Larry Aurie

Lawrence Henry "Larry" Aurie (February 8, 1905 in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada – December 12, 1952) was a Canadian professional right winger who played 11 seasons in the National Hockey League for the Detroit Cougars, Detroit Falcons and Detroit Red Wings.

Playing career
Aurie was considered by owner James Norris as the heart and soul of the Detroit NHL franchise from 1927 through 1938. He was known for his remarkable all-around play, goal-scoring achievements and for being instrumental in the Red Wings' winning their first two Stanley Cup championships in 1936 and 1937. Aurie began his professional hockey career in 1926 with the London Panthers of the Canadian Professional Hockey League (CPHL). The following season, he moved up to the NHL to play with Detroit. His dedication to off-season fitness with his short stature (5 foot 6 inches) earned him the nicknames "Little Dempsey" (for his fistic abilities) and "The Little Rag Man" (for his remarkable and entertaining ability to control or "rag" the puck during penalty killing).

Twice during his career, Aurie led the Wings in assists and in 1933–34, his 35 points topped the club in scoring. He was third in NHL scoring with a career-high 46 points in 1934–35 and fourth overall in 1936–37 with 43 points. He and Herbie Lewis represented the Red Wings at the first ever NHL All Star Game in 1934.

Aurie captained the team in the 1932–33 season, led the league in playoff scoring in 1934 with 10 points in nine games and led the league in goal scoring in 1937 with 23 while earning a first-team selection on the post-season NHL All-Star Team.

He was part of the Wings' first big line, playing alongside center Marty Barry and left wing Lewis. His selfless play and hustle made him a favorite of owner James Norris.

Aurie scored his NHL leading 23rd goal on March 11, 1937 in a 4–2 win over the New York Rangers, but later in the game fractured his leg in a collision with Rangers' defenceman Art Coulter, ending his season. Aurie's season leading scoring performance earned him a berth on the NHL First All-Star Team. Unfortunately, this was Aurie’s last strong season. The lingering effects of his fractured leg began to affect his play and in 1937–38, he dropped to 10 goals and 19 points and was forced to retire after the season at age 33. After the season, team owner James Norris decided to honor Aurie by retiring his jersey No. 6 - the first Detroit player to have this honor bestowed upon him.

The following season, Aurie was named player-coach of Detroit’s AHL farm club, the Pittsburgh Hornets, but returned to the Red Wings for one final game on Jan. 10 - scoring the winning goal against Montreal in a 3–0 shutout at Detroit. Aurie would later go on to head coach the Oshawa Generals.

Retirement
Aurie's No. 6 jersey was officially retired by Wings owner James Norris after the 1937–38 season (he returned to play one more game for Detroit on Jan. 10, 1939), but was reissued once in the late 1950s to his cousin (not nephew as has been widely reported) Cummy Burton, with the family's blessing.

Aurie died in Detroit on December 12, 1952, having suffered a stroke the previous evening.

Awards & achievements

 * IAHL Second All-Star Team, 1939
 * Led NHL in goals in 1936–37
 * Named to NHL First All-Star Team, 1936–37
 * Played in NHL All-Star Game, 1933–34
 * Led Detroit in scoring, 1933–34
 * Served as team captain, 1932–33
 * Won the Stanley Cup (with Detroit) 1936, 1937

Career statistics
--- Regular Season ---  Playoffs Season  Team                        Lge    GP    G    A  Pts  PIM  GP   G   A Pts PIM -- 1926-27 London Panthers             CPHL    0   14    7   21    0  --  --  --  --  -- 1927-28 Detroit Cougars             NHL    44   13    3   16   43  --  --  --  --  -- 1928-29 Detroit Cougars             NHL    35    1    1    2   26   2   1   0   1   2 1929-30 Detroit Cougars             NHL    43   14    5   19   28  --  --  --  --  -- 1930-31 Detroit Falcons             NHL    41   12    6   18   23  --  --  --  --  -- 1931-32 Detroit Falcons             NHL    48   13    8   21   18   2   0   0   0   0 1932-33 Detroit Red Wings           NHL    45   12   11   23   25   4   1   0   1   4 1933-34 Detroit Red Wings           NHL    48   16   19   35   36   9   3   7  10   2 1934-35 Detroit Red Wings           NHL    48   17   29   46   24  --  --  --  --  -- 1935-36 Detroit Red Wings           NHL    44   16   18   34   17   7   1   1   2   2 1936-37 Detroit Red Wings           NHL    45   23   20   43   20  --  --  --  --  -- 1937-38 Detroit Red Wings           NHL    47   10    9   19   19  --  --  --  --  -- 1938-39 Detroit Red Wings           NHL     1    1    0    1    0  --  --  --  --  -- 1938-39 Pittsburgh Hornets          IAHL   39    8   19   27   16  --  --  --  --  -- 1939-40 Pittsburgh Hornets          IAHL   39   12   12   24   12  --  --  --  --  -- 1940-41 Pittsburgh Hornets          AHL     6    0    3    3    2  --  --  --  --  -- 1943-44 Pittsburgh Hornets          AHL     1    0    0    0    0  --  --  --  --  -- --        NHL Totals                        489  148  129  277  279  24   6   8  14  10

Coaching statistics
Season Team               Lge  Type        GP  W  L T OTL    Pct    Result 1938-39 Pittsburgh Hornets IAHL Player-Head 54 22 28 4  0 0.44444 1939-40 Pittsburgh Hornets IAHL Head       56 25 22 9   0 0.52679 1940-41 Pittsburgh Hornets AHL Head        56 21 29 6   0 0.42857 Lost in round 2 1941-42 Pittsburgh Hornets AHL Head        56 23 28 5   0 0.45536 Out of Playoffs 1942-43 Pittsburgh Hornets AHL Head        56 26 24 6   0 0.51786 Lost in round 1 1943-44 Pittsburgh Hornets AHL Head        52 12 31 9   0 0.31731 Out of Playoffs

Note

 * 1)  The NHL team in Detroit has had three names — Detroit Cougars (1926–1930), Detroit Falcons (1930–1932), and Detroit Red Wings (1932 to date)