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1893 AHAC season

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Ice hockey season
Sports season
1893 AHAC season
LeagueAmateur Hockey Association of Canada
SportIce hockey
DurationJanuary 7 – March 17, 1893
Teams5
1893
ChampionsMontreal Hockey Club
AHAC seasons
← 1892
1894 →
Montreal Hockey Club with the Stanley Cup

The 1893 Amateur Hockey Association of Canada season lasted from January 7 until March 17. The Montreal Hockey Club defeated the Montreal Crystals 2-1 to claim the league and Canadian champion for the sixth season in a row and was awarded the new Stanley Cup without any competition by virtue of their status as AHAC champion.

Executive

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On December 15, 1892, the AHAC elected its officers for the season:

  • President - F. M. S. Jenkins, Ottawa
  • 1st Vice. Pres. - J. Crathern, Victorias
  • 2nd Vice. Pres. - A. Laurie, Quebec
  • Secretary-Treasurer - J. A. Findlay, Montreal
  • Council - A. Ritchie, Crystals; G. Carpenter, Shamrocks; M. Costigan, McGill; A. Z. Palmer, Ottawa Rebels; J. Farwell, Sherbrooke

Season

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The season came down to the wire between Montreal Hockey Club (MAAA) and Ottawa Hockey Club (the future Senators). MAAA won the showdown match with Ottawa 7-1 on February 18, then clinched first place on March 10 vs Crystals. However, two disputes needed to be settled at a special meeting on March 13 before the AHAC title was confirmed to MAAA. The meeting took place at the offices of James Caruthers at 3416 Av. du Parc, Montreal (formerly 699 Sherbrooke St.). Both decisions would have an impact as MAAA ended up finishing one game ahead of the Ottawa Hockey Club. Ottawa won the Quebec protest, but Montreal HC were also favored in the protest filed by Crystals, thereby confirming the AHAC championship and (eventually) the first Stanley Cup.

First protest: Ottawa and Quebec got into a dispute. Quebec protested their loss on January 21 in Quebec and refused to play in the return match until the protest was decided. The return match was scheduled for February but was not played until March 17. However, the matter was ruled in favor of Ottawa. At the same time, Ottawa was in a dispute with the Ontario Hockey Association over the location of the final match for the Ontario championship. In the end, Ottawa seceded from the Ontario association.

Second protest: In the March 3 game between MAAA and Crystals, a Crystals player was sent off and the penalty carried over into overtime. Crystals tried to argue that the overtime consisted of a new game and that they should be restored to full strength. They decided to not play the overtime. An unlikely protest said the papers. It was denied and MAAA was credited with the victory.

The end result was that MAAA was declared AHAC champions, and would eventually be handed the Stanley Cup. It is not clear if they knew they were also playing for Lord Stanley's Cup, which had been donated the year before, but they were aware it was an AHAC clinching game. It would be known as the Dominion Challenge Cup until April 30 when the Board of Trustees released rules for the "Stanley Hockey Championship Cup" and announced that MAAA's name was already engraved on the Cup and that it would soon be presented to them.

Final standing

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Note GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, GF = Goals For, GA = Goals Against

Team GP W L T GF GA
Montreal Hockey Club 8 7 1 0 38 18
Ottawa Hockey Club 8 6 2 0 49 22
Montreal Crystals 8 3 5 0 25 34
Quebec Hockey Club 8 2 5 1 23 46
Montreal Victorias 8 1 6 1 20 35

Results

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Month Day Visitor Score Home Score Location
Jan. 7 Ottawa HC 3 Victorias 4 Victoria Rink
13 Quebec HC 3 Crystals 8 Crystal Rink
14 Montreal HC 2 Ottawa HC 4 Rideau Rink
14 Quebec HC 1 Victorias 1 Victoria Rink
18 Crystals 3 Victorias 1 Victoria Rink
21 Ottawa HC 5 Quebec HC 3 Quebec Skating Rink
23 Montreal HC 7 Victorias 5 Victoria Rink
28 Victorias 2 Ottawa HC 7 Rideau Rink
28 Montreal HC 3 Quebec HC 2 Quebec Skating Rink
Feb. 3 Ottawa HC 4 Crystals 3 Crystal Rink
4 Victorias 3 Quebec HC 4 Quebec Skating Rink
10 Quebec HC 2 Montreal HC 9 Victoria Rink
11 Crystals 1 Ottawa HC 11 Rideau Rink
18 Crystals 3 Quebec HC 8 Quebec Skating Rink
18 Ottawa HC 1 Montreal HC 7 Victoria Rink
23 Victorias 3 Crystals 4 Crystal Rink
Mar. 3 (†) Crystals 2 Montreal HC 2 Victoria Rink
4 Montreal HC 6 Victorias 1 Victoria Rink
10 (††) Montreal HC 2 Crystals 1 Crystal Rink
17 Quebec HC 0 Ottawa HC 14 Rideau Rink

† Game awarded to Montreal because Crystals refused to continue.

†† Montreal clinches league championship.

Source: Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol. 1.[1]

Player Stats

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Scoring leaders

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Note: GP = Games played, G = Goals scored

Name Club GP G
Haviland Routh Montreal HC 7 12
A.E. Swift Quebec HC 8 11
Richard Bradley Ottawa HC 8 11
Dave Brown Crystals 7 10
Chauncey Kirby Ottawa HC 8 10
Shirley Davidson Victorias 6 8
Billy Barlow Montreal HC 7 7
George Lowe Montreal HC 5 6
William Murray Crystals 7 6
Archie Hodgson Montreal HC 8 6
Source

Coleman(1966) pp. 9–10

Goaltending averages

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Note: GP = Games played, GA = Goals against, SO = Shutouts, GAA = Goals against average

Name Club GP GA SO GAA
Tom Paton Montreal HC 8 18 0 2.3
Albert Morel Ottawa HC 8 22 1 2.8
Herbert Collins Crystals 8 34 1 4.3
Robert Jones Victorias 8 35 0 4.4
Harry Patton Quebec HC 7 32 0 4.6
Frank Stocking Quebec HC 1 14 0 14.0

Championship

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Montreal HC won the championship for placing first in the regular season. This was Montreal HC's third straight championship since the Championship Trophy was inaugurated in 1891. According to the terms for the trophy, Montreal HC was allowed to keep the Trophy.[2] A new version was struck for following seasons (this new version is on display at the MAA building at 2070 rue Peel Street, Montreal). The version won 1891-1893 that was gifted to Montreal is on display in the collection of the Hockey Hall of Fame.

As champions of the AHAC, the Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup (known today as the Stanley Cup) was to be awarded to Montreal as its inaugural champion. On May 15, 1893, Sheriff John Sweetland finally presented the trophy to the MAAA president J. A. Taylor during the MAAA annual meeting at the Montreal Gymnasium SW corner of Mansfield and de Maisonneuve in Montreal. This was the first MAAA clubhouse before they moved to Peel Street in 1905. Each player received a souvenir gold ring as a gift of the MAAA.[3] Disputes between the Montreal HC and the MAAA kept the Cup in the MAAA hands until it was accepted by the Club on February 23, 1894.[4]

Therefore, contrary to what was previously believed, the first Stanley Cup was not awarded at the Victoria Skating Rink but at Crystal Palace — also known as Crystal Rink — on March 10, 1893, at what is now rue Jeanne Mance just south of Blvd. St. Joseph in Montreal. This was not the original Crystal Palace, which had stood where the Palace Theatre would later be built on Sainte-Catherine Street; rather, it was the same structure, dismantled and relocated to that site in 1878. The building was lost to fire in 1896.

The March 11, 1893 Montreal Daily Star (see image to the right) demonstrates that the Montreal Hockey Club understood the stakes: a victory that night would secure the AHAC trophy as regular season champions. The Stanley Cup itself had been donated the previous year by Governor-General Lord Stanley of Preston, and the players possibly knew it also was on the line — the Cup appears prominently in the team's 1893 photograph (see above), positioned in front of the AHAC trophy. No playoff existed yet to determine a champion (unless a tie-breaker was needed); the title went to whoever finished atop the regular season standings. That would change the following year, when hockey's first playoff was held at the Victoria Skating Rink in Montreal.

So, there are really four points of interest in Montreal when it comes to the first Stanley Cup.

1. MAAA/MHC defeated Ottawa Hockey Club 7-1, in what effectively was the championship game at Victoria Skating Rink (site on Stanley Street in downtown Montreal) on February 18, 1893.

2. MHC defeated Crystals at Crystal Palace (2nd location today near rue Jeanne-Mance and Blvd St. Joseph in Montreal) to clinch first place and the AHAC championship (and the Stanley Cup) on March 10.

3. However, two disputes needed to be settled at a special meeting on March 13 before the AHAC title was confirmed to MHC. The meeting took place at the offices of James Caruthers at 3416 Av. du Parc, Montreal (formerly 699 Sherbrooke St.). Both decisions would have an impact as MHC ended up finishing one game ahead of the Ottawa Hockey Club. Ottawa won the Quebec protest, but MHC were also favored in the protest filed by Crystals, thereby confirming the AHAC championship and (eventually) the first Stanley Cup.

4. On May 15, 1893, Sheriff John Sweetland finally presented the trophy to the MAAA president J. A. Taylor during the MAAA annual meeting at the Montreal Gymnasium SW corner of Mansfield and de Maisonneuve in Montreal.

Montreal Daily Star, March 11, 1893 — reporting on the Crystal Rink game that decided both the AHAC title and the first Stanley Cup.
The second Crystal Palace, Fletcher's Field, Montreal, 1880.

Stanley Cup engraving

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Players
1893 Montreal Amateur Athletic Association
Forwards
Billy Barlow ^
Archie Hodgson ^
"Harvie" Routh ^
Alex Kingan ^
Alex Irving ^
George Low ^
Defencemen
Allan Cameron (point)
James A. Stewart (cover point
Goaltender
Tom Paton
  • ^ Unknown who played Center, Rover, Right Wing and Left Wing, so the players are listed as forwards

non-players=

  • Harry L. Shaw (Manager/Secretary-Treasurer)
  • James Taylor (President of AAA) (Missing from team picture)

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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  • Coleman, Charles L. (1966) [1964]. The Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol. 1, 1893–1926 inc. pp. 8–12.
  • Diamond, Dan, ed. (1992). The Official National Hockey League Stanley Cup centennial book. Toronto, Ontario: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 0-7710-2803-2.
  • Podnieks, Andrew; Hockey Hall of Fame (2004). Lord Stanley's Cup. Triumph Books. ISBN 1-55168-261-3.

Notes

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  1. ^ Coleman 1966, pp. 8–12.
  2. ^ "Senior Championship Trophy". Hockey Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 2008年09月30日.
  3. ^ "Governor-General's Cup. A Handsome Trophy Was Presented to the M.A.A.A. last night". Montreal Gazette. May 16, 1893. p. 8.
  4. ^ Diamond, p.14
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Preceded by Montreal Hockey Club
AHAC Champions

1893 Succeeded by
Preceded by
first winners
Montreal Hockey Club
Stanley Cup Champions

1893 Succeeded by
Preceded by AHAC seasons
1893 Succeeded by

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