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1910–11 NHA season

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Sport
  
Ice hockey

Runners-up
  
Montreal Canadiens

Top scorer
  
Marty Walsh

Number of games
  
16

Finals champion
  
Ottawa Senators

Champions
  
Ottawa Hockey Club

Start date
  
1910

Champion
  
Ottawa Senators

Number of teams
  
5

People also search for
  
1911–12 NHA season

1910–11 NHA season

League
  
National Hockey Association

Duration
  
December 31, 1910 – March 10, 1911

The 1910–11 NHA season was the second season of the now defunct National Hockey Association. The Ottawa Hockey Club won the league championship. Ottawa took over the Stanley Cup from the Montreal Wanderers and defended it against teams from Galt, Ontario, and Port Arthur, Ontario .

Contents

League business

The annual meeting was held November 12, 1910, electing the following executive:

  • Emmett Quinn (president and secretary)
  • Directors:

  • Eddie McCafferty, Wanderers
  • John Ambrose O'Brien, Renfrew
  • W. P. Humphrey, Shamrocks
  • George Kennedy, Canadiens
  • Joe Power, Quebec
  • The Shamrocks resigned from the league and were not replaced. The Club Athletique-Canadien and the Quebec Hockey Club were granted franchises. Haileybury and Cobalt left the league. Club-Athletique-Canadien had made a claim on the Canadiens name and threatened a lawsuit if they were not granted a franchise. There are three written descriptions of this transaction. Coleman(1966) writes that George Kennedy, president of the CAC bought the Haileybury franchise. In Andy O'Brien's book, Ambrose O'Brien is quoted as saying that he sold the Canadiens to Kennedy. In Holzman's book, the franchise was given to Kennedy, but Kennedy had to pay O'Brien for the rights to Newsy Lalonde. In The Globe of March 7, 1911, it is claimed that Lalonde's sale was the first ever sale of a player.

    The NHA decided to impose a $5,000 per team salary cap.

    A second meeting, on November 26, 1910, updated the Board of Directors to:

  • D'Arcy McGee, Ottawa
  • James A. Barnett, Renfrew
  • Adolphe Lecours, Canadiens
  • Joe Power, Quebec
  • Eddie McCafferty, Wanderers
  • The salary cap, while opposed by the players was upheld at the meeting.

    Source: Coleman, p. 201–203.

    Salary cap

    The salary cap of $5000 per club caused a situation where Bruce Stuart of Ottawa threatened a mass defection to a new league. However, the players found that the Arena Company, owners of the Montreal Arena would not rent to the players. There was no other suitable arena in Montreal available for a new league and the players had no choice but to abandon the effort. Some players took a large cut in salary: Marty Walsh, Fred Lake and Dubby Kerr were paid $600 each where they had been paid $1200 each in 1910. The dispute caused the cancellation of a pre-season exhibition series in New York for the Ottawas and Wanderers.

    Rule changes

    Games were changed from two periods of 30 minutes, to three periods of twenty minutes, with ten-minute rest periods. The Spalding hockey puck was adopted as the standard puck.

    Note: W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

    Stanley Cup challenges

    Ottawa played two challenges after the season at The Arena in Ottawa.

    Port Arthur vs. Ottawa

    Marty Walsh was a "one-man wrecking crew", scoring ten goals against Port Arthur.

    Post-season exhibition series

    After the season a series was arranged between Renfrew and Montreal Wanderers and Ottawa to play in New York. Renfrew and Montreal played first, with the winner to play-off against Ottawa. After the Wanderers defeated Renfrew 18–5 (13–4, 4–1), Ottawa won a $2,500 prize for the two-game series winning 12–7 ( 7–2, 5–8 ).

    Ottawa and Montreal then played a two-game series in Boston on March 22 and March 25, 1911 (the first game being the first professional hockey game in Boston). Ottawa won a $2,500 purse by a total score of 13–11 (5–7, 8–4). Ottawa had picked up Cyclone Taylor from Renfrew to play in the Boston exhibition games.

    Sources
  • "WANDERERS AGAIN DOWN THE RENFREWS; Montreal Skaters Capture the Second Game of Canadian Hockey at Rink.". New York Times. March 19, 1911. p. S2. 
  • "OTTAWA HOCKEY CLUB DOWNS WANDERERS; Stanley Cup Winners Show High Class Team Work and Skating at Local Rink.". New York Times. March 21, 1911. p. 12. 
  • "OTTAWA TEAM WINS $2,500 HOCKEY PURSE; Wanderers of Montreal Beaten in Final Game of Four Nights' Carnival.". New York Times. March 22, 1911. p. 12. 
  • Schedule and results

    † Protested by Renfrew.

    ‡ Replay of protested game.

    Stanley Cup engraving

    Ottawa put their names on the cup in 1909 and 1910 but did not in 1911. It was not until the trophy was redesigned in 1948 that the words "1911 Ottawa Senators" was put onto its then-new collar.

    References

    1910–11 NHA season Wikipedia