Tag: Source edit |
No edit summary Tag: Source edit |
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|PointsLeader=[[Max Bentley]] (62) |
|PointsLeader=[[Max Bentley]] (62) |
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|PIMLeader=[[Gus Mortson]] (142) |
|PIMLeader=[[Gus Mortson]] (142) |
||
− | |WinsLeader=[[Al Rollins]] (27) |
+ | |WinsLeader=[[Al Rollins (goalie)|Al Rollins]] (27) |
|GAALeader=Al Rollins (1.77) |
|GAALeader=Al Rollins (1.77) |
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|StanleyCup=yes |
|StanleyCup=yes |
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Having last met in the 1949 Semi-finals, the Leafs dispatched the Bruins again by a 4-1 series score with one game ending in a tie, the last playoff tie in NHL history. |
Having last met in the 1949 Semi-finals, the Leafs dispatched the Bruins again by a 4-1 series score with one game ending in a tie, the last playoff tie in NHL history. |
||
− | '''Game 1''' at [[Maple Leaf Gardens]] saw two rookie goalies play their first career playoff game. The Bruins [[Jack Gelineau]] would record his only career playoff shutout in Game 1 while the Leafs [[Al Rollins]] had a fantastic regular season and won the [[Vezina Trophy]]. Game 1 wouldn't turn out well for Rollins who gave up a goal to [[Lorne Ferguson]] at 14:48 of the first period. Less than two minutes later, Rollins was knocked out of the series after a collision with the Bruins [[Pete Horeck]]. Veteran goalie [[Turk Broda]], who'd retire the next season, stepped in for Rollins. Broda gave up a goal early in the third period to [[Woody Dumart]] and Gelineau stopped all 24 Leaf shots for a 2-0 win.<br /><br /> |
+ | '''Game 1''' at [[Maple Leaf Gardens]] saw two rookie goalies play their first career playoff game. The Bruins [[Jack Gelineau]] would record his only career playoff shutout in Game 1 while the Leafs [[Al Rollins (goalie)|Al Rollins]] had a fantastic regular season and won the [[Vezina Trophy]]. Game 1 wouldn't turn out well for Rollins who gave up a goal to [[Lorne Ferguson]] at 14:48 of the first period. Less than two minutes later, Rollins was knocked out of the series after a collision with the Bruins [[Pete Horeck]]. Veteran goalie [[Turk Broda]], who'd retire the next season, stepped in for Rollins. Broda gave up a goal early in the third period to [[Woody Dumart]] and Gelineau stopped all 24 Leaf shots for a 2-0 win.<br /><br /> |
'''Game 2''' at Toronto was a rough affair that had a very strange ending. After [[Bill Barilko]] put the Leafs up 1-0, he'd become involved in several incidents. The second period saw seven fights break out and Barilko received a game misconduct for a hit on [[Dunc Fisher]] that resulted in Fisher leaving the game on a stretcher. [[Johnny Peirson]] tied the game up at the 9:26 of the second. The game went scoreless in the third, resulting in overtime. The first OT period was also scoreless and it was 11:45pm on a Saturday night. The city of Toronto had a curfew law that prohibited professional sporting events from occurring on Sunday. As a result, the game ended after one overtime period and was declared a draw. The game is not officially counted in NHL game registers though the statistics in the game are. In OT, Johnny Peirson suffered a broken cheek and was lost for the remainder of the series.<br /><br /> |
'''Game 2''' at Toronto was a rough affair that had a very strange ending. After [[Bill Barilko]] put the Leafs up 1-0, he'd become involved in several incidents. The second period saw seven fights break out and Barilko received a game misconduct for a hit on [[Dunc Fisher]] that resulted in Fisher leaving the game on a stretcher. [[Johnny Peirson]] tied the game up at the 9:26 of the second. The game went scoreless in the third, resulting in overtime. The first OT period was also scoreless and it was 11:45pm on a Saturday night. The city of Toronto had a curfew law that prohibited professional sporting events from occurring on Sunday. As a result, the game ended after one overtime period and was declared a draw. The game is not officially counted in NHL game registers though the statistics in the game are. In OT, Johnny Peirson suffered a broken cheek and was lost for the remainder of the series.<br /><br /> |
||
'''Game 3''' at [[Boston Garden]] saw the 36 year old Broda play brilliantly and shut the Bruins out. [[Cal Gardner]] opened the scoring at 3:02 of the second period on a solo rush. Stopped in front of the Bruins net by [[Bill Quackenbush]] and [[Murray Henderson]], he managed to get off a shot as he was falling that eluded Gelineau. [[Fern Flaman]] got revenge for the Bruins trading him with a [[Power play]] goal on a point shot at 13:11. [[Max Bentley]] added a goal in the third period and the series was tied.<br /><br /> |
'''Game 3''' at [[Boston Garden]] saw the 36 year old Broda play brilliantly and shut the Bruins out. [[Cal Gardner]] opened the scoring at 3:02 of the second period on a solo rush. Stopped in front of the Bruins net by [[Bill Quackenbush]] and [[Murray Henderson]], he managed to get off a shot as he was falling that eluded Gelineau. [[Fern Flaman]] got revenge for the Bruins trading him with a [[Power play]] goal on a point shot at 13:11. [[Max Bentley]] added a goal in the third period and the series was tied.<br /><br /> |
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| align="right" | [[Turk Broda]] ||31 ||0 ||0 ||0 ||4 |
| align="right" | [[Turk Broda]] ||31 ||0 ||0 ||0 ||4 |
||
|- align="center" |
|- align="center" |
||
− | | align="right" | [[Al Rollins]] ||40 ||0 ||0 ||0 ||0 |
+ | | align="right" | [[Al Rollins (goalie)|Al Rollins]] ||40 ||0 ||0 ||0 ||0 |
|} |
|} |
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;Goaltending |
;Goaltending |
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| align="right" | [[Bill Juzda]] ||11 ||0 ||0 ||0 ||7 |
| align="right" | [[Bill Juzda]] ||11 ||0 ||0 ||0 ||7 |
||
|- align="center" |
|- align="center" |
||
− | | align="right" | [[Al Rollins]] ||4 ||0 ||0 ||0 ||0 |
+ | | align="right" | [[Al Rollins (goalie)|Al Rollins]] ||4 ||0 ||0 ||0 ||0 |
|} |
|} |
||
;Goaltending |
;Goaltending |
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==Awards and Records== |
==Awards and Records== |
||
− | *[[Vezina Trophy]]: [[Al Rollins]] |
+ | *[[Vezina Trophy]]: [[Al Rollins (goalie)|Al Rollins]] |
*[[Ted Kennedy]], Center, NHL Second Team All-Star |
*[[Ted Kennedy]], Center, NHL Second Team All-Star |
||
*[[Sid Smith]], Left Wing, NHL Second Team All-Star |
*[[Sid Smith]], Left Wing, NHL Second Team All-Star |
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Line 404: | Line 404: | ||
==1951 Toronto Maple Leafs== |
==1951 Toronto Maple Leafs== |
||
− | [[Turk Broda]], [[Al Rollins]], [[Jimmy Thomson (ice hockey b. 1927)|Jimmy Thomson]], [[Gus Mortson]], [[Bill Barilko]], [[Bill Juzda]], [[Fern Flaman]], [[Hugh Bolton]], [[Ted Kennedy]] (captain), [[Sid Smith]], [[Tod Sloan]], [[Cal Gardner]], [[Howie Meeker]], [[Harry Watson (ice hockey b. 1923)|Harry Watson]], [[Max Bentley]], [[Joe Klukay]], [[Danny Lewicki]], [[Ray Timgren]], [[Fleming Mackell]], [[Johnny McCormack]], [[Bob Hassard]], [[Conn Smythe]] (manager), [[Joe Primeau]] (coach), Tim Daly (trainer) |
+ | [[Turk Broda]], [[Al Rollins (goalie)|Al Rollins]], [[Jimmy Thomson (ice hockey b. 1927)|Jimmy Thomson]], [[Gus Mortson]], [[Bill Barilko]], [[Bill Juzda]], [[Fern Flaman]], [[Hugh Bolton]], [[Ted Kennedy]] (captain), [[Sid Smith]], [[Tod Sloan]], [[Cal Gardner]], [[Howie Meeker]], [[Harry Watson (ice hockey b. 1923)|Harry Watson]], [[Max Bentley]], [[Joe Klukay]], [[Danny Lewicki]], [[Ray Timgren]], [[Fleming Mackell]], [[Johnny McCormack]], [[Bob Hassard]], [[Conn Smythe]] (manager), [[Joe Primeau]] (coach), Tim Daly (trainer) |
==Gallery== |
==Gallery== |
Revision as of 03:02, 2 December 2020
1950–51 Toronto Maple Leafs | |
Division | 2nd NHL |
---|---|
1950–51 record | 41–16–13 |
Goals for | 212 |
Goals against | 138 |
Team information | |
General manager | Conn Smythe |
Coach | Joe Primeau |
Captain | Ted Kennedy |
Arena | Maple Leaf Gardens |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Tod Sloan (31) |
Assists | Ted Kennedy (43) |
Points | Max Bentley (62) |
Penalty minutes | Gus Mortson (142) |
Wins | Al Rollins (27) |
Goals against average | Al Rollins (1.77) |
The 1950–51 Toronto Maple Leafs season was Toronto's 34th season in the NHL. The Maple Leafs finished 2nd in the league and won the 1951 Stanley Cup Finals over the Montreal Canadiens 4 games to 1. The 1951 Finals is famous for Bill Barilko scoring the winning goal in overtime and all five games being decided in overtime.
Off-season
Regular Season
Final Standings
GP | W | L | T | Pts | GF | GA | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Detroit Red Wings | 70 | 44 | 13 | 13 | 101 | 236 | 139 |
Toronto Maple Leafs | 70 | 41 | 16 | 13 | 95 | 212 | 138 |
Montreal Canadiens | 70 | 25 | 30 | 15 | 65 | 173 | 184 |
Boston Bruins | 70 | 22 | 30 | 18 | 62 | 178 | 197 |
New York Rangers | 70 | 20 | 29 | 21 | 61 | 169 | 201 |
Chicago Black Hawks | 70 | 13 | 47 | 10 | 36 | 171 | 280 |
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against
Teams that qualified for the playoffs are highlighted in bold.
Game Log
No. | R | Date | Score | Opponent | Record |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | L | October 14, 1950 | 1–2 | Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 0–1–0 |
2 | T | October 15, 1950 | 4–4 | @ Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 0–1–1 |
3 | W | October 18, 1950 | 2–0 | @ Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 1–1–1 |
4 | W | October 21, 1950 | 5–0 | New York Rangers (1950–51) | 2–1–1 |
5 | W | October 22, 1950 | 5–3 | @ Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 3–1–1 |
6 | W | October 25, 1950 | 1–0 | Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 4–1–1 |
7 | W | October 28, 1950 | 4–2 | Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 5–1–1 |
8 | T | October 29, 1950 | 3–3 | @ Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 5–1–2 |
9 | W | November 1, 1950 | 5–3 | Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 6–1–2 |
10 | W | November 2, 1950 | 2–1 | @ Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 7–1–2 |
11 | T | November 4, 1950 | 2–2 | New York Rangers (1950–51) | 7–1–3 |
12 | W | November 8, 1950 | 5–3 | @ New York Rangers (1950–51) | 8–1–3 |
13 | L | November 11, 1950 | 1–3 | Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 8–2–3 |
14 | W | November 12, 1950 | 7–0 | @ Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 9–2–3 |
15 | L | November 16, 1950 | 2–5 | @ Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 9–3–3 |
16 | W | November 18, 1950 | 5–4 | New York Rangers (1950–51) | 10–3–3 |
17 | L | November 19, 1950 | 1–3 | @ Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 10–4–3 |
18 | W | November 22, 1950 | 5–2 | Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 11–4–3 |
19 | W | November 23, 1950 | 2–1 | @ Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 12–4–3 |
20 | W | November 25, 1950 | 4–1 | Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 13–4–3 |
21 | W | November 26, 1950 | 3–2 | @ New York Rangers (1950–51) | 14–4–3 |
22 | T | November 30, 1950 | 0–0 | @ Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 14–4–4 |
23 | T | December 2, 1950 | 0–0 | Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 14–4–5 |
24 | T | December 3, 1950 | 3–3 | @ Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 14–4–6 |
25 | W | December 6, 1950 | 3–1 | Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 15–4–6 |
26 | W | December 9, 1950 | 8–1 | Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 16–4–6 |
27 | L | December 10, 1950 | 2–3 | @ Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 16–5–6 |
28 | L | December 13, 1950 | 3–4 | Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 16–6–6 |
29 | W | December 14, 1950 | 7–1 | @ Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 17–6–6 |
30 | L | December 16, 1950 | 2–3 | Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 17–7–6 |
31 | W | December 17, 1950 | 4–2 | @ Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 18–7–6 |
32 | W | December 20, 1950 | 6–1 | Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 19–7–6 |
33 | T | December 23, 1950 | 2–2 | Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 19–7–7 |
34 | L | December 27, 1950 | 1–3 | @ New York Rangers (1950–51) | 19–8–7 |
35 | L | December 30, 1950 | 1–3 | Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 19–9–7 |
36 | W | December 31, 1950 | 4–2 | @ Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 20–9–7 |
37 | L | January 6, 1951 | 2–4 | New York Rangers (1950–51) | 20–10–7 |
38 | T | January 9, 1951 | 3–3 | @ Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 20–10–8 |
39 | T | January 13, 1951 | 3–3 | Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 20–10–9 |
40 | L | January 14, 1951 | 1–2 | @ New York Rangers (1950–51) | 20–11–9 |
41 | W | January 18, 1951 | 5–2 | @ Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 21–11–9 |
42 | W | January 20, 1951 | 2–1 | Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 22–11–9 |
43 | T | January 21, 1951 | 0–0 | @ Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 22–11–10 |
44 | W | January 24, 1951 | 4–3 | Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 23–11–10 |
45 | W | January 27, 1951 | 2–1 | New York Rangers (1950–51) | 24–11–10 |
46 | W | January 28, 1951 | 4–3 | @ Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 25–11–10 |
47 | W | February 1, 1951 | 3–1 | @ Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 26–11–10 |
48 | W | February 3, 1951 | 6–3 | Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 27–11–10 |
49 | T | February 4, 1951 | 3–3 | @ Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 27–11–11 |
50 | W | February 7, 1951 | 3–1 | Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 28–11–11 |
51 | L | February 10, 1951 | 1–2 | Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 28–12–11 |
52 | W | February 11, 1951 | 5–3 | @ Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 29–12–11 |
53 | T | February 15, 1951 | 2–2 | @ Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 29–12–12 |
54 | W | February 17, 1951 | 2–0 | New York Rangers (1950–51) | 30–12–12 |
55 | W | February 18, 1951 | 5–2 | @ New York Rangers (1950–51) | 31–12–12 |
56 | T | February 21, 1951 | 2–2 | Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 31–12–13 |
57 | W | February 24, 1951 | 6–2 | Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 32–12–13 |
58 | L | March 1, 1951 | 1–3 | @ Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 32–13–13 |
59 | W | March 3, 1951 | 3–0 | Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 33–13–13 |
60 | L | March 5, 1951 | 1–3 | @ Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 33–14–13 |
61 | L | March 7, 1951 | 0–3 | Detroit Red Wings (1950–51) | 33–15–13 |
62 | W | March 10, 1951 | 5–3 | Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 34–15–13 |
63 | L | March 11, 1951 | 1–3 | @ Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 34–16–13 |
64 | W | March 14, 1951 | 3–1 | @ New York Rangers (1950–51) | 35–16–13 |
65 | W | March 15, 1951 | 5–3 | @ Chicago Black Hawks (1950–51) | 36–16–13 |
66 | W | March 17, 1951 | 3–1 | New York Rangers (1950–51) | 37–16–13 |
67 | W | March 18, 1951 | 4–1 | @ New York Rangers (1950–51) | 38–16–13 |
68 | W | March 21, 1951 | 2–0 | Montreal Canadiens (1950–51) | 39–16–13 |
69 | W | March 24, 1951 | 4–1 | Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 40–16–13 |
70 | W | March 25, 1951 | 1–0 | @ Boston Bruins (1950–51) | 41–16–13 |
Playoffs
Toronto Maple Leafs 4, Boston Bruins 1 (One tie)
Having last met in the 1949 Semi-finals, the Leafs dispatched the Bruins again by a 4-1 series score with one game ending in a tie, the last playoff tie in NHL history.
Game 1 at Maple Leaf Gardens saw two rookie goalies play their first career playoff game. The Bruins Jack Gelineau would record his only career playoff shutout in Game 1 while the Leafs Al Rollins had a fantastic regular season and won the Vezina Trophy. Game 1 wouldn't turn out well for Rollins who gave up a goal to Lorne Ferguson at 14:48 of the first period. Less than two minutes later, Rollins was knocked out of the series after a collision with the Bruins Pete Horeck. Veteran goalie Turk Broda, who'd retire the next season, stepped in for Rollins. Broda gave up a goal early in the third period to Woody Dumart and Gelineau stopped all 24 Leaf shots for a 2-0 win.
Game 2 at Toronto was a rough affair that had a very strange ending. After Bill Barilko put the Leafs up 1-0, he'd become involved in several incidents. The second period saw seven fights break out and Barilko received a game misconduct for a hit on Dunc Fisher that resulted in Fisher leaving the game on a stretcher. Johnny Peirson tied the game up at the 9:26 of the second. The game went scoreless in the third, resulting in overtime. The first OT period was also scoreless and it was 11:45pm on a Saturday night. The city of Toronto had a curfew law that prohibited professional sporting events from occurring on Sunday. As a result, the game ended after one overtime period and was declared a draw. The game is not officially counted in NHL game registers though the statistics in the game are. In OT, Johnny Peirson suffered a broken cheek and was lost for the remainder of the series.
Game 3 at Boston Garden saw the 36 year old Broda play brilliantly and shut the Bruins out. Cal Gardner opened the scoring at 3:02 of the second period on a solo rush. Stopped in front of the Bruins net by Bill Quackenbush and Murray Henderson, he managed to get off a shot as he was falling that eluded Gelineau. Fern Flaman got revenge for the Bruins trading him with a Power play goal on a point shot at 13:11. Max Bentley added a goal in the third period and the series was tied.
Game 4 at Boston saw the Leafs outlast the Bruins who opened the scoring at 7:50 of the first period with Dunc Fisher's only point of the series. The Leafs Sid Smith evened the score on the power play with the Bruins Bill Ezinicki in the box. Max Bentley put the Leafs up for good two minutes later. Barilko's second of the series in the third period finished a 3-1 win and a 2-1-1 series lead for the Leafs.
Game 5 at Toronto was held after a three day layoff. With Gord Henry replacing Jack Gelineau in the Bruins net, the Leafs dominated the ailing Bruins with two goals by Joe Klukay (including one shorthanded), Fleming Mackell and Ted Kennedy before Bill Ezinicki scored a consolation goal for the Bruins.
Game 6 at Boston saw the Leafs win the series with a 6-0 whitewashing of the Bruins with Gord Henry again in net. Klukay scored twice with individual markers by Kennedy, Mackell, Sid Smith and Tod Sloan. The Leafs took the series 4-1-1.
# | Date | Visitor | Score | Home | Record |
1 | March 28 | Boston Bruins | 2-0 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 1-0 |
2 | March 31 | Boston Bruins | 1-1 (OT) | Toronto Maple Leafs | 1-0-1 |
3 | April 1 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 3-0 | Boston Bruins | 1-1-1 |
4 | April 3 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 3-1 | Boston Bruins | 2-1-1 |
5 | April 7 | Boston Bruins | 1-4 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 1-1-3 |
6 | April 8 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 6-0 | Boston Bruins | 4-1-1 |
Toronto Maple Leafs 4, Montreal Canadiens 1
Every game went into overtime in this series. Bill Barilko scored the Cup-winning goal, his last goal in the NHL as he would die in a plane crash during the summer.
Date | Away | Score | Home | Score | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
April 11 | Montreal | 2 | Toronto | 3 | OT |
April 14 | Montreal | 3 | Toronto | 2 | OT |
April 17 | Toronto | 2 | Montreal | 1 | OT |
April 19 | Toronto | 3 | Montreal | 2 | OT |
April 21 | Montreal | 2 | Toronto | 3 | OT |
Player Stats
Regular Season
- Scoring
Player | GP | G | A | Pts | PIM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Max Bentley | 67 | 21 | 41 | 62 | 34 |
Ted Kennedy | 63 | 18 | 43 | 61 | 32 |
Tod Sloan | 70 | 31 | 25 | 56 | 105 |
Sid Smith | 70 | 30 | 21 | 51 | 10 |
Cal Gardner | 66 | 23 | 28 | 51 | 42 |
Harry Watson | 68 | 18 | 19 | 37 | 18 |
Jimmy Thomson | 69 | 3 | 33 | 36 | 76 |
Danny Lewicki | 61 | 16 | 18 | 34 | 26 |
Joe Klukay | 70 | 14 | 16 | 30 | 16 |
Fleming MacKell | 70 | 12 | 13 | 25 | 40 |
Howie Meeker | 49 | 6 | 14 | 20 | 24 |
John McCormack | 46 | 6 | 7 | 13 | 2 |
Gus Mortson | 60 | 3 | 10 | 13 | 142 |
Bill Barilko | 58 | 6 | 6 | 12 | 96 |
Ray Timgren | 70 | 1 | 9 | 10 | 20 |
Bill Juzda | 65 | 0 | 9 | 9 | 64 |
Fern Flaman | 39 | 2 | 6 | 8 | 64 |
Hugh Bolton | 13 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 4 |
Phil Maloney | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Bob Hassard | 12 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Andy Barbe | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Dusty Blair | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Bobby Copp | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Turk Broda | 31 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
Al Rollins | 40 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
- Goaltending
Player | MIN | GP | W | L | T | GA | GAA | SA | SV | SV% | SO |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Al Rollins | 2373 | 40 | 27 | 5 | 8 | 70 | 1.77 | 5 | |||
Turk Broda | 1827 | 31 | 14 | 11 | 5 | 68 | 2.23 | 6 | |||
Team: | 4200 | 70 | 41 | 16 | 13 | 138 | 1.97 | 11 |
Playoffs
- Scoring
Player | GP | G | A | Pts | PIM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Max Bentley | 11 | 2 | 11 | 13 | 4 |
Sid Smith | 11 | 7 | 3 | 10 | 0 |
Ted Kennedy | 11 | 4 | 5 | 9 | 6 |
Tod Sloan | 11 | 4 | 5 | 9 | 18 |
Joe Klukay | 11 | 4 | 3 | 7 | 0 |
Bill Barilko | 11 | 3 | 2 | 5 | 31 |
Fleming MacKell | 11 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 9 |
Harry Watson | 5 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
Cal Gardner | 11 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 4 |
Howie Meeker | 11 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 14 |
Fern Flaman | 9 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 8 |
Gus Mortson | 11 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
Jimmy Thomson | 11 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 34 |
Ray Timgren | 11 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Turk Broda | 8 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Danny Lewicki | 9 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Bill Juzda | 11 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 |
Al Rollins | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
- Goaltending
Player | MIN | GP | W | L | T | GA | GAA | SA | SV | SV% | SO |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Turk Broda | 492 | 8 | 5 | 1 | 9 | 1.10 | 2 | ||||
Al Rollins | 210 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 6 | 1.71 | 0 | ||||
Team: | 702 | 10 | 8 | 2 | 15 | 1.28 | 2 |
Awards and Records
- Vezina Trophy: Al Rollins
- Ted Kennedy, Center, NHL Second Team All-Star
- Sid Smith, Left Wing, NHL Second Team All-Star
- Jimmy Thomson, Defense, NHL Second Team All-Star
1951 Toronto Maple Leafs
Turk Broda, Al Rollins, Jimmy Thomson, Gus Mortson, Bill Barilko, Bill Juzda, Fern Flaman, Hugh Bolton, Ted Kennedy (captain), Sid Smith, Tod Sloan, Cal Gardner, Howie Meeker, Harry Watson, Max Bentley, Joe Klukay, Danny Lewicki, Ray Timgren, Fleming Mackell, Johnny McCormack, Bob Hassard, Conn Smythe (manager), Joe Primeau (coach), Tim Daly (trainer)
Gallery
Video
Highlights of Game 5 of the Finals including goals by Richard, the game tying goal with 32 seconds left by Tod Sloan and the overtime winner by Bill Barilko.
References
- ↑ 1950-51 Toronto Maple Leafs Statistics - Hockey-Reference.com. hockey-reference.com. Retrieved on 2009-05-27.
Toronto Maple Leafs | |
---|---|
Franchise | Franchise • Original Six • Players • Coaches • GMs • Seasons • Records • Draft Picks • Award Winners |
Arenas | Mutual Street Arena • Maple Leaf Gardens • Scotiabank Centre |
Affiliates | Toronto Marlies (AHL) • Reading Royals (ECHL) |
Rivalries | Montreal Canadiens • Philadelphia Flyers • Ottawa Senators |
Personnel | Brad Treliving (General manager) • Sheldon Keefe (coach) • John Tavares (captain) |
Media | OPB/Sportsnet/TSN4 (TV) • CJCL-FM/CHUM/CHOQ-FM (Radio) • Sportsnet+ (Online) |
Culture | Hockey Knights in Canada • Leafs Nation Network • Maple Leaf Square • Ford Performance Centre • "Fifty Mission Cap" • Face-Off • The Hockey Sweater |
Stanley Cup Championships (13) | 1918 • 1922 • 1932 • 1942 • 1945 • 1947 • 1948 • 1949 • 1951 • 1962 • 1963 • 1964 • 1967 |
Division Championships (5) | 1932–33 • 1933–34 • 1934–35 • 1937–38 • 1999–00 |
1950–51 NHL season by team | |
---|---|
Teams | Boston • Chicago • Detroit • Montreal • New York • Toronto |
See also | All-Star Game • 1951 Stanley Cup Finals |