While at Princeton, Baker would win a national championship in 1911 as a halfback with the football team and in 1912 and 1914 with the hockey team, where he was known as a fast and agile skater.
Sportswriters in Philadelphia referred to him as "the blond Adonis of the gridiron", thanks in part to the fact he played football without a helmet! Baker set a school record with 92 points in 1911, a record which stood for 63 years. In 1913 he was named captain of the team for his senior year.
While statistics were not kept during Baker's time with the Tigers, it's been estimated that he scored over 120 goals and 100 assists in three years, an average of nearly 4.5 goals per game and more than 3 assists per game. Aside from his offensive skills, he was also well known for his sportsmanship and gentlemanly play, being called for only a single penalty during his entire college career and known for visiting the opponents dressing room after every game to shake hands with each player.
He concluded his football career at Princeton with a 20-3-4 record and his hockey career with a 20-7 mark.
After graduating in 1914, Baker would win a national amateur championship with the St. Nicholas Hockey Club in 1915. So well known was Baker by this point that the marquee at the arena would read "Hobey Baker plays tonight." While with the St. Nicholas club, Baker turned down a $20,000 offer to play for the Montreal Canadiens, as it was frowned up at the time to for someone of his stature in society to play sports for money.
Following his graduation from Princeton, Baker worked for a time in New York and took up aviation as a hobby during this time period, including once leading a squadron of a dozen planes over the Princeton football stadium before landing his plane on the football field!
He then enlisted in the United States Army Air Service. While serving in Europe during World War I, Baker rose to the level of captain and was named commander of the 141st Aero Squadron, where he had the planes painted in Princeton's black and orange and adopted a tiger as the squadron logo.
In 1918, Baker was test piloting a recently repaired plane, it crashed, killing him hours before he was due to leave France and return to the United States.
Baker was so highly regarded that he was the only American in the Hockey Hall of Fame's inaugural class of nine inductees in 1945 and one of the first group of inductees into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 1973. Two years later, Baker was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, the only person to be inducted into the Hockey and College Football Halls of Fame.
In 1921, Princeton named it's new arena the Hobey Baker Memorial Rink, still used by the Tigers and currently the second oldest arena in American college hockey.
1980 would see the NCAA introduce the Hobey Baker Award, given annually to the nation's best college hockey player.
This past Saturday against ECAC and Ivy League rival Harvard, the Tigers wore special throwback jerseys to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Baker, the school's greatest player, and his final season playing at Princeton.
Today's featured jersey is a 2013-14 Princeton University Tigers "Hobey Baker" jersey as modeled by Princeton head coach Bob Prier when the jersey was unveiled back in October.
This jersey is a blend of various styles of jerseys worn by Princeton during Baker's era, as some hockey and football jerseys had the tiger striping down the arms and others the "P" crest on the front, both of which are combined into this highly attractive and effective throwback.
Bonus jersey: Today's bonus jersey is a 1911-12 Princeton University Hobey Baker jersey. This wool sweater is identical to the ones worn by the Tigers during team photos in 1912 and 1914, with it's orange P logo on the chest. It differs from the university's football jerseys of the day, which had v-neck collars, as the hockey team used round neck collars, a lesson in paying attention to details when trying to authenticating jerseys, or in this case, a sweater.
Today's video is about Hobey Baker and the Hobey Baker Award.
If interested in profiling other multi-sports atheletes of an earlier era have a look at Lionel Conacher.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.historicacanada.ca/content/heritage-minutes/lionel-conacher
http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=p199401&page=bio&list=
Thanks for the suggestion but…
DeleteBeen there. Done that.
http://thirdstringgoalie.blogspot.com/2012/05/1925-26-pittsburgh-pirates-lionel.html
thanks - missed that, my mistake.
ReplyDeleteLooked for his name in the side labels under Lionel Conacher. should have noticed labelled last name first and looked for Conacher Lionel.