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1961–62 NHL season
National Hockey League season
National Hockey League season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | 1961–62 NHL season |
| league | National Hockey League |
| sport | Ice hockey |
| duration | October 11, 1961 – April 22, 1962 |
| season | Regular season |
| no_of_games | 70 |
| no_of_teams | 6 |
| TV | CBC, SRC (Canada) |
| None (United States) | |
| season_champ_name | Season champion |
| season_champs | Montreal Canadiens |
| MVP | Jacques Plante (Canadiens) |
| MVP_link | Hart Memorial Trophy |
| top_scorer | Bobby Hull (Black Hawks) |
| top_scorer_link | Art Ross Trophy |
| finals | Stanley Cup |
| finals_link | 1962 Stanley Cup Finals |
| finals_champ | Toronto Maple Leafs |
| finals_runner-up | Chicago Black Hawks |
| nextseason_link | 1962–63 NHL season |
| prevseason_link | 1960–61 NHL season |
| nextseason_year | 1962–63 |
| prevseason_year | 1960–61 |
| seasonslistnames | NHL |
None (United States) | finals_runner-up = Chicago Black Hawks The 1961–62 NHL season was the 45th season of the National Hockey League (NHL). Six teams played 70 games each. The Toronto Maple Leafs were the Stanley Cup champions as they defeated the Chicago Black Hawks four games to two.
League business
At a meeting of the owners and governors, Conn Smythe resigned as Toronto's governor, to be replaced by his son, Stafford Smythe. Thereupon, Conn Smythe was appointed honorary governor.
Pre-season
A big trade took place between the Montreal Canadiens and the New York Rangers with Doug Harvey and Albert Langlois going to the Rangers for Lou Fontinato. Harvey was named player-coach of the Rangers.
In an exhibition game in Trail, British Columbia, Jean Beliveau tore knee ligaments and would be unavailable for some time. This followed a knee injury to Dickie Moore.
Several holdouts on the Stanley Cup champion Chicago Black Hawks were reported. Stan Mikita, Reg Fleming and Dollard St. Laurent refused to sign their contracts, but they eventually came to terms.
Regular season
Glenn Hall received one of the greatest standing ovations in NHL history just before the NHL All-star game began. He had difficulty suppressing his emotions at the tremendous welcome he received. The All-stars defeated the Black Hawks 3–1.
Doug Harvey scored a goal in his debut as player-coach of the Rangers when they trounced the Boston Bruins 6–2 right at Boston Garden. The Rangers downed the Bruins again at Madison Square Garden 6–3 as Andy Bathgate had the hat trick and Camille Henry had two goals.
Montreal downed the Rangers 3–1 in their home opener as Henri Richard led the way with two goals playing with Beliveau and Moore, two cripples who were not expected to play. Doug Harvey was given an ovation by the crowd as he skated out in a Ranger uniform. The new defence pair of Al MacNeil and Lou Fontinato turned in a good game.
Earl Ingarfield Sr. had a hat-trick on November 19 as the Rangers beat the Maple Leafs 5–3. The Broadway Blueshirts were showing some power, and three nights later, Doug Harvey picked up three assists and Gump Worsley picked up a shutout as the Rangers blanked the Red Wings 4–0. The win put the Rangers into first place and the following night they beat the Bruins 4–3 as Harvey scored the winner.
Ab McDonald had the hat trick December 6, as Chicago drubbed the Rangers 8–3 right at Madison Square Garden. Bill Hay had four assists for the Black Hawks.
Toronto took over first place January 10 when they beat the Bruins 7–5. Frank Mahovlich scored two goals on his 24th birthday and Dave Keon also had two goals.
Glenn Hall played his 500th consecutive game January 17, but was beaten 7–3 by Montreal. In a losing cause, Bobby Hull scored two goals, including his 20th of the season. Glenn Hall received a car from James D. Norris, president of the Black Hawks.
Percy LeSueur, famous Ottawa goaltender in the old NHA, died on January 28, 1962, at age 79.
Bobby Hull scored four goals February 1 as the Black Hawks defeated Detroit 7–4.
The Rangers defeated the Red Wings 3–2 at home March 14, but the two highlights were Gordie Howe's 500th goal on Gump Worsley and a penalty shot for the Rangers Andy Bathgate. Howe took a pass from Alex Delvecchio and made a nice move to get by Doug Harvey. Howe switched to a left-handed shot and beat Worsley with a backhander for the 500th goal. Midway through the third period, Dean Prentice had a breakaway and was skating toward the Detroit goal, when Hank Bassen, the Detroit goalkeeper, slid his stick to break up the play. Referee Eddie Powers awarded a penalty shot, but somehow forgot that the rules had been changed that season to read that the offended player must take the shot, not one of his teammates, and Powers permitted Andy Bathgate to take the shot. Bathgate gave Bassen some of his slick dekes and Bassen flopped on his face, allowing Bathgate to fire the puck into the open net for the winning goal. From there, the Rangers held on and made the playoffs for the first time since 1958.
Bobby Hull joined the 50 goal club when he scored his 50th goal at about the five-minute mark of the first period as the Chicago Black Hawks beat the New York Rangers 4–1 at Madison Square Garden in the final game of the season.
Hall and Jacques Plante of the Canadiens played every minute of every game in goal; other than Eddie Johnston of the Bruins two seasons later in 1964, they were the last major professional goaltenders to do so.
The first 43 seasons saw only one 50 goal scorer, Maurice "Rocket" Richard. Then last season, 1960–61, Bernie Geoffrion scored 50. This season saw another 50 goal scorer in Bobby Hull of the Chicago Black Hawks. From this point onwards until the new century, far more seasons than not would see at least one player score fifty in a season.
Final standings
Playoffs
Playoff bracket
The top four teams in the league qualified for the playoffs. In the semifinals, the first-place team played the third-place team, while the second-place team faced the fourth-place team, with the winners advancing to the Stanley Cup Finals. In both rounds, teams competed in a best-of-seven series (scores in the bracket indicate the number of games won in each best-of-seven series).
| RD1-seed1=1 | RD1-team1=Montreal | RD1-score1=2 | RD1-seed2=3 | RD1-team2=Chicago | RD1-score2=4 | RD1-seed3=2 | RD1-team3=Toronto | RD1-score3=4 | RD1-seed4=4 | RD1-team4=New York | RD1-score4=2 | RD2-seed1=3 | RD2-team1=Chicago | RD2-score1=2 | RD2-seed2=2 | RD2-team2=Toronto | RD2-score2=4
Semifinals
The Black Hawks returned to the Finals, by defeating the first-place Canadiens four games to two in the semifinal. In the other, the second-place Maple Leafs defeated the Rangers, also in six games to advance to the Finals.
(1) Montreal Canadiens vs. (3) Chicago Black Hawks
|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =No scoring |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =No scoring |1-3-1 =Stan Mikita (1) – sh – 18:06 |1-3-2 =01:32 – Dickie Moore (1) 05:38 – pp – Jean Beliveau (1) |goalie1-1 =Glenn Hall 34 saves / 36 shots |goalie1-2 =Jacques Plante 36 saves / 37 shots
|2-1-1 =Bobby Hull (1) – pp – 05:26 |2-1-2 =15:10 – pp – Dickie Moore (2) |2-2-1 =Stan Mikita (2) – 05:15 |2-2-2 =No scoring |2-3-1 =Bobby Hull (2) – 05:15 |2-3-2 =11:04 – pp – Dickie Moore (3) 12:45 – Jean-Guy Talbot (1) 14:05 – Claude Provost (1) |goalie2-1 =Glenn Hall 23 saves / 27 shots |goalie2-2 =Jacques Plante 28 saves / 31 shots
|3-1-1 =09:05 – Bronco Horvath (1) 18:06 – Stan Mikita (3) |3-1-2 =No scoring |3-2-1 =19:17 – pp – Bill Hay (1) |3-2-2 =No scoring |3-3-1 =02:15 – Kenny Wharram (1) |3-3-2 =Red Berenson (1) – 14:27 |goalie3-1 =Glenn Hall 26 saves / 27 shots |goalie3-2 =Jacques Plante 23 saves / 27 shots
|4-1-1 =01:51 – pp – Bobby Hull (3) 08:28 – pp – Bronco Horvath (2) |4-1-2 =No scoring |4-2-1 =No scoring |4-2-2 =Jean Beliveau (2) – pp – 03:36 Dickie Moore (4) – 16:04 |4-3-1 =04:39 – Ab McDonald (1) 05:16 – pp – Bill Hay (2) 12:56 – pp – Ab McDonald (2) |4-3-2 =Gilles Tremblay (1) – 08:46 |goalie4-1 =Glenn Hall 32 saves / 35 shots |goalie4-2 =Jacques Plante 37 saves / 42 shots
|5-1-1 =Bobby Hull (4) – 02:55 Bronco Horvath (3) – 17:27 |5-1-2 =06:13 – Phil Goyette (1) 13:08 – Claude Provost (2) |5-2-1 =Kenny Wharram (2) – 19:14 |5-2-2 =No scoring |5-3-1 =Bill Hay (3) – 01:39 |5-3-2 =10:26 – Red Berenson (2) |goalie5-1 =Glenn Hall 35 saves / 38 shots |goalie5-2 =Jacques Plante 25 saves / 29 shots
|6-1-1 =04:02 – Ab McDonald (3) |6-1-2 =No scoring |6-2-1 =13:39 – Kenny Wharram (3) |6-2-2 =No scoring |6-3-1 =No scoring |6-3-2 =No scoring |goalie6-1 =Glenn Hall 41 saves / 41 shots |goalie6-2 =Jacques Plante 29 saves / 31 shots
(2) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (4) New York Rangers
|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =06:53 – Dave Keon (1) |1-2-1 =Ken Schinkel (1) – 11:56 Earl Ingarfield (1) – 19:25 |1-2-2 =00:24 – pp – Red Kelly (1) 14:42 – sh – Tim Horton (1) |1-3-1 =No scoring |1-3-2 =19:19 – en – George Armstrong (1) |goalie1-1 =Gump Worsley 28 saves / 31 shots |goalie1-2 =Johnny Bower 26 saves / 28 shots
|2-1-1 =No scoring |2-1-2 =No scoring |2-2-1 =Earl Ingarfield (2) – pp – 12:42 |2-2-2 =09:37 – pp – George Armstrong (2) 18:08 – Bob Pulford (1) |2-3-1 =No scoring |2-3-2 =No scoring |goalie2-1 =Gump Worsley 37 saves / 39 shots |goalie2-2 =Johnny Bower 27 saves / 28 shots
|3-1-1 =No scoring |3-1-2 =Tim Horton (2) – pp – 05:59 |3-2-1 =01:25 – Jean-Guy Gendron (1) 07:05 – Johnny Wilson (1) 19:50 – Johnny Wilson (2) |3-2-2 =George Armstrong (3) – 06:46 |3-3-1 =05:02 – pp – Andy Hebenton (1) 08:17 – Dave Balon (1) |3-3-2 =Red Kelly (2) – pp – 04:47 Bob Pulford (2) – 13:43 |goalie3-1 =Gump Worsley 36 saves / 40 shots |goalie3-2 =Johnny Bower 26 saves / 31 shots
|4-1-1 =00:41 – Rod Gilbert (1) 15:26 – Rod Gilbert (2) |4-1-2 =No scoring |4-2-1 =No scoring |4-2-2 =No scoring |4-3-1 =14:03 – Dave Balon (2) 19:30 – en – Jean-Guy Gendron (2) |4-3-2 =Bob Pulford (3) – sh – 11:59 Bob Nevin (1) – 16:22 |goalie4-1 =Gump Worsley 40 saves / 42 shots |goalie4-2 =Johnny Bower 37 saves / 40 shots
|5-1-1 =No scoring |5-1-2 =07:46 – Ron Stewart (1) |5-2-1 =Jean-Guy Gendron (3) – 13:42 |5-2-2 =12:21 – Frank Mahovlich (1) |5-3-1 =Earl Ingarfield (3) – 12:31 |5-3-2 =No scoring |5-4-1 =No scoring |5-4-2 =04:23 – Red Kelly (3) |goalie5-1 =Gump Worsley 56 saves / 59 shots |goalie5-2 =Johnny Bower 39 saves / 41 shots
|6-1-1 =Andy Bathgate (1) – 18:21 |6-1-2 =09:36 – George Armstrong (4) 12:43 – Bob Pulford (4) 17:52 – Dave Keon (2) |6-2-1 =No scoring |6-2-2 =03:17 – Dick Duff (1) 05:01 – Frank Mahovlich (2) 17:34 – pp – Dick Duff (2) |6-3-1 =No scoring |6-3-2 =09:53 – pp – Dave Keon (3) |goalie6-1 =Gump Worsley 33 saves / 40 shots |goalie6-2 =Johnny Bower 32 saves / 33 shots
Stanley Cup Finals
Main article: 1962 Stanley Cup Finals
In the Finals, the Maple Leafs defeated the defending champions in six games. It was the first of three consecutive Stanley Cup wins by the Maple Leafs.
|1-1-1 =Bobby Hull (5) – pp – 03:35 |1-1-2 =No scoring |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =01:32 – Dave Keon (4) 13:54 – pp – Frank Mahovlich (3) |1-3-1 =No scoring |1-3-2 =06:03 – George Armstrong (5) 14:32 – Tim Horton (3) |goalie1-1 =Glenn Hall |goalie1-2 =Johnny Bower
|2-1-1 =No scoring |2-1-2 =02:35 – pp – Billy Harris (1) |2-2-1 =No scoring |2-2-2 =No scoring |2-3-1 =Stan Mikita (4) – 08:47 Stan Mikita (5) – 18:27 |2-3-2 =09:47 – Frank Mahovlich (4) 16:08 – George Armstrong (6) |goalie2-1 =Glenn Hall |goalie2-2 =Johnny Bower
|3-1-1 =No scoring |3-1-2 =No scoring |3-2-1 =04:35 – Stan Mikita (6) 08:33 – pp – Ab McDonald (4) |3-2-2 =No scoring |3-3-1 =19:21 – en – Bronco Horvath (4) |3-3-2 =No scoring |goalie3-1 =Glenn Hall |goalie3-2 =Johnny Bower
|4-1-1 =10:35 – Bobby Hull (6) 15:41 – Reg Fleming (1) |4-1-2 =Red Kelly (4) – pp – 18:08 |4-2-1 =00:46 – pp – Bobby Hull (7) 07:31 – Reg Fleming (2) |4-2-2 =No scoring |4-3-1 =No scoring |4-3-2 =No scoring |goalie4-1 =Glenn Hall |goalie4-2 =Johnny Bower, Don Simmons
|5-1-1 =Murray Balfour (1) – 18:05 |5-1-2 =00:17 – Bob Pulford (5) 17:45 – Bob Pulford (6) |5-2-1 =Ab McDonald (5) – 00:59 Ab McDonald (6) – pp – 03:07 |5-2-2 =08:31 – Billy Harris (2) 09:50 – pp – Dave Keon (5) 13:24 – Frank Mahovlich (5) |5-3-1 =Bob Turner (1) – sh – 10:31 |5-3-2 =04:41 – George Armstrong (7) 06:31 – Frank Mahovlich (6) 13:51 – pp – Bob Pulford (7) |goalie5-1 =Glenn Hall |goalie5-2 =Don Simmons
|6-1-1 =No scoring |6-1-2 =No scoring |6-2-1 =No scoring |6-2-2 =No scoring |6-3-1 =08:56 – Bobby Hull (8) |6-3-2 =Bob Nevin (2) – 10:29 Dick Duff (3) – pp – 14:14 |goalie6-1 =Glenn Hall |goalie6-2 =Don Simmons
Awards
| 1961–62 NHL awards |
|---|
| Prince of Wales Trophy: |
| (Regular season champion) |
| Art Ross Trophy: |
| (Top scorer) |
| Calder Memorial Trophy: |
| (Best first-year player) |
| Hart Memorial Trophy: |
| (Most valuable player) |
| James Norris Memorial Trophy: |
| (Best defenceman) |
| Lady Byng Memorial Trophy: |
| (Excellence and sportsmanship) |
| Vezina Trophy: |
| (Goaltender of team with the best goals-against average) |
All-Star teams
| First Team | Position | Second Team |
|---|---|---|
| Jacques Plante, Montreal Canadiens | G | Glenn Hall, Chicago Black Hawks |
| Doug Harvey, New York Rangers | D | Carl Brewer, Toronto Maple Leafs |
| Jean-Guy Talbot, Montreal Canadiens | D | Pierre Pilote, Chicago Black Hawks |
| Stan Mikita, Chicago Black Hawks | C | Dave Keon, Toronto Maple Leafs |
| Andy Bathgate, New York Rangers | RW | Gordie Howe, Detroit Red Wings |
| Bobby Hull, Chicago Black Hawks | LW | Frank Mahovlich, Toronto Maple Leafs |
Player statistics
Scoring leaders
Note: GP = Games played, G = Goals, A = Assists, PTS = Points, PIM = Penalties in minutes
| Player | Team | GP | G | A | PTS | PIM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bobby Hull | Chicago Black Hawks | 70 | 50 | 34 | 84 | 35 |
| Andy Bathgate | New York Rangers | 70 | 28 | 56 | 84 | 44 |
| Gordie Howe | Detroit Red Wings | 70 | 33 | 44 | 77 | 54 |
| Stan Mikita | Chicago Black Hawks | 70 | 25 | 52 | 77 | 97 |
| Frank Mahovlich | Toronto Maple Leafs | 70 | 33 | 38 | 71 | 87 |
| Alex Delvecchio | Detroit Red Wings | 70 | 26 | 43 | 69 | 18 |
| Ralph Backstrom | Montreal Canadiens | 66 | 27 | 38 | 65 | 29 |
| Norm Ullman | Detroit Red Wings | 70 | 26 | 38 | 64 | 54 |
| Bill Hay | Chicago Back Hawks | 60 | 11 | 52 | 63 | 34 |
| Claude Provost | Montreal Canadiens | 70 | 33 | 29 | 62 | 22 |
Leading goaltenders
Note: GP = Games played; Min – Minutes played; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts
| Player | Team | GP | MIN | GA | GAA | W | L | T | SO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jacques Plante | Montreal Canadiens | 70 | 4200 | 166 | 2.37 | 42 | 14 | 14 | 4 |
| Johnny Bower | Toronto Maple Leafs | 59 | 3540 | 151 | 2.56 | 31 | 18 | 10 | 2 |
| Glenn Hall | Chicago Black Hawks | 70 | 4200 | 185 | 2.64 | 31 | 26 | 13 | 9 |
| Hank Bassen | Detroit Red Wings | 27 | 1620 | 75 | 2.78 | 9 | 12 | 6 | 3 |
| Lorne Worsley | New York Rangers | 60 | 3531 | 173 | 2.94 | 22 | 27 | 9 | 2 |
| Terry Sawchuk | Detroit Red Wings | 43 | 2580 | 141 | 3.28 | 14 | 21 | 8 | 5 |
| Don Head | Boston Bruins | 38 | 2280 | 161 | 4.24 | 9 | 26 | 3 | 2 |
| Bruce Gamble | Boston Bruins | 28 | 1680 | 121 | 4.32 | 6 | 18 | 4 | 1 |
Coaches
- Boston Bruins: Phil Watson
- Chicago Black Hawks: Rudy Pilous
- Detroit Red Wings: Sid Abel
- Montreal Canadiens: Toe Blake
- New York Rangers: Doug Harvey
- Toronto Maple Leafs: Punch Imlach
Debuts
The following is a list of players of note who played their first NHL game in 1961–62 (listed with their first team, asterisk(*) marks debut in playoffs):
- Ed Westfall, Boston Bruins
- Pat Stapleton, Boston Bruins
- Pit Martin, Detroit Red Wings
- Red Berenson, Montreal Canadiens
- Vic Hadfield, New York Rangers
- Gerry Cheevers, Toronto Maple Leafs
Last games
The following is a list of players of note that played their last game in the NHL in 1961–62 (listed with their last team):
- Dollard St. Laurent, Chicago Black Hawks
- Leo Labine, Detroit Red Wings
- Marcel Bonin, Montreal Canadiens
- Johnny Wilson, New York Rangers
- Bert Olmstead, Toronto Maple Leafs
Broadcasting
Hockey Night in Canada on CBC Television televised Saturday night regular season games and Stanley Cup playoff games. Games were not broadcast in their entirety until the 1968–69 season, and were typically joined in progress, while the radio version of HNIC aired games in their entirety.
This was the second consecutive season that the NHL did not have an American national broadcaster until the 1965–66 season.
References
- {{Citation|last=Coleman|first=Charles L.|year=1976
- {{cite book |title=Years of glory, 1942–1967: the National Hockey League's official book of the six-team era
- {{cite book|title=Total Hockey |editor=Diamond, Dan |publisher=Total Sports |year=2000 |isbn=1-892129-85-X
- {{cite book |editor-last=Dryden |editor-first=Steve |title=Century of hockey |publisher=McClelland & Stewart Ltd.
- {{Citation|last1=Duplacey |first1=James|year=2008
- {{cite book |last1=Fischler |first1=Stan |last2=Fischler |first2=Shirley
- {{Citation|last=McFarlane|first=Brian|year=1969|title=50 Years Of Hockey
;Notes
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