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1955 Stanley Cup Final

1955 ice hockey championship series


1955 ice hockey championship series

FieldValue
year1955
team2[Montreal Canadiens](1954-55-montreal-canadiens-season)
team2_shortMontreal
team2_captainEmile Bouchard
team2_coachDick Irvin
team1**[Detroit Red Wings](1954-55-detroit-red-wings-season)**
team1_shortDetroit
team1_captainTed Lindsay
team1_coachJimmy Skinner
team1_1**4**
team1_2**7**
team1_32
team1_43
team1_5**5**
team1_63
team1_7**3**
team1_tot4
team2_12
team2_21
team2_3**4**
team2_4**5**
team2_51
team2_6**6**
team2_71
team2_tot3
datesApril 3–14, 1955
location1Detroit: Olympia Stadium (1, 2, 5, 7)
location2Montreal: Montreal Forum (3, 4, 6)
series_winnerGordie Howe (19:49, second)
hofers**Red Wings:**
Alex Delvecchio (1977)
Gordie Howe (1972)
Red Kelly (1969)
Ted Lindsay (1966)
Marcel Pronovost (1978)
Terry Sawchuk (1971)
**Canadiens:**
Jean Beliveau (1972)
Emile Bouchard (1966)
Bernie Geoffrion (1972)
Doug Harvey (1973)
Tom Johnson (1970)
Dickie Moore (1974)
Bert Olmstead (1985)
Jacques Plante (1978)
Maurice Richard (1961; did not play)
**Coaches:**
Dick Irvin (1958, player)

Alex Delvecchio (1977) Gordie Howe (1972) Red Kelly (1969) Ted Lindsay (1966) Marcel Pronovost (1978) Terry Sawchuk (1971) Canadiens: Jean Beliveau (1972) Emile Bouchard (1966) Bernie Geoffrion (1972) Doug Harvey (1973) Tom Johnson (1970) Dickie Moore (1974) Bert Olmstead (1985) Jacques Plante (1978) Maurice Richard (1961; did not play) Coaches: Dick Irvin (1958, player) The 1955 Stanley Cup Final was the championship series of the National Hockey League's (NHL) 1954–55 season, and the culmination of the 1955 Stanley Cup playoffs. It was contested between the Montreal Canadiens, appearing in their fifth of ten straight Finals, and the defending champion Detroit Red Wings, in the third Detroit-Montreal Finals series of the 1950s and the second consecutively. The Red Wings once again defeated the Canadiens in seven games for their second consecutive Stanley Cup championship, fourth in six seasons, and seventh overall. The Red Wings would not win the Stanley Cup again until , and as of , remains the last time they won Game 7 of the Finals. It also marked the last time that a U.S.-based team defeated a Canada-based team in the championship round until .

As of , 1955 remains the only year in which the Stanley Cup Final, NBA Finals, and World Series all went the full seven games.

Paths to the Finals

Montreal defeated the Boston Bruins in five games to reach the Finals. Detroit defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs in four games to reach the Finals.

Game summaries

Prior to the playoffs, Montreal's Maurice Richard was suspended and would be missed by the Canadiens.

In the second game, Ted Lindsay scored four goals to set an NHL record for most goals in one game in a Finals series.

Gordie Howe set two NHL records, amassing 12 points in this round, and surpassing former Canadiens player (and soon-to-be-coach) Toe Blake's point mark for the playoffs with 20 points in 11 games.

This was also the first Finals in which the home team won all seven games of the series, a feat that would be repeated only twice in the next 50 years, in (Montreal defeated the Chicago Black Hawks) and (the New Jersey Devils beat the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim).

|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =No scoring |1-2-1 =Floyd Curry (4) - 5:09 |1-2-2 =14:00 - pp - Alex Delvecchio (2) |1-3-1 =Floyd Curry (5) - 8:57 |1-3-2 =13:05 - Vic Stasiuk (3) 17:07 - sh - Marty Pavelich (1) 19:42 - en - Ted Lindsay (3) |goalie1-1 =Jacques Plante 26 saves / 29 shots |goalie1-2 =Terry Sawchuck 20 saves / 22 shots

|2-1-1 =No scoring |2-1-2 =2:15 - sh - Marcel Pronovost (1) 9:57 - Ted Lindsay (4) 16:00 - Alex Delvecchio (3) 17:11 - Gordie Howe (5) |2-2-1 =No scoring |2-2-2 =8:10 - Ted Lindsay (5) 15:48 - pp - Ted Lindsay (6) 19:37 - Ted Lindsay (7) |2-3-1 =Ken Mosdell (2) - 12:32 |2-3-2 =No scoring |goalie2-1 = Charlie Hodge 7 saves / 10 shots Jacques Plante 36 saves / 40 shots |goalie2-2 =Terry Sawchuck 26 saves / 27 shots

|3-1-1 =8:30 - pp - Bernie Geoffrion (3) 8:42 - pp - Bernie Geoffrion (4) |3-1-2 =Red Kelly (1) - pp - 18:13 |3-2-1 =14:23 - Bernie Geoffrion (5) |3-2-2 =Vic Stasiuk (4) - 16:16 |3-3-1 =7:50 - Jack LeClair (4) |3-3-2 =No scoring |goalie3-1 =Jacques Plante 35 saves / 37 shots |goalie3-2 =Terry Sawchuck 22 saves / 26 shots

|4-1-1 =00:40 - Calum MacKay (2) |4-1-2 =Dutch Reibel (4) - 12:38 |4-2-1 =3:41 - Bernie Geoffrion (6) 8:25 - Jean Beliveau (4) 9:07 - Tom Johnson (2) |4-2-2 =No scoring |4-3-1 =2:33 - Floyd Curry (6) |4-3-2 =Dutch Reibel (5) - 3:40 Jim Hay (1) - 12:00 |goalie4-1 =Jacques Plante 37 saves / 40 shots |goalie4-2 =Terry Sawchuck 25 saves / 30 shots

|5-1-1 =Jean Beliveau (5) - pp - 8:01 |5-1-2 =12:59 - Glen Skov (2) 18:59 - Gordie Howe (6) |5-2-1 =No scoring |5-2-2 =12:29 - pp - Gordie Howe (7) 16:20 - pp - Gordie Howe (8) |5-3-1 =No scoring |5-3-2 =2:09 - Vic Stasiuk (5) |goalie5-1 =Jacques Plante 36 saves / 41 shots |goalie5-2 =Terry Sawchuck 20 saves / 21 shots

|6-1-1 =7:30 - Jean Beliveau (6) |6-1-2 =Alex Delvecchio (4) - 13:36 |6-2-1 =3:45 - pp - Jack LeClair (5) 5:21 - pp - Bernie Geoffrion (7) 18:18 - Bernie Geoffrion (8) |6-2-2 =Alex Delvecchio (5) - pp - 15:54 |6-3-1 =00:19 - Floyd Curry (7) 18:55 - Calum MacKay (3) |6-3-2 =Red Kelly (2) - 16:23 |goalie6-1 =Jacques Plante 35 saves / 38 shots |goalie6-2 =Terry Sawchuck 33 saves / 39 shots

|7-1-1 =No scoring |7-1-2 =No scoring |7-2-1 =No scoring |7-2-2 =7:12 - Alex Delvecchio (6) 19:49 - Gordie Howe (9) |7-3-1 =Floyd Curry (8) - pp - 14:35 |7-3-2 =2:59 - Alex Delvecchio (7) |goalie7-1 =Jacques Plante 30 saves / 33 shots |goalie7-2 =Terry Sawchuck 21 saves / 22 shots

Stanley Cup engraving

The 1955 Stanley Cup was presented to Red Wings captain Ted Lindsay by NHL President Clarence Campbell following the Red Wings' 3–1 win over the Canadiens in game seven.

The following Red Wings players and staff had their names engraved on the Stanley Cup:

1954–55 Detroit Red Wings

  • 3 Marcel Pronovost
  • 4 Leonard Red Kelly (A)
  • 5 Benny Woit
  • 15 Larry Hillman
  • 18 Jim Hay
  • 12 Glen Skov
  • 14 Earl Reibel
  • 10 Alex Delvecchio
  • 19 Vic Stasiuk
  • 8 Tony Leswick
  • 9 Gordie Howe
  • 11 Marty Pavelich
  • 16 John Wilson
  • 17 Bill Dineen
  • 20 Marcel Bonin |non-players=
  • Marguerite Norris (President/Owner), Bruce Norris (Vice President/Owner)
  • Jack Adams (Manager), Jimmy Skinner (Coach)
  • John Mitchell (Chief Scout), Carl Mattson (Trainer)
  • Fred Huber Jr. (Publicity Director), Ross "Lefty" Wilson (Asst. Trainer) | engraving-notes=
  • Larry Hillman became the youngest player to be engraved on the Stanley Cup at 18 years, 2 months, 9 days. Gaye Stewart held the previous record in 1942 at 18 years, 9 months, and 21 days.
  • Wally Crossman (Asst. Trainer/Stick Boy) was left off the Stanley Cup, and team picture.
  • Marguerite Norris was the first woman to win back-to-back Stanley Cups in 1953–54, 1954–55.
  • Jimmy Skinner was the 8th NHL rookie coach to win the Stanley Cup.
  • Glenn Hall played 2 games for Detroit during the season. He was spare goalie for the finals. Hall spent most regular-season and playoffs playing for the Edmonton Flyers(WHL). So, his name was left off the Stanley Cup.

Members of Detroit Red Wings Dynasty 1950, 1952, 1954, 1955

Gordie Howe, Red Kelly, Ted Lindsay, Marty Pavelich, Marcel Pronovost, John Wilson (6 Players), Jack Adams, Carl Mattson, Fred Hubert Jr. (3 Non-players).

Aftermath

The next year, the Red Wings again met the Canadiens in the Finals in the hopes of a three-peat, but Montreal would get revenge on Detroit, winning the Cup in five games. The Canadiens then started a dynasty, winning the Stanley Cup the next four years, in 1957, 1958, 1959, and 1960.

The loss marked the end of the Red Wings’ dynasty. The Red Wings would return to the Finals in 1961, 1963, 1964, and 1966, but they would lose each one. They then entered a near 20 year slump known as the "Dead Wings" era, in which they would only make the playoffs twice between 1967 and 1983. The Red Wings would not win the Stanley Cup again until 1997, in which they swept the Philadelphia Flyers, starting another dynasty.

Notes

References

  • Podnieks, Andrew; Hockey Hall of Fame (2004). Lord Stanley's Cup. Bolton, Ont.: Fenn Pub. pp 12, 50.

before = Detroit Red Wings 1954 | after = Montreal Canadiens 1956 | title = Detroit Red Wings Stanley Cup champions | years = 1955|

References

  1. (June 24, 2024). "History of Game 7 in Stanley Cup Final".
  2. (November 2, 2025). "A brief history: Here's every World Series Game 7".
  3. (June 22, 2025). "NBA Finals history: Game 7 matchups and stats since 1951".
  4. Cole, Stephen. (2004). "The Best of Hockey Night in Canada". McArthur & Company.
  5. (April 6, 1955). "Wings Top Canadiens Again; LINDSAY'S 4 GOALS MARK 7-1 TRIUMPH Detroit Takes 2-0 Lead in Games Over Montreal Six in Stanley Cup Final". The New York Times.
  6. (March 26, 1962). "POINT OF FACT".
  7. (June 9, 2003). "Devils Defeat Mighty Ducks to Win Stanley Cup". The New York Times.
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