Professional Documents
Culture Documents
(NHL)
Article by James H. Marsh
Updated by Tabitha Marshall
Published Online December 19, 2012
Last Edited December 12, 2016
The National Hockey League (NHL) is a men’s professional ice hockey league. Widely
recognized as the world’s premier hockey league, it was established in Montréal, Québec, in
1917. The league currently includes 31 franchises: 7 in Canada and 24 in the United States.
The Canadian teams are the Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators,
Winnipeg Jets, Edmonton Oilers, Calgary Flames and Vancouver Canucks. Teams compete
annually for the Stanley Cup, the oldest professional sports trophy in North America.
In the next 25 years, the league underwent numerous changes in composition, scheduling
and playoff format. In 1924, the Boston Bruins became the first American club to join; and by
1926, six of the 10 teams were from the United States. The Ottawa Senators dominated the
1920s, with six league titles and four Stanley Cup victories; however, the team folded in
1934.
Some early exploits live on in hockey history: Joe Malone scored seven goals in one game in
1920; George Hainsworth won the Vézina Trophy in its first three years; and in February
1923, Foster Hewitt broadcast a game on the radio for the first time. Outstanding players of
the era included Frank “King” Clancy, Charlie Conacher, Bill Cook, Aurèle Joliat, Lester
Patrick and Nels Stewart. Howie Morenz was the flashiest player, and Eddie Shore the
premier defenceman.
The Toronto Maple Leafs, led by Walter “Turk” Broda, Syl Apps, Ted Kennedy and Max
Bentley, were the dominant team of the 1940s, winning the Stanley Cup six times in 10
years. However, Maurice “Rocket” Richard of the Canadiens was clearly the outstanding
offensive player, scoring 50 goals in 50 games in the 1944–45 season, including five goals
and three assists in one game. In 1948, the colour barrier was broken when Larry Kwong
played for the New York Rangers. Ten years later, in 1958, Willie O’Ree would become the
first Black player in the league, when he took to the ice for the Boston Bruins.
The outstanding team of the early 1950s was the Detroit Red Wings, led by Gordie Howe
(who won the scoring championship five times and the Hart Trophy four times in the
decade), Red Kelly, Ted Lindsay and Terry Sawchuk. In the mid-1950s, the Montreal
Canadiens built possibly the most powerful team in NHL history, with Maurice and Henri
Richard, Bernie Geoffrion, Jean Béliveau, Jacques Plante, Dickie Moore, Doug Harvey and
others. The Canadiens won the Stanley Cup six times, including a record five straight (1955–
56 to 1959–60).
The 1960s began with Chicago’s first Stanley Cup victory in 23 years (1960–61), led by the
brilliant Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita and Glenn Hall. Toronto won the Stanley Cup four more
times, and Montreal won two more times before the league expanded in 1967.
In 1980, the Atlanta franchise moved to Calgary (see Calgary Flames), bringing the number
of NHL teams in Canada to seven. In 1983–84, Edmonton became the first of the ex-WHA
teams to win the Stanley Cup, ending a four-year reign by the New York Islanders. The high-
scoring Oilers (with such stars as Mark Messier and Wayne Gretzky) captured the cup in four
of the next six seasons. In the early 1990s, Mario Lemieux’s Pittsburgh Penguins became the
dominant team, taking back-to-back Stanley Cups in 1990–91 and 1991–92, and winning a
record-setting 17 games in a row in 1992–93 — a record that still stands today.
The sport increasingly emphasized scoring and offensive play. In the 1970s, Phil Esposito of
the Boston Bruins set new records for goals (76) and points (152) in a season (1970–71),
while defenceman Bobby Orr revolutionized his position, becoming the first defenceman to
win the scoring championship (Orr won the Art Ross Trophy in 1970 and 1975). The offensive
emphasis of the sport was typified in the 1980s by the incredible scoring feats of Mario
Lemieux and of Wayne Gretzky, whose accomplishments are perhaps unmatched in any
sport. Gretzky is the all-time leading scorer in the NHL with 2,857 points, and the only player
to reach 2,000 career points; he holds or shares 61 NHL records, including most goals (894)
and most assists (1963).
In the summer of 1997, the league announced that it would expand to four more American
cities. By the year 2000, with the addition of the Nashville Predators (1998), Atlanta
Thrashers (1999), Minnesota Wild and Columbus Blue Jackets (2000), the NHL had
expanded to 30 teams. In 2011, the Atlanta Thrashers relocated to Winnipeg, and the Jets
name was reinstated. In 2016, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman announced that a new
franchise in Las Vegas, the Golden Knights, would join the league for the 2017–18 season,
bringing the total number of clubs to 31.
Overall, Canadian franchises have proven to be more financially viable than a number of
American teams. In 2012, the Toronto Maple Leafs was the most profitable franchise in the
NHL at $81.9 million. Believing that Canada could support another NHL franchise, ambitious
Canadian businessman Jim Balsillie, founder of the wireless technological firm Research In
Motion, did his best to bring another franchise north of the border. Balsillie made several
bids to move American teams to Hamilton (in southern Ontario), trying to purchase
Pittsburgh in 2006 and Nashville in 2007. In 2009, Balsillie tried once more to bring the
Phoenix Coyotes to Hamilton, but the NHL and Arizona bankruptcy judge Redfield T. Baum
rejected the bid.
Southern Ontario was not the only region in Canada that tried to acquire an NHL franchise.
In 2009, True North Sports and Entertainment (TNSE) made a serious pitch for the Phoenix
Coyotes (the same franchise that moved from Winnipeg in 1996), but a last-minute
settlement was reached between the NHL and the City of Glendale to keep the Coyotes in
Arizona. However, the Atlanta Thrashers were also experiencing problems, and TNSE
finalized a deal to move the Thrashers to Winnipeg on 31 May 2011. The team was renamed
the Jets, the same name Winnipeg’s hockey team had during their glory years in the World
Hockey Association from 1972 to 1979 and in the NHL from 1979 to 1996. The return of
NHL hockey to Winnipeg was extremely popular with Winnipeggers. According to the
Winnipeg Free Press, 5,800 season tickets sold out in 17 minutes.
When the 2005 collective bargaining agreement expired in 2012, teams and players once
again found themselves arguing about money. The major issue this time was the percentage
of hockey-related revenues the players would receive in a season. According to the existing
contract, players received 57 per cent of all hockey-related revenues, but the NHL wanted
the percentage dropped significantly. Neither the players nor the NHL would budge, and
the resulting lockout cancelled 510 regular season games (34 games per team), the NHL All-
Star Game, and the 2013 Winter Classic between the Detroit Red Wings and the Toronto
Maple Leafs. An agreement was finally reached on 12 January 2013, with players and owners
sharing hockey-related revenues 50–50, among other terms.
Canadians in the NHL
The spread of hockey and growing proficiency of players in Sweden, Finland, the Czech
Republic, Slovakia and the United States is reflected in the increasing number of players
from these countries in the NHL, including many of the Russian, Swedish, Finnish, and Czech
stars who emerged in the 1990s. In recent years, the number of NHL players recruited from
Canadian junior hockey has dropped significantly. As of 2015, Canadians account for
approximately half of the league’s players, a decrease of around 25 per cent from 1990. As
in the past, Canadians continue to play crucial roles on and off the ice; for example,
Jonathan Toews led the Chicago Blackhawks to victory in 2010, 2013 and 2015, while Sidney
Crosby hoisted the Cup in 2009 and 2016 as captain of the Pittsburgh Penguins.
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