team". PittsburghHockey.net. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Christman, Paul. "Pittsburgh's first NHL team had fast burst out of the gate". PittsburghHockey.net. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  4. ^ a b "Let's Go Pirates!". Let's Go Pens. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  5. ^ Braunwart, Bob; Bob Carroll. "LIONEL CONACHER: Canada's Answer to Jim Thorpe" (PDF). Coffin Corner: Vol. 3, No. 11 (1981). Warminster, Pennsylvania: Professional Football Researchers Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-26. Retrieved 2012-01-13.
  6. ^ a b "How About It, Buccos?". The Pittsburgh Post. April 5, 1924. p. 9 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ "Pittsburgh's Official Colors Will Be Worn by New Ball Club". The Pittsburgh Post. April 27, 1912. p. 10 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ "Fils' Lineup Is Selected". The Pittsburgh Post. June 29, 1912. p. 18 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ "Post Clock Ticks". The Pittsburgh Post. April 25, 1924. p. 14 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ "Pittsburgh Pirates (NHL) Jersey History". PittsburghHockey.net. Archived from the original on March 4, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  11. ^ "Pittsburgh Pirates (NHL) 1925-30". PittsburghHockey.net. Archived from the original on March 4, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  12. ^ "1928-29 Pittsburgh Pirates (NHL)".
  13. ^ "Standings for the Pittsburgh Pirates of the NHL". Hockey Database. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
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