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Georges Vézina

Joseph Georges Gonzague Vézina (/ˈvɛzɪnə/; French: [ʒɔʁʒ vezina]; January 21, 1887 – March 27, 1926) was a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender who played seven seasons in the National Hockey Association (NHA) and nine in the National Hockey League (NHL), all with the Montreal Canadiens. After being signed by the Canadiens in 1910, Vézina played in 327 consecutive regular season games and a further 39 playoff games, before leaving early during a game in 1925 due to illness. Vézina was diagnosed with tuberculosis, and died on March 27, 1926.

Georges Vézina
Hockey Hall of Fame, 1945
Born (1887-01-21)January 21, 1887
Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada
Died March 27, 1926(1926-03-27) (aged 39)
Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada
Height 5 ft 6 in (168 cm)
Weight 185 lb (84 kg; 13 st 3 lb)
Position Goaltender
Caught Left
Played for Montreal Canadiens
Playing career 1910–1925

The only goaltender to play for the Canadiens between 1910 and 1925, Vézina helped the team win the Stanley Cup in 1916 and 1924, while reaching the Stanley Cup Finals three more times. Nicknamed the "Chicoutimi Cucumber" for his calm composure while in goal, Vézina allowed the fewest goals in the league seven times in his career: four times in the NHA and three times in the NHL. In 1918, Vézina became the first NHL goaltender to both record a shutout and earn an assist on a goal. At the start of the 1926–27 NHL season, the Canadiens donated the Vezina Trophy to the NHL as an award to the goaltender who allowed the fewest goals during the season. Since 1981, the award has been given to the most outstanding goaltender as determined by a vote of NHL general managers. In Vézina's hometown of Chicoutimi, the sports arena is named the Centre Georges-Vézina in his honour. When the Hockey Hall of Fame opened in 1945, Vézina was one of the original nine inductees, and in 2017 the NHL included him on their list of the 100 greatest players in league history.

Personal life

Georges, the fifth of eight children, was born on January 21, 1887, in Chicoutimi, Quebec, to Georges-Henri Vézina, a local baker and his wife Clara Belley.[1] Georges attended school at the Petit Séminaire de Chicoutimi from 1898 until the age of fourteen, when he left the school to help at his father's bakery.[2][3] He played hockey from a young age, participating in informal street hockey matches with others his own age.[4] Vézina partook in these matches in his shoes, and used skates for the first time at age 16 when he joined the local team in Chicoutimi.[5] As Chicoutimi was in a remote area of Quebec, more than 200 kilometres from Quebec City, the hockey club was not in any organised league. Rather the club, known as the Saguenéens ("People from the Saguenay", the region where Chicoutimi is located), toured the province, playing exhibition games against a variety of clubs.[4]

Vézina married Marie-Adélaïde-Stella Morin on June 3, 1908, in Chicoutimi.[6] After Vézina's death, it was reported that he had fathered 22 children. This rumour was started when the Canadiens' manager, Léo Dandurand, told reporters that Vézina "speaks no English and has twenty-two children, including three sets of triplets, and they were all born in the space of nine years." In actuality the Vézinas only had two children and Georges spoke broken English.[7] In 1912 they had their first child, a son named Jean-Jules. A second son was born the night of the Montreal Canadiens' first Stanley Cup win in 1916. To honour the event, Georges named the child Marcel Stanley.[8] When not playing hockey, Vézina operated a tannery in Chicoutimi, living a quiet life.[9]

Playing career

NHA

 
Vézina while a member of the Chicoutimi Hockey Club

On February 17, 1910, the Chicoutimi Hockey Club played an exhibition match against the Montreal Canadiens.[5] Though playing an inferior team the Canadiens failed to score a goal, losing the game. This prompted Joseph Cattarinich, goaltender for the Canadiens, to convince his team to offer a tryout to Georges Vézina, who was Chicoutimi's goaltender.[10] Vézina initially refused the offer, staying in Chicoutimi until the Canadiens returned in December of that year. This time they convinced Georges, along with his brother Pierre, to come to Montreal. The two Vézina brothers arrived on December 22, 1910.[4] While Pierre failed to make the team, Georges impressed the Canadiens, especially with the use of his stick to block shots.[11] Vézina was signed to a contract for C$800 per season,[3][5] and made his professional debut December 31, 1910, against the Ottawa Senators.[4] He would play all 16 games for the Canadiens in the 1910–11 season, finishing with a record of eight wins and eight losses, while allowing the fewest goals in the league.

 
Georges Vézina with the Canadiens early in his career

The following season Vézina again led the league in goals against, as well as winning eight games, along with 10 losses.[9] Vézina recorded his first career shutout during the 1912–13 season, defeating Ottawa 6–0 on January 18, 1913, for one of his nine wins in the season.[12] The Canadiens finished first in the NHA for the first time in 1913–14, in a tie with the Toronto Blueshirts. Once again, Vézina led the league with the fewest goals against, while posting 13 victories and seven losses. Under the NHA rules, the first place team would play in the Stanley Cup Finals, but due to the tie for first, the Canadiens had to play a two-game, total-goals series against Toronto. Vézina shut out the Blueshirts in the first game, a 2–0 win for Montreal, but let in six goals in the second game, allowing the Blueshirts to play for the Stanley Cup, which they won.

After losing 14 games and finishing last in the NHA in 1914–15, Vézina and the Canadiens won 16 games during the 1915–16 season, placing the team first in the league. As league leaders, the Canadiens earned the right to play in the 1916 Stanley Cup Finals, where they faced off against the Portland Rosebuds, champions of the rival Pacific Coast Hockey Association. The Canadiens defeated the Rosebuds three games to two in the best-of-five-games series, winning the Stanley Cup for the first time in team history.[13] Vézina's second son was born the night of the fifth game, which coupled with a bonus of $238 each member of the Canadiens received for the championship, led to him considering the series as the pinnacle of his career.[14] The following season Vézina again led the NHA with the fewest goals against, the fourth time in seven years he did so, helping the Canadiens to again reach the Stanley Cup Finals, where they lost to the Seattle Metropolitans.

NHL

The NHA gave way to the National Hockey League (NHL) in November 1917, with Vézina and the Canadiens joining the new league. On February 18, 1918, he became the first goaltender in NHL history to record a shutout, by blanking the Torontos 9–0.[15] He finished the season with 12 wins, allowing the fewest goals against.[16] Vézina also set a record, which was shared with Clint Benedict of the Ottawa Senators, for the fewest shutouts needed to lead the league, with one.[17]

During the 1918–19 Vézina became the first goaltender to be credited with an assist: during a December 28, 1918 game against Toronto Vézina made a save and gave the puck to Newsy Lalonde, who immediately scored.[18] Vézina won 10 games during the season and helped the Canadiens defeat the Ottawa Senators in the NHL playoffs for the right to play for the Stanley Cup against the PCHA champion, the Seattle Metropolitans. Held in Seattle, the two teams were tied in the best-of-five series when it was cancelled due to the Spanish flu epidemic, the first time the Stanley Cup was not awarded.[19] In the 10 playoff games prior to the cancellation, Vézina had won six games, lost three and tied one, with one shutout. Vézina recorded nearly identical records the next two seasons, with 13 wins, 11 losses and a goals against average above four in both 1919–20 and 1920–21. He won 12 games the following season, as the Canadiens again failed to qualify for the Stanley Cup.[20]

 
Georges Vézina c. 1919–21. He led the Canadiens to their first two Stanley Cup championships.

After winning 13 games in 1922–23, Vézina led the Canadiens into the NHL playoffs, where they lost the two-game, total-goal series to the Senators, who would win the Stanley Cup. The following season saw Vézina return to leading the league in fewest goals against. His average of 1.97 goals per game was the first time a goaltender had averaged fewer than two goals against per game.[21] With another 13-win season in 1923–24, the Canadiens reached the NHL playoffs, where they again faced the Ottawa Senators. This time the Canadiens won the series, then defeated the Vancouver Maroons of the PCHA before reaching the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in five years. Playing the Calgary Tigers of the Western Canada Hockey League, Vézina and the Canadiens won the best-of-three series two games to none, as Vézina recorded a shutout in the second game.[22] The championship was the Canadiens' first as a member of the NHL and second title as a club. After a 17-win season in 1924–25 where Vézina recorded a goals-against average of 1.81 to again lead the league, the Canadiens reached the Stanley Cup Finals. The Canadiens only qualified after the Hamilton Tigers, the regular season champions, were suspended for refusing to play in the playoffs unless they were paid more.[23] Facing the Victoria Cougars, the Canadiens lost the series three games to one.

Returning to Montreal for training camp for the 1925–26 season, Vézina was noticeably ill, though he said nothing about it. By the time of the Canadiens' first game on November 28 against the Pittsburgh Pirates, he had lost 35 pounds in a span of six weeks,[24] and had a fever of 102 Fahrenheit. Regardless, he took to the ice, and completed the first period without allowing a goal. Vézina began vomiting blood in the intermission before returning for the start of the second period.[25] He then collapsed in his goal area, and left the game, with former U.S. Olympic team goaltender Alphonse Lacroix taking his place. Pittsburgh won the game, 1–0.[5]

The day after the game, Vézina was diagnosed with tuberculosis and advised to return home.[26] He made a last trip into the Canadiens' dressing room on December 3 to say a final goodbye to his teammates. Dandurand would later describe Vézina as sitting in his corner of the dressing room with "tears rolling down his cheeks. He was looking at his old pads and skates that Eddie Dufour [the Canadiens trainer] had arranged in Georges' corner. Then, he asked one little favour—the sweater he had worn in the last world series."[5] Vézina returned to his hometown of Chicoutimi with his wife Marie, where he died in the early hours on Saturday, March 27, 1926, at l'Hôtel-Dieu hospital. Though he played only one period for the Canadiens during the entire season, the team honoured his entire $6,000 salary, a testament to how important Vézina had been to the team. The Canadiens finished in last place in 1925–26.[26]

Legacy

"Vézina was a pale, narrow-featured fellow, almost frail-looking, yet remarkably good with his stick. He'd pick off more shots with it than he did with his glove. He stood upright in the net and scarcely ever left his feet; he simply played all his shots in a standing position. He always wore a toque—a small, knitted hat with no brim in Montreal colours – bleu, blanc et rouge. I also remember him as the coolest man I ever saw, absolutely imperturbable."

Frank Boucher, player and coach for the New York Rangers[5]

One of the dominant goaltenders in the NHA and early NHL, Vézina led the Canadiens to five Stanley Cup Finals appearances, where they won the title twice.[27] Seven times in his career, Vézina had the lowest goals-against average in the league he played, and he had the second-best average another five times.[28] From when he joined the Canadiens in 1910, until being forced to retire in 1925, Vézina never missed a game nor allowed a substitute, playing in 328 consecutive regular season games and an additional 39 playoff games.[9][29] For the first several years of his career goaltenders could not leave their feet to make a save, and while this rule was changed in 1918 Vézina continued to play in this conservative style throughout his career.[30][31] Even so, Vézina is regarded as one of the greatest goaltenders in the early days of hockey;[32] the Montreal Standard referred to him as the "greatest goaltender of the last two decades" in their obituary.[33]

 
Vézina's funeral procession at the Saint-François-Xavier Cathedral in Chicoutimi in 1926.

Well liked in Montreal, Vézina was often seen as the best player on the ice for the Canadiens, and was respected by his teammates, who considered him the spiritual leader of the team.[10] Referred to as "le Concombre de Chicoutimi" (the "Chicoutimi Cucumber") for his cool demeanour on the ice, he was also known as "l'Habitant silencieux" (the "silent Habitant", Habitant being a nickname for the Canadiens), a reference to his reserved personality.[34] He often sat in a corner of the team's dressing room alone, smoking a pipe and reading the newspaper.[35] When news of Vézina's death was announced, newspapers across Quebec paid tribute to the goalie with articles about his life and career. Hundreds of Catholic masses were held in honour of the devout Vézina, and more than 1,500 people filled the Chicoutimi cathedral for his funeral.[28] He was buried in le Cimetière Saint-Francois Xavier in Chicoutimi.[36]

A lasting legacy of Vézina was the trophy named after him. At the start of the 1926–27 season, Léo Dandurand, Leo Letourneau and Joseph Cattarinich, owners of the Montreal Canadiens, donated the Vezina Trophy to the NHL in honour of Vézina.[9] The first trophy named after an NHL player, it was to be awarded to the goaltender of the team who allowed the fewest goals during the regular season.[27][9] The inaugural winner of the trophy was Vézina's successor in goal for the Canadiens, George Hainsworth. He went on to win the trophy the next two seasons as well. In 1981, the NHL changed the format of awarding the trophy, instead giving it to the goaltender deemed best in the league based on a poll of NHL general managers.[37] The Hockey Hall of Fame was established in 1945 and among the first nine inductees was Vézina.[20] In 1998 Vézina was ranked number 75 on The Hockey News' list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players.[25] In honour of the first professional athlete to come from Chicoutimi, the city renamed their hockey arena the Centre Georges-Vézina in 1965.[38] When the NHL announced its 100 greatest players in conjunction with the league's centennial 2017, Vézina was included on the list.[27]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP W L T Min GA SO GAA GP W L T Min GA SO GAA
1909–10 Chicoutimi Saguenéens MCHL
1910–11 Montreal Canadiens NHA 16 8 8 0 980 62 0 3.80
1911–12 Montreal Canadiens NHA 18 8 10 0 1109 66 0 3.57
1912–13 Montreal Canadiens NHA 20 9 11 0 1217 81 1 3.99
1913–14 Montreal Canadiens NHA 20 13 7 0 1222 64 1 3.14 2 1 1 0 120 6 1 3.00
1914–15 Montreal Canadiens NHA 20 6 14 0 1257 81 0 3.86
1915–16 Montreal Canadiens NHA 24 16 7 1 1482 76 0 3.08 5 3 2 0 300 13 0 2.60
1916–17 Montreal Canadiens NHA 20 10 10 0 1217 80 0 3.94 6 2 4 0 360 29 0 4.83
1917–18 Montreal Canadiens NHL 21 12 9 0 1282 84 1 3.93 2 1 1 0 120 10 0 5.00
1918–19 Montreal Canadiens NHL 18 10 8 0 1117 78 1 4.19 10 6 3 1 636 37 1 3.49
1919–20 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 13 11 0 1456 113 0 4.66
1920–21 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 13 11 0 1441 99 1 4.12
1921–22 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 12 11 1 1469 94 0 3.84
1922–23 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 13 9 2 1488 61 2 2.46 2 1 1 0 120 3 0 1.50
1923–24 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 13 11 0 1459 48 3 1.97 6 6 0 0 360 6 2 1.00
1924–25 Montreal Canadiens NHL 30 17 11 2 1860 56 5 1.81 6 3 3 0 360 18 1 3.00
1925–26 Montreal Canadiens NHL 1 0 0 0 20 0 0 0.00
NHA totals 138 70 67 1 8484 510 2 3.61 13 6 7 0 780 48 1 3.69
NHL totals 190 103 81 5 11592 633 13 3.28 26 17 8 1 1596 74 4 2.78

See also

Notes

References

  • Allen, Kevin; Duff, Bob; Bower, Johnny (2002), Without Fear: Hockey's 50 Greatest Goaltenders, Chicago: Triumph Books, ISBN 978-1-57243-484-4
  • Coleman, Charles (1966), Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol I., Toronto: Kendall/Hunt, ISBN 0-8403-2941-5
  • Diamond, Dan, ed. (2002), Total Hockey: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Hockey League, Second Edition, New York: Total Sports Publishing, ISBN 1-892129-85-X
  • Dryden, Steve (1997), The Top 100 NHL Players of All Time, Toronto: McClelland & Stewart Inc., ISBN 0-7710-4176-4
  • Falla, Jack (2008), Open Ice: Reflections and Confessions of a Hockey Lifer, Mississauga, Ontario: John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd., ISBN 978-0-470-15305-5
  • Feige, Timothy (2011), Hockey's Greatest Tragedies: The Broken Heroes of the Fastest Game on Earth, London: Arcturus Publishing, ISBN 978-1-84837-742-4
  • Georges Vézina's NHL Profile, National Hockey League, retrieved April 22, 2020
  • Georges Vézina Page, Hockey Hall of Fame, retrieved November 24, 2008
  • Hackel, Stu (January 1, 2017), Georges Vezina: 100 Greatest NHL Players, National Hockey League, retrieved January 19, 2017
  • Hughes, Morgan; Fischler, Stan and Shirley; Romain, Joseph; Duplacey, James (2003), Hockey Chronicle: Year-by-Year History of the National Hockey League, Lincolnwood, Illinois: Publications International, Ltd., ISBN 0-7853-9624-1
  • Jenish, D'Arcy (2008), The Montreal Canadiens: 100 Years of Glory, Toronto: Doubleday Canada, ISBN 978-0-385-66324-3
  • Lalancette, Mikaël (2021), Georges Vézina: L'habitant silencieux [Georges Vézina: The Silent Habitant] (in French), Montreal: Les Éditions de l'Homm, ISBN 978-2-761957-13-7
  • Leonetti, Mark (2004), Canadiens Legends: Montreal's Hockey Heroes, Raincoast Books, ISBN 978-1-55192-731-2
  • National Hockey League (2008), National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book 2009, Toronto: Dan Diamond & Associates, Inc., ISBN 978-1-894801-14-0
  • Podnieks, Andrew (2004), Lord Stanley's Cup, Bolton, Ontario: Fenn Publishing, ISBN 1-55168-261-3
  • Shea, Kevin (November 7, 2008a), One on One with Georges Vezina, Hockey Hall of Fame, retrieved November 24, 2008
  • Shea, Kevin (2008b), , Hockey Hall of Fame, archived from the original on July 6, 2010, retrieved November 25, 2008
  • Stubbs, Dave (February 19, 2017), Clint Benedict overshadowed, not forgotten, National Hockey League, retrieved August 7, 2020
  • Vigneault, Michel (2005), Vézina, Georges (baptized Joseph-Georges-Gonzague), Dictionary of Canadian Biography, retrieved January 8, 2022
  • Weekes, Don; Banks, Kerry (2004), The Unofficial Guide to Even More of Hockey's Most Unusual Records, Greystone Books, ISBN 978-1-55365-062-1
  • Weir, Glenn; Chapman, Jeff; Weir, Travis (1999), Ultimate Hockey, Toronto: Stoddart Publishing, ISBN 0-7737-6057-1

External links

  • Biographical information and career statistics from NHL.com, or Eliteprospects.com, or Hockey-Reference.com, or Legends of Hockey, or The Internet Hockey Database

georges, vézina, joseph, georges, gonzague, vézina, french, ʒɔʁʒ, vezina, january, 1887, march, 1926, canadian, professional, hockey, goaltender, played, seven, seasons, national, hockey, association, nine, national, hockey, league, with, montreal, canadiens, . Joseph Georges Gonzague Vezina ˈ v ɛ z ɪ n e French ʒɔʁʒ vezina January 21 1887 March 27 1926 was a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender who played seven seasons in the National Hockey Association NHA and nine in the National Hockey League NHL all with the Montreal Canadiens After being signed by the Canadiens in 1910 Vezina played in 327 consecutive regular season games and a further 39 playoff games before leaving early during a game in 1925 due to illness Vezina was diagnosed with tuberculosis and died on March 27 1926 Georges VezinaHockey Hall of Fame 1945Born 1887 01 21 January 21 1887Chicoutimi Quebec CanadaDiedMarch 27 1926 1926 03 27 aged 39 Chicoutimi Quebec CanadaHeight5 ft 6 in 168 cm Weight185 lb 84 kg 13 st 3 lb PositionGoaltenderCaughtLeftPlayed forMontreal CanadiensPlaying career1910 1925The only goaltender to play for the Canadiens between 1910 and 1925 Vezina helped the team win the Stanley Cup in 1916 and 1924 while reaching the Stanley Cup Finals three more times Nicknamed the Chicoutimi Cucumber for his calm composure while in goal Vezina allowed the fewest goals in the league seven times in his career four times in the NHA and three times in the NHL In 1918 Vezina became the first NHL goaltender to both record a shutout and earn an assist on a goal At the start of the 1926 27 NHL season the Canadiens donated the Vezina Trophy to the NHL as an award to the goaltender who allowed the fewest goals during the season Since 1981 the award has been given to the most outstanding goaltender as determined by a vote of NHL general managers In Vezina s hometown of Chicoutimi the sports arena is named the Centre Georges Vezina in his honour When the Hockey Hall of Fame opened in 1945 Vezina was one of the original nine inductees and in 2017 the NHL included him on their list of the 100 greatest players in league history Contents 1 Personal life 2 Playing career 2 1 NHA 2 2 NHL 3 Legacy 4 Career statistics 4 1 Regular season and playoffs 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksPersonal life EditGeorges the fifth of eight children was born on January 21 1887 in Chicoutimi Quebec to Georges Henri Vezina a local baker and his wife Clara Belley 1 Georges attended school at the Petit Seminaire de Chicoutimi from 1898 until the age of fourteen when he left the school to help at his father s bakery 2 3 He played hockey from a young age participating in informal street hockey matches with others his own age 4 Vezina partook in these matches in his shoes and used skates for the first time at age 16 when he joined the local team in Chicoutimi 5 As Chicoutimi was in a remote area of Quebec more than 200 kilometres from Quebec City the hockey club was not in any organised league Rather the club known as the Sagueneens People from the Saguenay the region where Chicoutimi is located toured the province playing exhibition games against a variety of clubs 4 Vezina married Marie Adelaide Stella Morin on June 3 1908 in Chicoutimi 6 After Vezina s death it was reported that he had fathered 22 children This rumour was started when the Canadiens manager Leo Dandurand told reporters that Vezina speaks no English and has twenty two children including three sets of triplets and they were all born in the space of nine years In actuality the Vezinas only had two children and Georges spoke broken English 7 In 1912 they had their first child a son named Jean Jules A second son was born the night of the Montreal Canadiens first Stanley Cup win in 1916 To honour the event Georges named the child Marcel Stanley 8 When not playing hockey Vezina operated a tannery in Chicoutimi living a quiet life 9 Playing career EditNHA Edit Vezina while a member of the Chicoutimi Hockey Club On February 17 1910 the Chicoutimi Hockey Club played an exhibition match against the Montreal Canadiens 5 Though playing an inferior team the Canadiens failed to score a goal losing the game This prompted Joseph Cattarinich goaltender for the Canadiens to convince his team to offer a tryout to Georges Vezina who was Chicoutimi s goaltender 10 Vezina initially refused the offer staying in Chicoutimi until the Canadiens returned in December of that year This time they convinced Georges along with his brother Pierre to come to Montreal The two Vezina brothers arrived on December 22 1910 4 While Pierre failed to make the team Georges impressed the Canadiens especially with the use of his stick to block shots 11 Vezina was signed to a contract for C 800 per season 3 5 and made his professional debut December 31 1910 against the Ottawa Senators 4 He would play all 16 games for the Canadiens in the 1910 11 season finishing with a record of eight wins and eight losses while allowing the fewest goals in the league Georges Vezina with the Canadiens early in his career The following season Vezina again led the league in goals against as well as winning eight games along with 10 losses 9 Vezina recorded his first career shutout during the 1912 13 season defeating Ottawa 6 0 on January 18 1913 for one of his nine wins in the season 12 The Canadiens finished first in the NHA for the first time in 1913 14 in a tie with the Toronto Blueshirts Once again Vezina led the league with the fewest goals against while posting 13 victories and seven losses Under the NHA rules the first place team would play in the Stanley Cup Finals but due to the tie for first the Canadiens had to play a two game total goals series against Toronto Vezina shut out the Blueshirts in the first game a 2 0 win for Montreal but let in six goals in the second game allowing the Blueshirts to play for the Stanley Cup which they won After losing 14 games and finishing last in the NHA in 1914 15 Vezina and the Canadiens won 16 games during the 1915 16 season placing the team first in the league As league leaders the Canadiens earned the right to play in the 1916 Stanley Cup Finals where they faced off against the Portland Rosebuds champions of the rival Pacific Coast Hockey Association The Canadiens defeated the Rosebuds three games to two in the best of five games series winning the Stanley Cup for the first time in team history 13 Vezina s second son was born the night of the fifth game which coupled with a bonus of 238 each member of the Canadiens received for the championship led to him considering the series as the pinnacle of his career 14 The following season Vezina again led the NHA with the fewest goals against the fourth time in seven years he did so helping the Canadiens to again reach the Stanley Cup Finals where they lost to the Seattle Metropolitans NHL Edit The NHA gave way to the National Hockey League NHL in November 1917 with Vezina and the Canadiens joining the new league On February 18 1918 he became the first goaltender in NHL history to record a shutout by blanking the Torontos 9 0 15 He finished the season with 12 wins allowing the fewest goals against 16 Vezina also set a record which was shared with Clint Benedict of the Ottawa Senators for the fewest shutouts needed to lead the league with one 17 During the 1918 19 Vezina became the first goaltender to be credited with an assist during a December 28 1918 game against Toronto Vezina made a save and gave the puck to Newsy Lalonde who immediately scored 18 Vezina won 10 games during the season and helped the Canadiens defeat the Ottawa Senators in the NHL playoffs for the right to play for the Stanley Cup against the PCHA champion the Seattle Metropolitans Held in Seattle the two teams were tied in the best of five series when it was cancelled due to the Spanish flu epidemic the first time the Stanley Cup was not awarded 19 In the 10 playoff games prior to the cancellation Vezina had won six games lost three and tied one with one shutout Vezina recorded nearly identical records the next two seasons with 13 wins 11 losses and a goals against average above four in both 1919 20 and 1920 21 He won 12 games the following season as the Canadiens again failed to qualify for the Stanley Cup 20 Georges Vezina c 1919 21 He led the Canadiens to their first two Stanley Cup championships After winning 13 games in 1922 23 Vezina led the Canadiens into the NHL playoffs where they lost the two game total goal series to the Senators who would win the Stanley Cup The following season saw Vezina return to leading the league in fewest goals against His average of 1 97 goals per game was the first time a goaltender had averaged fewer than two goals against per game 21 With another 13 win season in 1923 24 the Canadiens reached the NHL playoffs where they again faced the Ottawa Senators This time the Canadiens won the series then defeated the Vancouver Maroons of the PCHA before reaching the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in five years Playing the Calgary Tigers of the Western Canada Hockey League Vezina and the Canadiens won the best of three series two games to none as Vezina recorded a shutout in the second game 22 The championship was the Canadiens first as a member of the NHL and second title as a club After a 17 win season in 1924 25 where Vezina recorded a goals against average of 1 81 to again lead the league the Canadiens reached the Stanley Cup Finals The Canadiens only qualified after the Hamilton Tigers the regular season champions were suspended for refusing to play in the playoffs unless they were paid more 23 Facing the Victoria Cougars the Canadiens lost the series three games to one Returning to Montreal for training camp for the 1925 26 season Vezina was noticeably ill though he said nothing about it By the time of the Canadiens first game on November 28 against the Pittsburgh Pirates he had lost 35 pounds in a span of six weeks 24 and had a fever of 102 Fahrenheit Regardless he took to the ice and completed the first period without allowing a goal Vezina began vomiting blood in the intermission before returning for the start of the second period 25 He then collapsed in his goal area and left the game with former U S Olympic team goaltender Alphonse Lacroix taking his place Pittsburgh won the game 1 0 5 The day after the game Vezina was diagnosed with tuberculosis and advised to return home 26 He made a last trip into the Canadiens dressing room on December 3 to say a final goodbye to his teammates Dandurand would later describe Vezina as sitting in his corner of the dressing room with tears rolling down his cheeks He was looking at his old pads and skates that Eddie Dufour the Canadiens trainer had arranged in Georges corner Then he asked one little favour the sweater he had worn in the last world series 5 Vezina returned to his hometown of Chicoutimi with his wife Marie where he died in the early hours on Saturday March 27 1926 at l Hotel Dieu hospital Though he played only one period for the Canadiens during the entire season the team honoured his entire 6 000 salary a testament to how important Vezina had been to the team The Canadiens finished in last place in 1925 26 26 Legacy Edit Vezina was a pale narrow featured fellow almost frail looking yet remarkably good with his stick He d pick off more shots with it than he did with his glove He stood upright in the net and scarcely ever left his feet he simply played all his shots in a standing position He always wore a toque a small knitted hat with no brim in Montreal colours bleu blanc et rouge I also remember him as the coolest man I ever saw absolutely imperturbable Frank Boucher player and coach for the New York Rangers 5 One of the dominant goaltenders in the NHA and early NHL Vezina led the Canadiens to five Stanley Cup Finals appearances where they won the title twice 27 Seven times in his career Vezina had the lowest goals against average in the league he played and he had the second best average another five times 28 From when he joined the Canadiens in 1910 until being forced to retire in 1925 Vezina never missed a game nor allowed a substitute playing in 328 consecutive regular season games and an additional 39 playoff games 9 29 For the first several years of his career goaltenders could not leave their feet to make a save and while this rule was changed in 1918 Vezina continued to play in this conservative style throughout his career 30 31 Even so Vezina is regarded as one of the greatest goaltenders in the early days of hockey 32 the Montreal Standard referred to him as the greatest goaltender of the last two decades in their obituary 33 Vezina s funeral procession at the Saint Francois Xavier Cathedral in Chicoutimi in 1926 Well liked in Montreal Vezina was often seen as the best player on the ice for the Canadiens and was respected by his teammates who considered him the spiritual leader of the team 10 Referred to as le Concombre de Chicoutimi the Chicoutimi Cucumber for his cool demeanour on the ice he was also known as l Habitant silencieux the silent Habitant Habitant being a nickname for the Canadiens a reference to his reserved personality 34 He often sat in a corner of the team s dressing room alone smoking a pipe and reading the newspaper 35 When news of Vezina s death was announced newspapers across Quebec paid tribute to the goalie with articles about his life and career Hundreds of Catholic masses were held in honour of the devout Vezina and more than 1 500 people filled the Chicoutimi cathedral for his funeral 28 He was buried in le Cimetiere Saint Francois Xavier in Chicoutimi 36 A lasting legacy of Vezina was the trophy named after him At the start of the 1926 27 season Leo Dandurand Leo Letourneau and Joseph Cattarinich owners of the Montreal Canadiens donated the Vezina Trophy to the NHL in honour of Vezina 9 The first trophy named after an NHL player it was to be awarded to the goaltender of the team who allowed the fewest goals during the regular season 27 9 The inaugural winner of the trophy was Vezina s successor in goal for the Canadiens George Hainsworth He went on to win the trophy the next two seasons as well In 1981 the NHL changed the format of awarding the trophy instead giving it to the goaltender deemed best in the league based on a poll of NHL general managers 37 The Hockey Hall of Fame was established in 1945 and among the first nine inductees was Vezina 20 In 1998 Vezina was ranked number 75 on The Hockey News list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players 25 In honour of the first professional athlete to come from Chicoutimi the city renamed their hockey arena the Centre Georges Vezina in 1965 38 When the NHL announced its 100 greatest players in conjunction with the league s centennial 2017 Vezina was included on the list 27 Career statistics EditRegular season and playoffs Edit Regular season PlayoffsSeason Team League GP W L T Min GA SO GAA GP W L T Min GA SO GAA1909 10 Chicoutimi Sagueneens MCHL 1910 11 Montreal Canadiens NHA 16 8 8 0 980 62 0 3 80 1911 12 Montreal Canadiens NHA 18 8 10 0 1109 66 0 3 57 1912 13 Montreal Canadiens NHA 20 9 11 0 1217 81 1 3 99 1913 14 Montreal Canadiens NHA 20 13 7 0 1222 64 1 3 14 2 1 1 0 120 6 1 3 001914 15 Montreal Canadiens NHA 20 6 14 0 1257 81 0 3 86 1915 16 Montreal Canadiens NHA 24 16 7 1 1482 76 0 3 08 5 3 2 0 300 13 0 2 601916 17 Montreal Canadiens NHA 20 10 10 0 1217 80 0 3 94 6 2 4 0 360 29 0 4 831917 18 Montreal Canadiens NHL 21 12 9 0 1282 84 1 3 93 2 1 1 0 120 10 0 5 001918 19 Montreal Canadiens NHL 18 10 8 0 1117 78 1 4 19 10 6 3 1 636 37 1 3 491919 20 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 13 11 0 1456 113 0 4 66 1920 21 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 13 11 0 1441 99 1 4 12 1921 22 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 12 11 1 1469 94 0 3 84 1922 23 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 13 9 2 1488 61 2 2 46 2 1 1 0 120 3 0 1 501923 24 Montreal Canadiens NHL 24 13 11 0 1459 48 3 1 97 6 6 0 0 360 6 2 1 001924 25 Montreal Canadiens NHL 30 17 11 2 1860 56 5 1 81 6 3 3 0 360 18 1 3 001925 26 Montreal Canadiens NHL 1 0 0 0 20 0 0 0 00 NHA totals 138 70 67 1 8484 510 2 3 61 13 6 7 0 780 48 1 3 69NHL totals 190 103 81 5 11592 633 13 3 28 26 17 8 1 1596 74 4 2 78Source NHL com 39 See also EditHistory of the Montreal Canadiens List of ice hockey players who died during their playing careerNotes Edit Lalancette 2021 pp 21 22 Lalancette 2021 p 27 a b Vigneault 2005 a b c d Jenish 2008 pp 34 35 a b c d e f Shea 2008a Lalancette 2021 p 46 Jenish 2008 pp 67 68 Jenish 2008 p 42 a b c d e Georges Vezina Page a b Weir Chapman amp Weir 1999 p 128 Leonetti 2004 p 37 Lalancette 2021 p 111 Podnieks 2004 p 48 Shea 2008b Lalancette 2021 p 182 Hughes et al 2003 p 32 Weekes amp Banks 2004 p 91 Allen Duff amp Bower 2002 p 187 Hughes et al 2003 p 34 a b Diamond 2002 p 550 National Hockey League 2008 p 187 Hughes et al 2003 p 57 Hughes et al 2003 p 60 Diamond 2002 p 125 a b Dryden 1997 p 141 a b Jenish 2008 p 68 a b c Hackel 2017 a b Jenish 2008 p 70 Hughes et al 2003 p 64 National Hockey League 2008 p 10 Stubbs 2017 Diamond 2002 p 1968 Falla 2008 pp 131 32 Jenish 2008 p 40 Jenish 2008 p 67 Feige 2011 p 236 National Hockey League 2008 p 205 Lalancette 2021 p 335 Georges Vezina s NHL Profile References EditAllen Kevin Duff Bob Bower Johnny 2002 Without Fear Hockey s 50 Greatest Goaltenders Chicago Triumph Books ISBN 978 1 57243 484 4 Coleman Charles 1966 Trail of the Stanley Cup Vol I Toronto Kendall Hunt ISBN 0 8403 2941 5 Diamond Dan ed 2002 Total Hockey The Official Encyclopedia of the National Hockey League Second Edition New York Total Sports Publishing ISBN 1 892129 85 X Dryden Steve 1997 The Top 100 NHL Players of All Time Toronto McClelland amp Stewart Inc ISBN 0 7710 4176 4 Falla Jack 2008 Open Ice Reflections and Confessions of a Hockey Lifer Mississauga Ontario John Wiley amp Sons Canada Ltd ISBN 978 0 470 15305 5 Feige Timothy 2011 Hockey s Greatest Tragedies The Broken Heroes of the Fastest Game on Earth London Arcturus Publishing ISBN 978 1 84837 742 4 Georges Vezina s NHL Profile National Hockey League retrieved April 22 2020 Georges Vezina Page Hockey Hall of Fame retrieved November 24 2008 Hackel Stu January 1 2017 Georges Vezina 100 Greatest NHL Players National Hockey League retrieved January 19 2017 Hughes Morgan Fischler Stan and Shirley Romain Joseph Duplacey James 2003 Hockey Chronicle Year by Year History of the National Hockey League Lincolnwood Illinois Publications International Ltd ISBN 0 7853 9624 1 Jenish D Arcy 2008 The Montreal Canadiens 100 Years of Glory Toronto Doubleday Canada ISBN 978 0 385 66324 3 Lalancette Mikael 2021 Georges Vezina L habitant silencieux Georges Vezina The Silent Habitant in French Montreal Les Editions de l Homm ISBN 978 2 761957 13 7 Leonetti Mark 2004 Canadiens Legends Montreal s Hockey Heroes Raincoast Books ISBN 978 1 55192 731 2 National Hockey League 2008 National Hockey League Official Guide amp Record Book 2009 Toronto Dan Diamond amp Associates Inc ISBN 978 1 894801 14 0 Podnieks Andrew 2004 Lord Stanley s Cup Bolton Ontario Fenn Publishing ISBN 1 55168 261 3 Shea Kevin November 7 2008a One on One with Georges Vezina Hockey Hall of Fame retrieved November 24 2008 Shea Kevin 2008b Georges Vezina Pinnacle Hockey Hall of Fame archived from the original on July 6 2010 retrieved November 25 2008 Stubbs Dave February 19 2017 Clint Benedict overshadowed not forgotten National Hockey League retrieved August 7 2020 Vigneault Michel 2005 Vezina Georges baptized Joseph Georges Gonzague Dictionary of Canadian Biography retrieved January 8 2022 Weekes Don Banks Kerry 2004 The Unofficial Guide to Even More of Hockey s Most Unusual Records Greystone Books ISBN 978 1 55365 062 1 Weir Glenn Chapman Jeff Weir Travis 1999 Ultimate Hockey Toronto Stoddart Publishing ISBN 0 7737 6057 1External links EditBiographical information and career statistics from NHL com or Eliteprospects com or Hockey Reference com or Legends of Hockey or The Internet Hockey Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georges Vezina amp oldid 1122960512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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