Vancouver Canucks (WHL)

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Vancouver Canucks
Johnnycanuck.jpg
CityVancouver, British Columbia
LeagueWHL
Founded1945
Operated1945–70
Home arenaPNE Forum
Pacific Coliseum
AffiliatesRochester Americans (AHL) (1968–1970)
Franchise history
1945–1952Vancouver Canucks (PCHL)
Championships
Playoff championships6 (1946, 1948, 1958, 1960,1969, 1970)

The Vancouver Canucks were a minor league professional ice hockey team in the Pacific Coast Hockey League and the Western Hockey League, based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Inaugurated in 1945 with the PCHL, they became a WHL team with the merger of the PCHL with the Western Canada Senior Hockey League in 1952. The Canucks played 25 seasons in the WHL between 1945 and 1970. In 1970 they were replaced by a new Canucks team of the same name, and joined the National Hockey League along with fellow expansion team, the Buffalo Sabres.

The Vancouver Canucks won six President's/Lester Patrick Cups (the trophy was renamed in 1960 after the death of Lester Patrick), two PCHL titles (1946 and 1948) and four WHL titles (1958, 1960, 1969 and 1970). They were also regular season champions four times. They played home games in the PNE Forum arena at the Pacific National Exhibition in east Vancouver, before moving for their last two seasons into the Pacific Coliseum just to the north.

Personnel[]

Players[]

Five Canucks players have been inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Andy Bathgate (inducted in 1978) played with Vancouver for four years (1952–54 and 1968–70) and was on the team for their final two championships. In 1969–70, he recorded 108 points in 72 games, earning the as league MVP. Johnny Bower, Tony Esposito, Allan Stanley and Gump Worsley – all Hall of Fame inductees – have all played one season with the Canucks.

Coaches[]

1948–49: Bill Cowley
1949–50: Bill Carse
1950–51: Bill Carse replaced by Murph Chamberlain
1951–52: Murph Chamberlain; replaced by Hugh Currie; replaced by Joe Carveth
1959–61: Art Chapman
1961–62: Phil Maloney (11–35–3); replaced by Hugh Currie (7–13–1) (February 7, 1962)
1962–63: Max McNab
1966–67: Bert Olmstead
1967–68: Jim Gregory
1968–69: Joe Crozier
1969–70: Joe Crozier; replaced by Hal Laycoe

General Managers[]

1948–49: Bill Cowley
1949–50: Coleman E. Hall
1950–51: –
1960–61: Coley Hall
1961–62: Art Chapman (temp); replaced by Dave Dauphine (after Nov.)
1962–63: Max McNab
1967–68: Annis Stukus
1968–69: Joe Crozier
1969–70: Joe Crozier; replaced by Bud Poile

Presidents[]

1948–61: Coleman E. Hall
1962–63: Fred J. Hume (owner)
1968–69: Cyrus McLean
1969–70: Cyrus McLean; replaced by Thomas K. Scallen

Honoured members[]

Hall of famers[]

Players

WHL league award winners[]

Players

Leader Cup – MVP

Rookie Award

Most Gentlemanly Player – Fred J. Hume Cup

Outstanding Defenseman – Hal Laycoe Cup

Leading Scorer Award

Outstanding Goaltender Award

Year by year standings[]

Presidents'/Lester Patrick Cup champions Division/reg. season Champions League Leader

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

Season League GP W L T Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
1945–46 PCHL 64 37 27 0 74 308 247 Won Championship
1946–47 PCHL 60 30 29 1 61 267 287
1947–48 PCHL 66 34 29 3 71 284 264 Won Championship
1948–49 PCHL 70 33 31 6 72 262 256 3rd North
1949–50 PCHL 70 33 28 9 75 300 264 3rd North
1950–51 PCHL 70 19 34 17 55 216 285 6th overall
1951–52 PCHL 70 23 38 9 55 226 283 8th overall
1952–53 WHL 70 32 28 10 74 222 216 2nd overall
1953–54 WHL 70 39 24 7 85 218 174 1st overall
1954–55 WHL 70 31 30 9 71 207 202 3rd overall
1955–56 WHL 70 38 28 4 80 252 181 1st Coast
1956–57 WHL 70 27 37 6 60 203 231 4th Coast
1957–58 WHL 70 44 21 5 93 238 174 1st Coast Won Championship
1958–59 WHL 70 31 28 11 73 219 214 2nd Coast
1959–60 WHL 70 44 20 6 94 230 177 1st overall Won Championship
1960–61 WHL 70 38 29 3 79 208 191 3rd overall
1961–62 WHL 70 18 48 4 40 223 324 4th Northern
1962–63 WHL 70 35 31 4 74 243 234 1st Northern
1963–64 WHL 70 26 41 3 55 229 258 6th overall
1964–65 WHL 70 32 32 6 70 263 244 3rd overall
1965–66 WHL 72 33 35 4 70 252 233 3rd overall
1966–67 WHL 72 38 32 2 78 228 215 3rd overall
1967–68 WHL 72 26 41 5 57 213 258 5th overall
1968–69 WHL 74 36 24 14 86 259 223 2nd overall Won Championship
1969–70 WHL 72 47 17 8 102 334 219 1st overall Won Championship
Season League GP W L T Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs

Year by year statistical leaders[]

Total points (team, season)[]

Year        Player            GP   Goals  Assists  Pts   PIM   Leading scorer
1952–'53    Larry Popein      70     25     44      59    23    Ian MacIntosh, Walt Atanas – 28
1953–'54    Larry Popein      70     34     32      66    22    Larry Popein
1954–'55    Doug Adam         67     30     22      52    53    Doug Adam
1955–'56    Phil Maloney      70     37     58      95    14    Phil Maloney
1956–'57    Phil Maloney      70     43     55      98     8    Phil Maloney
1957–'58    Phil Maloney      70     35     59      94     0    Jack McLeod – 44*
1958–'59    Ted Hampson       66     27     41      68    23    Dan Belisle – 31
1959–'60    Colin Kilburn     70     23     47      70    79    Jim Powers – 30
1960–'61    Bruce Carmichael  70     30     47      77    36    and Dan Belisle – 30
1961–'62    Phil Maloney      70     34     52      86     2    Barrie Ross – 35
1962–'63    Phil Maloney      69     24     61      90     8    Carl "Buddy" Boone – 44*
1963–'64    Phil Maloney      65     28     53      81    38    Carl "Buddy" Boone – 38
1964–'65    Billy McNeill     68     29     59      88    86    and Phil Maloney – 29
1965–'66    Billy McNeill     72     40     62     102    20    Billy McNeill
1966–'67    Gordon Vejprava   71     36     46      82    27    Gordon Vejprava
1967–'68    Phil Maloney      72     22     46      68     6    Bruce Carmichael – 31
1968–'69    Bob Barlow        74     36     48      84    50    Andy Bathgate – 37
1969–'70    Andy Bathgate     72     40     68*    108*   66    Paul Andrea – 44*
* – team record
Team record for PIM/season – 251, John Arbor, 1969–'70

Total points (team, playoffs)[]

Year        Player              GP   Goals  Assists  Pts   PIM
1952–'53    Larry Popein         9      5     10      15     0
1953–'54    Charles McCullough  13      5      8      13     0
1954–'55    Phil Maloney         5      2      2       4     0
1955–'56    Phil Maloney        15      8      7      15     4
1957–'58    Phil Maloney        11      8     17*     25*    4
1958–'59    (three players tied with 7 points in 9 games)
1959–'60    Ray Cyr             11      5     11      16    11
1960–'61    Bruce Carmichael     9      3      3       6     2
1962–'63    Phil Maloney         7      2      7       9     0
            Robert Kabel         7      5      4       9     2
1964–'65    Phil Maloney         5      1      5       6     0
            Billy McNeill        5      2      4       6     0
1965–'66    Larry Cahan          7      4     12      16     4
1966–'67    Bryan Hextall        8      3      5       8    11
1968–'69    Bryan Hextall        8      4      7      11    22
1969–'70    Murray Hall         11     10     11      21    10
            Gerry Glover        11      5     16      21    12
* – team record
Team record for goals/playoff – 14, Jack McLeod, 1957–'58
Team record for PIM/playoff – 47, Ted McCaskill, 1969–'70

Goaltender stats, season[]

Year        Player                GP    GA  EN  SO  GAA    W   L   T   SVS   .PC
1952–'53    Emile Francis         70   216       5  3.09  32  28  10               – won Outstanding Goalkeeper
1953–'54    Lorne "Gump" Worsley  70   168       4  2.40  39  24   7               – won Outstanding Goalkeeper
1954–'55    Johnny Bower          63   171       7  2.71  30  25   8               – won Outstanding Goalkeeper
1955–'56    Ray Mikulan           71   181          2.54                           – won Outstanding Goalkeeper
1956–'57    Ray Mikulan           71   231   0   4  3.25               1772  .885
1957–'58    Marcel Pelletier      71   173   0   8* 2.43               1749  .910* – won Outstanding Goalkeeper
1958–'59    Bruce Gamble          65   199   2   7  3.06  29  26  20   1630  .891
1959–'60    Hank Bassen           69   172       5  2.45  44  19   6               – won Outstanding Goalkeeper
1960–'61    Claude Evans          53   147       6  2.77  27  23   3
1961–'62    Claude Evans          40   165       2  4.08  11  26   3
            Art LaRiviere         23
1962–'63    Gilles Villemure      70   228       5  3.26  35  31   4
1963–'64    Marcel Paille         70   254       2  3.60  26  41   3
1964–'65    Gilles Villemure      60   212       6  3.46  27  26   6
1965–'66    Gilles Villemure      69   223       5  3.20  32  34   3
1966–'67    Don Simmons           72   213   1   7  2.95  38  32   2
1967–'68    Tony Esposito         63   199   0   4  3.20  25  33   4   
            Jean-Guy Morissette   11    58   0   0  5.45   1   8   1
1968–'69    George Gardner        53   154   2   2  3.01  25  18   9
            Charlie Hodge         13    32   1   0  2.54   7   2   4
            Al Millar             12    34   0   0  3.52   4   4   1
1969–'70    George Gardner        60   171   0   3  2.88  41  14   6               – won Outstanding Goalkeeper
            Lynn Zimmerman        13    48   0   0  3.78

Bibliography[]

  • Stott, Jon C. (2008), Ice Warriors: The Pacific Coast/Western Hockey League 1948–1974, Surrey, British Columbia: Heritage House Publishing, ISBN 978-1-894974-54-7

External links[]

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