Friday, January 20, 2017
1924-25 Montreal Maroons Clint Benedict Jersey
Clint Benedict
of the Montreal Maroons became the first goaltender in the NHL to reach
20 career shutouts on this date in 1925 with a 2-0 shutout over the
Boston Bruins.
While Benedict reached 20 NHL
shutouts in 1925, he actually had 23 career shutouts at that point, as
the NHL had only been formed in 1917, and Benedict's professional career
dated back to the 1912-13 season when he joined the Ottawa Senators of
the National Hockey Association.
He would back up future Hall of Famer Percy LeSueur
for two seasons until taking over as the starter in 1914, leading the
NHA in Goals Against Average for three consecutive seasons and recording
four shutouts in five seasons.
The 1914-15 Ottawa Senators of the NHA
Following the 1916-17 season, the NHA would disband
and the Senators would join the newly formed National Hockey League. As
part of the NHL, the Senators would win the Stanley Cup in 1920, 1921
and 1923 with Benedict as their goaltender. He would also lead the NHL
in wins for six of his seven seasons with the Senators after joining the
new league.
The
relationship between Benedict and the Senators would sour over the
matter of Benedict's drinking, which included the Senators withholding
some of his salary as a result. When Benedict sued the club, they
countersued and Benedict's problems were revealed and the relationship
was damaged beyond repair.
As
a result, Benedict was traded to the Montreal Maroons in time for their
inaugural season in 1924-25 with his NHL career shutout total standing
at 18. After a previous clean sheet, Benedict would get his 20th NHL shutout
on this date in 1925, the first goaltender in the NHL to reach that
milestone.
The inaugural 1924-25 Montreal Maroons
The
following season of 1925-26 saw Benedict add six more shutouts to his
career total during the regular season. He would then lead the Maroons
to their first Stanley Cup championship in only their second season while recording three more
shutouts in four Stanley Cup Finals games against the Victoria Cougars.
The Stanley Cup Champion 1925-26 Montreal Maroons
In 1926-27, Benedict would record 13 more shutouts in 43 games and two
seasons later add 11 more to his tally as scoring in the NHL reached an
all-time low, with Toronto's Ace Bailey led the league with 22 goals and 32 points in a 44 game schedule.
To
open up the game, the rules were changed, now allowing forward
passing in the attacking zone beginning with the 1929-30 NHL season. The
changes were immediate and dramatic, as Cooney Weiland led the
league with 43 goals and 73 points, 41 points more than Bailey's league
leading total the previous season! Shutouts by goaltenders were
obviously negatively affected, and Benedict's in particular, as his
total went from 11 to zero in his final NHL season.
Benedict earned his place in hockey lore in 1930 when, following being hit in the face by a shot from the Montreal Canadiens Howie Morenz
on January 5th, which broke his nose and fractured his cheek, he
returned to the ice six weeks later on February 20th against the New
York Americans, now wearing a protective facemask based on one used by
boxing sparring partners. His use of the mask was short-lived. Varying
accounts claim he wore it for one, two or even as many as five games,
modifying the mask and even trying different styles, before giving up
on the idea of wearing a mask due to them restricting his vision.
"The
nosepiece protruded too far and obscured my vision on low shots,"
Benedict said. After losing 2-0 to Chicago on February 25th wearing it,
"I threw the darn thing away. I blamed it for the loss and that was
that." He then tried a wire cage-style protector, like a baseball
catcher's mask, "but the wires distracted me. That's when I gave up."
Benedict wearing his famous facemask
He was again injured on March 4th in a game against Ottawa when he got hit in the face during a goalmouth scramble, which proved to be his final NHL game as well as his reported final (of five) games wearing a mask.
If the reports of Benedict wearing the mask for five games are accurate, he would have tied the Americans in the first game, defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-4 in the second, lost to Chicago 2-0 in the final game for the leather mask, again defeated the Maroons 5-1 on March 1st before leaving the game on March 4th, a 6-2 defeat by the Senators for a record of 2-2-1 in the five games while wearing a wire mask of some style.
He played one final season for the Windsor Bulldogs of the IHL before retiring as a player.
Benedict finished his NHL career with 190 wins and 28 ties, along with 57 shutouts in 362 games, holds numerous Maroons goaltending records, including most wins, shutouts and lowest goals against average, and won four Stanley Cups. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1965.
Today's featured jersey is a 1924-25 Montreal Maroons Clint Benedict jersey from the Maroons first season, and the one in which Benedict would become the first to reach the 20 shutout mark in NHL history.
The Maroons sweaters in their inaugural season read "MONTREAL" across the front, rather than the more familiar "M" logo that they would adopt for their second season and continue to wear for the remainder of the franchise's remaining 13 seasons.
Our video selection today is a trip through time and a look at the Evolution of the Goalie Mask. Hopefully you will see some forgotten favorites from the days of the early paint jobs on the full face mask.
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