Showing posts with label Edouard Newsy Lalonde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edouard Newsy Lalonde. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

The Crown Jewel Of Canadiens Collectibles

What you see here are nine Montreal Canadiens cards from 1911-12. In mint condition, judging by recent sales and auctions, the set might be worth a million!

Only the second ever set of hockey cards issued, the C55 1911-12 Imperial Tobacco series of 45 cards is a most sought after set.

The set contains many rookie cards and features 22 future Hall Of Famers, including four from the Montreal Canadiens.

The C55 set is the most common of the three cards sets produced by Imperial Tobacco, who also issued the 1910-11 C56 series and the 1912-13 C57 set.

The cards each feature colour drawing of photos taken from the day, and have brief player information on the reverse. The cards measure 1 1/2" by 2 1/2", and are an extremly rare find, especially in mint shape.

Players in the 1911-12 set were members of the NHA's Quebec Bulldogs, Ottawa Senators, Montreal Wanderers, Renfrew Millionaires and Canadiens. The series, considered the Holy Grail of hockey card sets, is highly prized by collectors. Though it is the easiest of the three early Imperial sets to find, it is the most difficult to complete due to it's size.

The highest priced card is #38 Georges Vezina which often sells at $1,650.00. The cards of Edouard "Newsy" Lalonde and Art Ross go for $800.00. Common cards, or non Hall Of Famers in the series, are rated at $100.00 each. The pricing are general for cards in the good to very good condition.

Other cards in the set include the Cleghorn brothers, Ogilvie and Sprague, Joe Hall, Jack Darragh, Cyclone Taylor, Riley Hern, Joe Malone, Didier Pitre, Jack Laviolette, Percy Lesueur and Tommy Dunderdale.

I'm not sure when it began, but professional grading of cards has helped send issues in perfect condition into stratospheric sales prices. The grading includes ratings on the colour and tinge of the card, the quality and smoothness of the surface, the sharpness of it's four corners, and the squared alignment of it's borders.

Cards are then graded from 1 to 10, docked a point for each imperfection. I am told that a card with more than more four imperfections does not receive a certifiable professional grading. It would then be considered to be in very good condition and perhaps quality due to it's rarety for the prices listed above.

In August of 2006, a 1979 #18 Wayne Gretzky O-Pee-Chee rookie card sold for $80,000, making it the most valuable hockey card in existence at the time.























Several months later the April 2007 issue of Beckett Hockey magazine published an article titled "The Greatest Card Ever Sold" focusing on the recent record setting $100,000 sale of a mint graded 1911-12 Georges Vezina hockey rookie card. The Honus Wagner baseball card is the most valuable sports card in history but legendary goalie George Vezina's rookie card is easily the most valuable hockey card to date.






















Finding a mint hockey card from the C55 set is not always easy but even the lower grades of 2 or 3, which are more commonly found, command prices up to hundreds of dollars. The Georges Vezina rookie card would be the crown jewel of any hockey card collector's collection. In the years to come it will be interesting to see what the mint graded Vezina rookie will sell for if it ever goes to auction again.

The Beckett Hockey Collector magazine reported in the September 2007 issue that a rare 1910-11 C56 Newsy Lalonde hockey card had tied the record, selling for $100K as well. The Newsy Lalonde hockey card was graded a 3 out of 10 by SCG, a sports card grading service.

There is no record of anyone having the entire 1911-12 set in top graded shape.

That would have to be worth a million?

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Thursday, July 31, 2008

1909-10 A Team Is Born

Note for all readers and Canadiens Fans:

The Montreal Canadiens 100 Seasons has been all consuming project for me to undertake starting this past summer. I hope that you will enjoy reading it as much as I have had digging it up. I always thought that there should be one single place online, almost like a web book, where much of this could be found. Now, hopefully, I can make that a reality.

As of today, July 31, 2008, I have completed documenting roughly about half of the team's history. As I continue to write and research these posts, I will begin posting on a Monday, Wednesday, and Friday schedule, while bringing the Habs current goings on once training camp begins.

Thanks for tuning in.



The Montreal Canadiens were born on December 2, 1909 in room 129 of the Windsor Hotel.

J. Ambrose O'Brien, a businessman and sports entrepreneur from Ottawa, with financial backing from business partner T.C. Hare, submitted the one thousand dollar National Hockey Association league entry fee and made guarantees for player salaries in the amount of $5,000.

The Montreal Wanderers had been one of the stronger teams in Eastern Canadian Amateur Hockey Association in 1908-09 and the owners of the club were upset that the ECAHA's other 3 teams - the Ottawa Senators, the Montreal Shamrocks, and the Quebec Bulldogs - had left them behind to create a newly formed league called the Canadian Hockey Association.

The CHA had been on created November 13, 1909 and was formed of the Ottawa, Montreal, and Quebec franchises, in addition to the Montreal National, and a team known as All - Montreal.



O'Brien meanwhile, had sports and arena interests in Renfrew, Haileybury and Cobalt and was sought out by Wanderers owners to form a new rival league to the CHA. Included in their ideas, was one for a Montreal based team comprised mainly of french speaking players, to counter the same idea of the CHA's Montreal National. It would be called the Montreal Canadiens, and their colours would be blue and white.

There was one small problem, these Montreal Canadiens had no arena to play in.

The issue was solved by the Wanderers, who wanted this new league to work out in such a bad way, that they would share their home rink, the Jubilee Arena, with the Canadiens.
















So the NHA was born, with the Canadiens joining forces with the Renfrew Creamery Kings, the Cobalt Silver Kings, the Haileybury Comets, and of course, the Wanderers. The Canadiens and the NHA, in its rivalry with the CHA, endured a difficult birth with several false starts.

After part of the initial schedule was remade and finally scrapped, the NHA accepted, or conspired to lure as the theory goes, two additional franchises from the CHA - the Senators and the Shamrocks - and began the season anew in January of 1910.

Jack Laviolette, a star player with the Montreal National of Federal Amateur Hockey League, the Michigan Soo Indians of the International Hockey League, and the Montreal Shamrocks of the Eastern Canadien Amateur Hockey Association, was regarded as one of the brighter hockey men the city of Montreal had in the early 1900's. He was brought in by owner O'Brien and teamed with secretary treasurer Eddy McCaffery in forming the group of players that would comprise the inaugural Montreal Canadiens team.




Laviolette, in addition to being manager, would also serve as the team's best defenseman and captain. He completed the task of getting players in place in less than one month.

Born Jean Baptiste "Jack" Laviolette in Belleville, Ontario on July 27, 1879, he moved with his family to Valleyfield, Quebec at age 12, where he developed a love of the game of hockey on his best friend Didier "Cannonball" Pitre's backyard rink.

Pitre, another defenseman, would become Laviolette's first signing to the Canadiens as he outbid the National for his services. It was quite a coup for the team, and the signing involved outracing the National's agent by train, who was also on the way to scoop up Pitre.



Soon after, Laviolette added Jos Cattarinich in goal and Newsy Lalonde in the rover position. The team's starters were rounded out by Ed Decary at center, with Arthur Bernier and Georges "Skinner" Poulin on the wings. Seven other players would suit up for Montreal in the restarted 12 game official season and they included Joseph Bougie, Ed Chapleau, Edgar Leduc, Edward Millaire, Patsy Séguin and goaltenders M. Larochelle and Teddy Groulx.

On a team photo handout of the day that featured the composition of the team, are two players named Rick Duckett and Noss Chartrand. There is little data pertaining to the standing of these players who were likely victims of the earlier season's false started schedule.



Laviolette, McCaffery, and O'Brien did much financial wheeling and dealing in aquiring several of their players, and certain transactions were contested with threats and lawsuits. After having stolen Pitre from under the National's nose, he targetted the services of Lalonde and Decary, and then moved on to All - Montreal for Poulin, all of whom where under contract.

With much of this contested in court, the Canadiens made headlines in local newpapers prior to having played their first NHA game.

Edouard Lalonde, was already known as Newsy by the time he arrived on the Canadiens scene. Born in Cornwall, Ontario, on October 31, 1887, the 22 year old Lalonde would quite rightfully become recognized as the Canadiens first true star player. Lalonde's on ice style made him the original "Flying Frenchman".

On January 5, 1910, the Canadiens beat the Cobalt squad 7-6 in overtime, with Lalonde scoring twice in what unofficially became their first ever game. Shortly after, the CHA was dissolved, and hence the Shamrocks and Senators, along with some of the league's better players, were absorbed into NHA.

It is not known how many games the Canadiens had played prior to the schedule being quickly revamped. The prior games played were shelved from the record and there exists little documentation today that details the false start.



The Canadiens restarted the season on January 19 and Lalonde recorded the team's first goal and hat trick in a loss to Renfrew. Both the Canadiens and Wanderers would play their local games at the Jubilee Arena, at the corner of Ste. Catherine and Malborough in the Westmount section of downtown Montreal. The Canadiens would lose the first four games in its history before beating Haileybury 9-5 on February 7, in front of a hometown crowd 3,000 strong. Pitre, the team's highest paid player at $1,700 per season, scored the winning goal.

Pitre would also score the winning goal in the Canadiens only other win of the 1910 season, registering a hat trick - a first for a Canadiens defenseman - on March 11 in a win over the crosstown Shamrocks. The game in itself was an oddity of sorts, as Canadiens starting goaltender M. Larochelle was tossed from the contest for vehemently arguing a goal with officials. Laviolette would take over in goal himself, thus becoming the first player coach to be credited with a win. Larochelle, who has no other Canadiens appearances to his credit, would not return. He has henceforth disappeared into mysterious Canadiens lore.

At the onset, the Canadiens were a bleak on ice, and off ice proposition. After three games, Laviolette passed the manager's hat to goalie Cattarinich so that he could concentrate his efforts on other duties involving the team while continuing to play.

Several events and strange occurances would mark the Canadiens initial campaign. Montreal would suffer its worst loss in history in this season on February 26, via a 15-3 pounding at the hands of the Haileybury Comets. In that game, Alex Currie and Nick Bawlf would become the first players to score 6 and 5 goals respectively against the sadsack Canadiens.




Finances were a problem for the Canadiens as well, and on March 9, prior to a game against the Wanderers, the Montreal players went on strike. Angered at not having been paid for their previous game, the players were convinced by Laviolette - who pointed to an arena full of possibly disappointed fans - that they would receive full renumeration for their services as soon as the gate receipts were counted.

The Canadiens would finish out the schedule in last place with a record of 2-10, scoring 59 goals and allowing an even 100. The following season, only Lalonde, Pitre, Laviolette, Bernier and Poulin would return.

In his first NHA season, Lalonde would score 38 goals in 11 games to win the league's first scoring title. He scored 16 of those in 6 games with the Canadiens before being "lent" to the Renfrew squad where he would add 22 more in the season's final five games. The move was done primarily to strengthen the O' Brien owned Creamery Kings in a Stanley Cup bid.

O' Brien was the big mover and shaker in the initial days of the NHA's first steps. In addition to the Canadiens and Renfrew, he also had ownership of the Haileybury and Cobalt franchises, and donated the league's first championship trophy - the O' Brien Cup.

Despite O' Brien's help, Renfrew would not manage its Cup goal, and the NHA championship and the Stanley Cup would become property of the Montreal Wanderers in 1910.




The Wanderers, led by stars Ernie Russell, Harry Hyland and goalie Riley Hern defeated the Berlin (now Kitchener) Union Jacks 7-3 in a one game Stanley Cup challenge held March 12, 1910 at the Jubilee Arena.

Ownership of the Stanley Cup at this time in hockey history is very different than it is known as today. As it was created to be a challenge cup, rules governing who could compete for it and how were in constant evolution until the bowl become property of the NHL.

The 1909 Stanley Cup champions were the Senators, then of the ECAHA. Ottawa had been awarded the Cup as league champions, and it was too late in the season for them to accept an outside challenge from the Winnipeg Shamrocks. While Ottawa partook in its first NHA season the following calendar year, it twice successfully defended its title in a pair of total goals games in January of 1910 against the Edmonton Eskimos and a team from Galt.

Though the Senators had twice defended their title, the team's name is inscribed on the bowl just once. Wheras other squads multiple wins within a 12 month period are duly recorded, there seemed to be little operative practice of consistency for inscriptions on the bowl.

Hockey in 1909-10, grew in often conspicuous leaps and bounds, and the Canadiens inaugural season mirrored the game's fast changing times.





The team's owners were sometimes suspect, often perceived by the public at large as simply money men cashing in on the sport's rise in popularity. As many of them were involved in boxing, horseracing, and gambling rings, hockey often suffered from the perception of it being nothing more than a violent mug's rackett. And it truly was!

Owners bought and sold teams quickly. Player's rights were fought over considerably. Local rinks gate receipts were questioned. In short, every variety of legal standing regarding the game had its share of dubious moments. Owners took advantage of players naivity, and the sides barely trusted each other.

That the Canadiens survived all of this, team name and origin intact, is quite a feat. They would have more than their share of trials and tribulations in their early going, but on the backs on great visionairies and proud players, they would outlast city rival teams through a multitude of ups and downs over the coming decades.

In all the fuss and flux, it would be the constants that remained from year to year that would bring about allegiance in the locals.

Laviolette and Cattarinich were emotionally invested in the team. Players such as Lalonde, Pitre, - stubborn as they came - and other mainstays to come, helped reinforce the team's humble foundation and build the sport in Eastern Canada.




Newsy Lalonde would leave his mark on the NHA and NHL, as much for his scoring exploits as he would for his temperament. A controversial figure of sorts, who was known at the time to have been making more money as one of the nation's best lacrosse players, Lalonde never hesitated to refuse his services when he felt he was being taking advantage of financially.

After the 1910-11 season, he jumped to Pacific Coast Hockey League's Vancouver Millionaires for more money. He was back in a Canadiens jersey the following season. Two seasons later he was sold / traded back to the Millionaires, but refused to report, causing the Canadiens all kinds of headaches in player and money transfers.

Regardless of his stubborn nature and his principles, Lalonde would be regarded as one of the NHL's early greats. He won six scoring championships across four leagues in his day - 2 NHA, 2 NHL, 1 PCHA in 1912, and 1 OPHL in 1909 - and would remain associated with the Canadiens as a player until 1923 when he was dealt to the Saskatoon Shieks for $3,500 and Aurel Joliat after a contractual squabble with then manager Leo Dandurand.

During his 12 seasons as a Canadiens player, Lalonde had been captain for eight of those years and its coach for 6. He played his final NHL game as a member of the New York Americans in 1927 and retired in 1929 after a year with the Niagara Falls Cataracts.

By 1932, he had patched up differences with Dandurand and returned to coach the Canadiens once more for two and a half seasons during some lean years for the club.



Pitre, a giant of a man for an early hockey player, had the on ice temperment of a teddy bear. He would play 13 of his next 14 hockey seasons in a Canadiens uniform, outlasting his sometimes rival team mate Lalonde by one season. A fast skating strong man with a reknowned hard shot, Pitre was one of the early game's better offensive defenseman at a time when the position was much less defined than it is today.

Laviolette would suit up for the Canadiens until 1918, when a car accident would end his career.

Cattarinich would not play for the Canadiens beyond the 1910 season. He would later team with Dandurand and another local businessman named Louis Letourneau to purchase the Canadiens.

For the 1910-11 season, Cattarinich would find his replacement in goal, and his discovery had a profound effect on the future of the Montreal Canadiens franchise.

















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Monday, March 24, 2008

Where Habs Legends Live On
















Did everyone have a good Easter weekend?

I spent a good part of my day Sunday on an egg hunt - online!

As I've mentioned here often before, one of my favorite hockey blogs for researching the history of the game, and specifically looking up Habs player bios, is Joe Pelletier's Greatest Hockey Legends. It's actually one of my daily stops because Joe's site has tons of Habs content, not surprisingly.

For anyone interested in the history of the Canadiens and their players, it is the best place to stop for well written biographies chock full of interesting and often forgotten detail. Joe's bio's are definitely not the bland variety that one finds at the Hockey Hall Of Fame site, as they often take on a more personal nature, delving into the lives of the players, before and after their careers have ended.

There are over 700 players, NHL and International, profiled at the site, and at last count, there were 74 Montreal Canadiens players featured among them. There may be more as I write this - Joe has added 3 more in the past week: Sylvio Mantha, Yvon Lambert, and Bunny Larocque.

Speaking of bunnies, Mr. Pelletier's site ran an extremely cool contest over the Easter weekend with a handsome prize attached - a $100 gift certificate for Amazon.com. I have entered into the contest, spending a few hours to look for the 5 images of easter eggs - the one you see below - in order to qualify.















The rules are that simple. Peruse the over 700 players bio's at the site and find the 5 images shown above and e-mail the names of the players to Joe and you are entered into the draw.

I'd have found mine alot faster had I not stopped to read so much, but that was a big part of my fun, and the reason why I visit Greatest Hockey Legends as often as I do.

There is still time to get involved, as the contest closes midnight Pacific time ( Joe is on the West coast ) which would be 3 A.M. Tuesday morning E.S.T.

The contest is actually just an invitation to the site, one among many good reasons to get familiar with it if you are interested in hockey and it's history.

For starters, there are the Habs bio's that I mentioned, but beyond that, Greatest Hockey Legends also features content on the Stanley Cup, playoff miscelania, goaltending legends, hockey's tough guys, all time player rankings, everything you'd want to know about International Hockey Series such as the 1972 Summit Series and the Canada Cups....and the list goes on and on.























One of my prefered attractions to the site are Joe's book reviews. If there is a new book out that has to do with hockey, chances are that it will be reviewed at the site.

Anniversaries, in hockey history are also taken note of, such as this eventful evening. With backlinks to insightful content, all bases are covered.























What makes the whole site worthy, is Mr. Pelletier's style of writing - unearthing human detail and sticking unbiasedly to the facts at hand.

Joe is a member of the SIHR, the Society for International Hockey Research, an author of several hockey books, and he has been a referenced consultant for television programs on hockey. Every nuance of his site reflects his immersion in a love of the game.

I highly recommend anyone wanting to learn more about the Habs greatest legends to check out the site. On occasion, readers have even asked Mr. Pelletier to post bios on forgotten players, and he has complied.






Here are five of my favorite Canadiens profiles:

Jean Beliveau
Newsy Lalonde

Yvan Cournoyer

Bill Durnan
Guy Carbonneau


Chances are, that if you make a regular stop at Hockey's Greatest Legends, you will learn something new real fast, or unearth a rare photo that will bring up an old memory, such as this one of Rangers GM and former Oilers coach Glen Sather, during his brief stint as a Canadien.












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Wednesday, March 05, 2008

The First Habs Superstar - Newsy Lalonde

One of my favorite fugures in Montreal Canadiens history has always been Edouard "Newsy" Lalonde.

A premier player in the pre NHL era of hockey in the early 1900's, Lalonde was a Habs pioneer. I've often thought that without his prowess and determination for the Canadiens cause in those early stages of hockey, the Montreal Canadiens as we know them, might not exist today.

Though he starred in a day when numbers weren't yet worn on jerseys, I've long felt that his number 4, worn in the NHL years of his career should hang proudly from the rafters of the Bell Centre, despite the fact that the number is forever attached to the great Jean Beliveau.

I often think about "Newsy" and the heritage he has left. LIke myself, Lalonde was born in Cornwall, and he rest in peace at the St. Columbans graveyard in town here. When I pass by there, the notion of going to visit his stone and paying my respects crosses my mind. It is on my to - do list, let's say.

I started thinking about "Newsy" again this past Sunday night. I was at the Bell for the Springsteen show, and when I came out of section 105, there was Lalonde's plaque in the builders section.



















Last summer I found out that Lalonde still has family living in Cornwall. A waitress I'd met at the Fifth Wheel Truck stop named Mary Ann Lefave often spoke to me of her love of the Habs and her favorite player, Mike Komisarek. In Mary Ann's eyes, there was always a vague familiarity that I could not place. She was a summer student working as a server before she left for college in September, and one her last day of work we started a conversation that pretty much flipped me out.

The conversation got rolling when I asked her how she had become so attached to the Canadiens. Mary Ann is 22, and she explained that it was a family tradition to cheer for the Habs. She mentioned her parents to me, and I was surprised to learn that I had known them both well having worked with both her mother and father at my very first job as a grocery clerk back in 1979.

Her mom and I, along with some friends used to go to the drive - in together.

Now if that didn't freak me out enough, she then told me that her paternal grandfather was the brother of Newsy Lalonde.

I used to deliver groceries to Mack Lalonde's house all the time - and I never knew this!

I'm hoping Mary Ann comes to work at The Wheel again next summer. There's a conversation I'd like to continue sometime!

Now Newsy was no average athlete by any means. Not only did he serve the Canadiens in several capacities, but Lalonde excelled at both hockey and lacrosse in his lifetime. He is recognized by the Hockey Hall of Fame as one of the most dominant players of hockey's first quarter century.

In the history of the Montreal Canadiens, there has always been a dominant player leading the team through the era's. Newsy Lalonde was the first in a succession of star players, predating the likes of Howie Morenz, Aurel Joliat, Maurice Richard, Jean Beliveau and Guy Lafleur. Perhaps, unfortunately for Newsy, he played at a time of less recognition, prior to when the Canadiens joined the NHL and those parts of his career are ignored in today's record books.

Lalonde was born in Cornwall, Ont. October 31, 1887 and as a youth worked in the newsprint plant - hence the nickname "Newsy". He began playing professionally with the Cornwall Rovers in 1905, at age 16.

In 1906, he was a member of the senior Woodstock club, moving in 1908 to play for the Toronto Arenas of the Ontario Professional Hockey League - the first pro league of its kind in Canada. Lalonde won the OPHL scoring championship with 29 goals in 9 games and played against the Montreal Wanderers for the Stanley Cup, which Toronto lost 6-4.

After two seasons with the Arena's, he became a Montreal Canadien.

The Canadiens played their first game ever on Wednesday January 5th,1910 at the Jubilee Rink, a 3,500 seat natural ice arena that was located in Montreal's East End at the corners of Ste-Catherine and Moreau streets.













Newsy was in the lineup for the Canadiens and scored two goals before being hit in the ankle with a puck and leaving the game. Montreal defeated the Cobalt Silver Kings 7-6 in overtime.


















Canadiens owner J. Ambrose O'Brien owned four of the five teams in the National Hockey Association he decided to lend Newsy Lalonde to the Renfrew Millionaires team for the balance of the season.













Lalonde added 38 goals, bringing his total for the year to 40. In 1911, Lalonde returned to the Canadiens but his goal production dropped to 19 in 16 games.







Following the 1911 season, Newsy Lalonde was traded to Frank Patrick's Vancouver Millionaires for Ernest Dubeau. He flourished in Vancouver, scoring 27 goals in 15 games and won the PCHA scoring championship.






Lalonde was sent back to Montreal the following year for Didier Pitre and responded by scoring 25 goals, finishing fifth in scoring behind Joe Malone of Quebec, who scored 43 goals in 20 games.














In 1915 Lalonde held out for more money from the Canadiens and retired after playing in only six games. Lacrosse, a sport in which Lalonde was said to be even more dominant in, paid almost double at the time.








By next season, he had come to terms with the team and enjoyed another excellent season ding the scoring race with 31 goals, adding three more in the playoffs as the Canadiens defeated the Portland Rosebuds 3 games to 2 to win their first of 24 Stanley Cups.

In the series, Lalonde dealt with a bout of the flu, playing the first game and missing the second. Lalonde returned in game three to score a goal, helping the Canadiens to a 6-3 win. In the fourth, Newsy scored with a minute left but it was not enough as Portland won 6-5 to tie the series at 2-2. Lalonde didn't score in the final game won by the Canadiens 2-1 on a late third period goal by defenseman Goldie Prodgers.

Lalonde pocketed the magnificent sum of $238 paid to each member of the championship team.

The following season Lalonde tallied 27 times, playing in the Stanley Cup final once more when the Canadiens traveled west to play the Seattle Metropolitans. In the second series game, he drew five penalties including a game misconduct and a $25 fine for butt-ending referee Jock Irvine during a brawl. Overall, it wasn't the best series for Lalonde or the Canadiens. He scored but 2 goals and Seattle won the series 3 -1, becoming the first American team to capture the Cup.

This would be the last game for the Montreal Canadiens in the National Hockey Association.

The National Hockey League began on November 26th 1917 with the Montreal Canadiens, Montreal Wanderers, Ottawa Senators and Toronto Arenas as charter league members. Lalonde participated in the first NHL game ever December 19th, 1917 as the Montreal Canadiens defeated the Ottawa Senators 7-4. While Lalonde scored 23 goals that season the Canadiens finished last in the league.

By 1919, the Canadiens made it back to the Stanley Cup final by winning the NHL regular season. Their western opponents in the Stanley Cup challenge were, once again, the Seattle Metropolitans. After five games in the series, each teams had two wins and one game ended in a tie. Newsy Lalonde had scored 17 goals in the ten playoff games.

The final game scheduled for April 1st, 1919 was never played. Joe Hall, Manager Kennedy, Billy Coutu, Jack McDonald and Newsy Lalonde were all hospitalized with influenza. Joe Hall died in the Seattle Receiving Hospital April 5, 1919. The Stanley Cup final series was canceled.

In 1921 the Canadiens finished out of the playoffs and Newsy Lalonde finished third in scoring. Early in the 1922 season the Canadiens were sold to Joseph Cattarinich, Louis A. Letourneau and Leo Dandurand. Newsy Lalonde walked out in a dispute with Leo Dandurand and held out for four games. He then played 20 games playing well below his normal level and only scored 9 goals. His performance prompted Leo Dandurand to trade him to the Saskatoon Sheiks of the PCHL for Aurel Joliat who was to become the next Canadiens superstar.

Newsy was now coming to the end of his career. In 1923 he regained his form when he got 29 goals in 26 games then he tailed off to 10 and 4 the next two years. In 1926 he moved to the New York Americans but only played one game for them before retiring.

By 1932 he had settled his differences with Leo Dandurand and was named coach of the Canadiens. His first year as coach the Canadiens barely made the playoffs and lost in the semi-finals to the Rangers.

The next season the Canadiens lost again in the first round of the playoffs, this time to the Blackhawks. In 1935, as happens to all losing coaches, Newsy was let go.

During his career with the Canadiens he was the leading scorer on six occasions. He captained the team from 1915-1921 and was a member of the first Montreal Canadiens team to win the Stanley Cup in 1916. He was scoring champion five times while playing in the National Hockey Association, Pacific Coast Hockey Association and National Hockey League.

He also held the record for the most goals scored by a professional hockey player from 1910 to 1954. It was his record of 441 goals that Maurice Richard passed. His total of 441 is much more than the 324 of Nels Stewart recognized as the modern record of the National Hockey League.


















Above - A collection of Newsy Lalonde memorabilia.

Statistics in the old days were not kept as well as they are today. With the few exceptions of great players like Lalonde who had the foresight to keep a scrapbook, it is impossible to get accurate statistics even after exhaustive research.

During these early years of the NHL, Lalonde made more money playing lacrosse than he did playing hockey. Beginning in 1910, he would make up to $5,000 per season playing lacrosse, while as late as 1920 he couldn't get more than $2,000 a year playing hockey. His salary in 1910-11 for the Montreal Canadiens was $1,300 which was one of the highest at the time.

In 1950, Newsy Lalonde was named athlete of the half century in lacrosse. He was also elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame and the Sports Hall of Fame of Canada. He had the honour to light the torch at the opening of the Sports Hall of Fame at Toronto in August 1955.

Edouard (Newsy) Lalonde died at the age of 83 on November 21, 1970.

Here are several interesting link on Lalonde:

A family site biography

His career stats

Newsy's Footprints Of The Game reel

Joe Pelletier's Newsy bio at Hockey's Greatest Legends

Newsy's Canadian Sports Hall Of Fame profile




About the Newsy Lalonde hockey card pictured at the top of this post:

In April 2007 a mint graded 1911-12 C55 Georges Vezina rookie hockey card sold for a record breaking $100K. This is the highest amount paid for a hockey card to date.

The Beckett Hockey Collector magazine reported in the September 2007 issue that a rare 1910-11 C56 Newsy Lalonde hockey card had tied the record, selling for $100K as well. The Newsy Lalonde hockey card was graded a 3 out of 10 by SCG, a sports card grading service.

According to Beckett this was “the first publicly reported C56 Imperial Tobacco #37 Newsy Lalonde” hockey card. To date only one other copy of this hockey card has surfaced.

About the photo of lalonde with Renfrew team mates Cyclone Taylor and Frank Patrick:

Amazing cabinet photo pictures three of hockey's early and biggest stars in a Renfrew, Ontario studio, decked out in their thick Renfrew Millionaires team sweaters. Lured to the Ottawa Valley team by big bucks offered by Renfrew's wealthy owners after the National Hockey Association was formed, Newsy Lalonde, Cyclone Taylor and Frank Patrick helped to form a powerhouse team that however was not able to secure the Stanley Cup for the community. Their stays in Renfrew were short but their exploits on the ice throughout their careers are legendary. The photo itself measures approximately 4" x 5 1/2" and has been mounted on thick cardboard which includes the photographer's name. Handwriting on the back lists the players and also includes "Taken in 1912". In outstanding condition, this stirring treasure featuring 3 Hall-of-Famers was obtained from Newsy Lalonde's family.