The 1931 Stanley Cup Finals was played between the Montreal Canadiens and the Chicago Black Hawks, making their first Stanley Cup Finals appearance. The defending champions Canadiens, won the series to become the second NHL team to win back-to-back championships. Former player and now coach, Chicago's Dick Irvin, made his Finals coaching debut against the team he would later coach to three Stanley Cup titles.
1931 Stanley Cup Finals | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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* indicates periods of overtime. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Location(s) | Chicago: Chicago Stadium (1, 2) Montreal: Montreal Forum (3–5) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Format | best-of-five | |||||||||||||||||||||
Coaches | Chicago: Dick Irvin Montreal: Cecil Hart | |||||||||||||||||||||
Captains | Chicago: Ty Arbour Montreal: Sylvio Mantha | |||||||||||||||||||||
Dates | April 3–14, 1931 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Series-winning goal | Johnny Gagnon (9:59, second) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Hall of Famers | Black Hawks: Charlie Gardiner (1945) Canadiens: George Hainsworth (1961) Aurele Joliat (1947) Sylvio Mantha (1960) Howie Morenz (1945) Coaches: Dick Irvin (1958, player) | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Game summaries
editOver 18,000 fans packed Chicago Stadium for game two to set a record for the largest attendance in hockey history to that time.[citation needed] The triple-overtime game three of the series was (at the time) the longest game in Stanley Cup Finals history, and today remains the fourth-longest game in Stanley Cup Finals history at 113:50.[citation needed]
Game five
editFor game five, Foster Hewitt came to Montreal to make the radio broadcast play-by-play and transmission lines carried his broadcast to radio stations across Canada Interest was so high that Montrealers in the thousands lined up for end zone and standing room tickets.[citation needed] Johnny Gagnon opened the scoring in the second period and Howie Morenz scored an insurance goal in the third period. It ended a nine-game goalless streak for Morenz.[1]
April 3 | Montreal Canadiens | 2–1 | Chicago Black Hawks | Chicago Stadium | Recap | |||
Georges Mantha (3) - 4:50 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Pit Lepine (2) - 2:20 | Third period | 8:20 - Vic Ripley (2) | ||||||
George Hainsworth | Goalie stats | Charlie Gardiner |
April 5 | Montreal Canadiens | 1–2 | 2OT | Chicago Black Hawks | Chicago Stadium | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 11:45 - Stew Adams (2) | ||||||
Nick Wasnie (3) - 12:10 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second overtime period | 4:50 - Johnny Gottselig (2) | ||||||
George Hainsworth | Goalie stats | Charlie Gardiner |
April 9 | Chicago Black Hawks | 3–2 | 3OT | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 5:15 - Johnny Gagnon (3) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 7:29 - Georges Mantha (5) | ||||||
Mush March (3) - 16:20 Stew Adams (3) - 17:07 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Cy Wentworth (1) - 13:50 | Third overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Charlie Gardiner | Goalie stats | George Hainsworth |
April 11 | Chicago Black Hawks | 2–4 | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum | Recap | |||
Johnny Gottselig (3) - 1:33 Ty Arbour (1) - 13:58 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 4:34 - Johnny Gagnon (4) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 4:25 - Johnny Gagnon (5) 10:55 - Pit Lepine (3) 17:25 - Pit Lepine (4) | ||||||
Charlie Gardiner | Goalie stats | George Hainsworth |
April 14 | Chicago Black Hawks | 0–2 | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 9:59 - Johnny Gagnon (6) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 15:27 - Howie Morenz (1) | ||||||
Charlie Gardiner | Goalie stats | George Hainsworth |
Montreal won series 3–2 | |
Stanley Cup engraving
editThe 1931 Stanley Cup was presented to Canadiens captain Sylvio Mantha by NHL President Frank Calder following the Canadiens 2–0 win over the Black Hawks in game five.
The following Canadiens players and staff had their names engraved on the Stanley Cup
1930–31 Montreal Canadiens
Players
- 7 Howie Morenz
- 9 Alfred Pit Lepine
- 4 Aurel Joliat
- 5 Armand Mondou
- 6 Nick Wasnie
- 10 Wildor Larochelle
- 14 Johnny Gagnon
- 16 Gus Rivers
- 11 Bert McCaffrey†B
- 2 Sylvio Mantha (captain)
- 3 Marty Burke
- 8 Albert Leduc
- 11 Art Lesieur
- 12 Georges Mantha
- 5 Jean Pusie†A
† Left off the Cup, but qualified to be on it. A Played three of five games in the Finals. B Played 22 of 44 regular season games.
Coaching and administrative staff
- Louis Athanase David (President), Edouard St. Pere (Vice President)
- Joseph Cattarinich (Vice President/Owner), Amerdee Monte (Director)
- Joseph Viateur "Leo" Dandurand (Secretary/Owner), Alphonse Raymond (Director)
- Cecil Hart (Manager-Coach), Georges Richer (Treasurer)
- Fernand Rinfeet (Director), Henry Gray (Director)
- Jules Dugal (Business Manager), Dr. J. A. Corrigan (Team Physician)
- Edward Dulfour (Trainer), Jim McKenna (Asst. Trainer)
Stanley Cup engraving
- Officially, owner Leo Dandurand was the Manager of the Montreal Canadiens from 1921–22 to 1934–35. However, Cecil Hart was engraved on the Stanley Cup in 1930 and 1931, and he is listed on every team picture for those seasons as Manager. Leo Dandurand would later get his name on the Grey Cup as the President (owner) of Montreal Allouettes in 1949. This made Leo Dandurand the 4th person to win both the Stanley Cup and Grey Cup. (See Joe Miller, Lionel Conacher, Carl Voss, Harold Ballard, Norman Kwong & Wayne Gretzky other persons who won both the Grey Cup and Stanley Cup.)
- *-The team physician's first name remains unknown
- Hilarion A. "Louis" Letourneau (Owner/Director) gave up position on Board of Directors of the Montreal Canadiens after the 1930 Stanley Cup. He would sell his shares in 1932. So name was not included on the 1931 Stanley Cup engraving.
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Jenish (2008), p. 76.
References
edit- Diamond, Dan (2000). Total Stanley Cup. Toronto: Total Sports Canada. ISBN 978-1-892129-07-9.
- Jenish, D'arcy (2008). The Montreal Canadiens: 100 years of glory. Doubleday Canada. ISBN 978-0-385-66324-3.
- Podnieks, Andrew; Hockey Hall of Fame (2004). Lord Stanley's Cup. Bolton, Ont.: Fenn Pub. pp 12, 50. ISBN 978-1-55168-261-7