Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Rennison Manners

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Shot
  
Left

Died
  
December 26, 1944

Career end
  
1931

Role
  
Ice hockey player

Career start
  
1923


Name
  
Rennison Manners

Weight
  
73 kg

Playing career
  
1922–1931

Height
  
1.8 m

Position
  
Centerman

Rennison Manners

Born
  
February 5, 1904 Ottawa, ON, CAN (
1904-02-05
)

Played for
  
Pittsburgh Pirates Philadelphia Quakers Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets Fort Pitt Hornets Ottawa Montagnards London Panthers Niagara Falls Cataracts

Rennison Flint "Ren, Dinny" Manners (February 5, 1904 in Ottawa, Ontario – December 26, 1944) was a Canadian professional ice hockey centre who played two seasons in the National Hockey League for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Quakers.

Playing career

In 1922-23 Manners played for, managed, and coached the Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets, of the United States Amateur Hockey Association, leading the team to a 10-10 record. He was then relieved of his coaching duties by Yellow Jackets owner, Roy Schooley, in favor of Dick Carroll, who had coached the Toronto Arenas to the Stanley Cup in 1918 That following season, the Yellow Jackets won the USAHA title. The Yellow Jackets were so dominant by 1925 that they spun off another Pittsburgh team, named the Fort Pitt Hornets, who played in the Eastern Division. Following the Yellow Jackets' 1923-24 season, Manners joined crosstown Fort Pitt Hornets. In 1926–27 he returned home to play for the senior Montagnards and led the city league in goals two years later.

During the 1929-30 season, Manners first played in the NHL, as he returned to Pittsburgh in 1929-30 to play for the Pirates, collecting three goals and two assists in 33 games. He then became a member of the Quakers when the franchise was relocated in September 1930. Manners only played four games for the Philadlephia club and spent most of his time with the Niagara Falls Cataracts of the Ontario Professional Hockey League. In 1931, he was reinstated as an amateur and played in a few leagues in the Ottawa area before joining the Montagnards for one last season in 1933–34. Manners later coached the revived Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets from 1935 until 1937, who were by now members of the Eastern Amateur Hockey League. The Yellow Jackets finally folded in 1937, and Manners' career ended. He died on December 26, 1944, when he collapsed while waiting for a streetcar.

References

Rennison Manners Wikipedia