1909 ECHA season

1909 ECHA season

The 1909 Eastern Canadian Hockey Association (ECHA) season lasted from January 2 until March 6. Teams played a twelve game schedule. The Ottawa Senators would win the league championship with a record of ten wins, two losses and take over the Stanley Cup.

League Business

Executive

* Joe Power, Quebec (President)
* James Strachan, Wanderers (1st Vice-President)
* J. Eveleigh, Montreal (2nd Vice-President)
* Emmett Quinn, (Secretary-Treasurer)

The Eastern Canadian Amateur Hockey Association league meeting was held November 4, 1908 and was a pivotal meeting in the evolution from amateur to professional ice hockey leagues. At the meeting the two last amateur, or at least partly amateur teams resigned over the signing of players from other teams. Montreal HC and Montreal Victorias left the league and later would continue as senior level men's teams playing for the Allan Cup. Unpaid players would no longer play with paid players.

The league would continue with four professional teams. The league name was changed to Eastern Canadian Hockey Association to reflect the change in status.

Regular Season

The Wanderers', Cecil Blatchford had retired and Bruce Stuart had moved to Ottawa. New additions included Joe Hall, Harry Smith, Jimmy Gardner and Steve Vair. The Wanderers would come close to their rivals, finishing second with nine wins and three losses.

Ottawa saw Harvey Pulford and Alf Smith retire, and Tom Phillips leave. Ottawa would replace these players with Edgar Dey, Billy Gilmour and Albert 'Dubby' Kerr from Toronto Professionals. Alf Smith would organize the Ottawa Senators of the Federal Hockey League.

Shamrocks added Harry Hyland, and Quebec saw the start of the career of Joe Malone.

Ottawa played an exhibition game prior to the season with the Toronto professionals on January 2 in Toronto. Ottawa defeated Toronto 5–4. [cite news |work=The Globe |date=January 4, 1909 |page=7 |title=Ottawa Not Invincible] Dubby Kerr place for Toronto, and signed with Ottawa a week later.

On January 25, Wanderers played an exhibition game in Cobalt, Ontario versus the Cobalt Silver Kings, betting $500 on themselves to win, but lost 6-4. [cite news |work=The Globe |title=Big Doings at Cobalt |date=January 28, 1909 |page=9] [cite news |work=The Globe |title=Enthusiastic Rufus Ryan |date=January 29, 1909 |page=9] After the game Harry Smith would leave the Wanderers to join Haileybury of the Timiskaming League. [cite news |work=The Globe |title=Smith at Haileybury |date=January 29, 1909 |page=9]

Highlights

The rivalry between Ottawa and Wanderers continued, Wanderers winning the first on January 6 7–6 in overtime, with Harry Smith scoring four against his former team. Ottawa would win the next 5–4 in Ottawa, and defeat Montreal in Montreal 9–8 before 8000 fans. Ottawa would finish the series winning 8–3 in Ottawa to clinch the championship.

Marty Walsh of Ottawa would win the scoring championship with 38 goals. Ottawa would average nearly ten goals per game.

Final Standing

Leading scorers

tanley Cup Challenges

Montreal vs. Edmonton

Prior to the season, Wanderers would play a challenge against the Edmonton Hockey Club, champions of the Alberta Amateur Hockey Association. Despite all players except for one being a 'ringer' for Edmonton, Montreal would defeat them December 28December 30, 1908 in Montreal. In game one, Harry Smith scored 5 goals as he lead the Wanderers to a 7–3 victory. The Edmontons won game two, 7–6, but Montreal took the two-game total goals series, 13–10.

After the challenge, Edmonton would play an exhibition game in Ottawa on January 2 before returning to Edmonton, defeating the Ottawa Senators (of the FHL) 4–2. [cite news|title=Edmonton Gagne a Ottawa|work=La Patrie |page=2 |date=January 4, 1909] Ottawa played the Toronto Pros the same day in Toronto, losing 5–4. [cite news |title=Les Ottawa Sont Surpris |work=La Patrie|page=2 |date=January 4, 1909] Lindsay, Pitre and Vair, having played with Edmonton for the challenge, would sign after the exhibition game with Renfrew of the Federal League. The players would help Renfrew to the FHL championship.

After the season, Ottawa took over the Cup, but a series against the Winnipeg Shamrocks could not be arranged and no challenge was played. (The Shamrocks would fold before the next season and never played a challenge.) Challenges from Renfrew of the Federal Hockey League and Cobalt of the Timiskaming League were disallowed when the Stanley Cup trustees ruled that the players on Renfrew and Cobalt were ineligible, having joined their teams after January 2.

Post-season exhibition

Ottawa and the Montreal Wanderers played a two-game series at the St. Nicholas Rink in New York on March 12 and March 13. Ottawa won the first game 6–4, and the second game was tied 8–8.

Ottawa Hockey Club 1909 Stanley Cup Champions

Stanley Cup champion
goaltenders=*Percy LeSueur
defence=*Fred Lake(point),
*Fred "Cyclone" Taylor (coverpoint),
*Edgar Dey Jr.(also played wing)
*Horace Merrill(Spare-Did not play)
wingers=* Albert "Dubbie" Kerr
*Hamilton Billy Gilmour (Also played rover)
*Harry Westwick
centers=*Bruce Stuart(rover)(Captain)
*Marty Walsh
non-players=
*Thomas D'arcy McGee (President), Llewellyn Bates (Vice President)
*Pete Green (Coach), Patrick Basketville (Treasurer)
*Martin Rosenthal (Secretary), Mac McGilton (Trainer)
*Charles Sparks, George Bryson, Dave Mulligan(Directors)
*Perciville Buttler, S.N. Nagle (Directors)
all-notes=†Missing from the team picture.
engraving-notes=Ottawa added a new ring to the bottom of the Stanley Cup and put their name on it. [ [Podnieks] ] .

References

*cite book
author=Coleman, Charles L.
title=The Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol. 1, 1893–1926 inc.
year=1966
publisher=NHL

* Podnieks, Andrew; Hockey Hall of Fame (2004). Lord Stanley's Cup. Triumph Books, 12, 48. ISBN 1-55168-261-3.

ee also

* Eastern Canadian Amateur Hockey Association
* 1909 FHL season
* List of pre-NHL seasons
* List of ice hockey leagues
* List of Stanley Cup champions


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