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Pacific Coast Hockey Association

The Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA) was a professional ice hockey league in western Canada and the western United States, which operated from 1911 to 1924 when it then merged with the Western Canada Hockey League (WCHL). The PCHA was considered to be a major league of ice hockey and was important in the development of the sport of professional ice hockey through its innovations.

Pacific Coast Hockey Association
SportIce hockey
Founded1911
Inaugural season1912
Ceased1924
CountriesCanada
United States
Last
champion(s)
Vancouver Maroons
Most titlesVancouver Millionaires/Maroons

The league was started by the Patrick family, professional hockey players from Montreal, building new arenas in Vancouver and Victoria, British Columbia. After a few years of play, the league was accepted by the Stanley Cup trustees as being of a high enough standard that teams from its league were accepted for Stanley Cup challenges. Starting in 1915, the league entered into an agreement where the Stanley Cup was to be contested between the National Hockey Association and the PCHA after the regular seasons were finished. The league struggled to make money, and various teams moved into different cities in an attempt to be successful financially. Eventually, the league, to survive, merged with the WCHL in 1924.

History edit

 
Lester Patrick.
 
Frank Patrick.

After playing for the Renfrew Millionaires in 1910, the brothers Frank and Lester Patrick moved west to Nelson, British Columbia to work in their father Joe's lumbering business. Lester and Frank had both played with the Nelson Hockey Club in the West Kootenay Hockey League priorly, during the 1908–09 season. After Joe Patrick decided to sell the business in January 1911, the Patricks decided then to form a new professional ice hockey league, risking the family fortune. The decision was made to put new rinks in Vancouver and Victoria, British Columbia, locations which necessitated the use of artificial ice, as the locations' climate prevented natural ice. Three teams: the New Westminster Royals, the Victoria Senators, and the Vancouver Millionaires would be formed. The Patricks moved quickly, buying property for the arenas in February. Ground was broken for the arenas in April and the arenas were completed in December. Victoria's arena seated 4,000, and cost $110,000 and the flagship arena in Vancouver had 10,500 seats and cost $210,000 to build.[1]

Once it became clear that the arenas would be built in time, the Patricks raided the National Hockey Association (NHA) for players, although with only three teams and no substitutes, the entire league only had 23 players under contract (including two reserves in case of injury). All players were paid by the league, unlike the NHA with its competing teams. The PCHA distributed players amongst the teams. Newsy Lalonde of the Canadiens would be the most notable player to move west, to play for Vancouver. The league was formally organized on December 7, 1911 to be run by Frank and Lester, who would also play for and manage the Vancouver and Victoria teams.[2] The Victoria arena would open to the public on Christmas Day 1911, and the first game of the PCHA was played on January 3, 1912, only a year after the Patricks decided to form the new league.[3] The first league championship for the Patterson Cup trophy was won by the New Westminster Royals.

 
New Westminster Royals in 1912, first champions of the Patterson Cup.

The league did not challenge for the Stanley Cup the first year. Despite the raiding of the NHA, a March 1912 west coast tour of the NHA's all-stars was arranged, billed as a sort of "World Series" of hockey. The NHA all-stars included Cyclone Taylor, a marquee name in the East, who had injured his hand refereeing a benefit game for Bruce Ridpath before coming out west and didn't play the first two games. After the PCHA all-stars won the first two games 10–4 and 5–1, leaving the series outcome in no doubt, the NHA manager Art Ross decided to let Taylor play at the Patrick's request. Taylor would put on an outstanding display of ice hockey prowess for the British Columbia fans and receive a two-minute ovation. Taylor, already rumoured to have signed with Vancouver, would later turn down a contract offer of the Ottawa Hockey Club of the NHA to join the Millionaires in December 1912 for a yearly salary of $1,800, the top salary of any player at the time.[4]

For the 1912–13 season the PCHA continued to raid the east for players. Besides Taylor, Goldie Prodgers, Eddie Oatman, Jack McDonald and Ernie Johnson moved out west, although Newsy Lalonde returned to Montreal. The New Westminster rink, to be built by local interests, was not ready and the Royals continued to play in Vancouver. Victoria would win the season and the club arranged for an exhibition series of the Stanley Cup champion Quebec Bulldogs. Victoria would defeat the Bulldogs, two victories to one.

During the 1913–14 season, the PCHA and the NHA started to act together, coming to agreements to recognize each other's player suspensions and contracts, and instituting a controlled "draft" process to facilitate the transfer of players. In a further agreement, the champions of each league would face each other for the Stanley Cup. After the 1914 season, league champion Victoria came east to play the first "World Series of hockey" challenge series with the Toronto Blueshirts for the Stanley Cup. After the series, the Stanley Cup trustees came to agreement with the NHA and PCHA and the challenge era of the Stanley Cup came to an end. Yearly playoffs between the leagues would become the new manner of deciding the Stanley Cup champion. In the 1914–15 season, Vancouver defeated the Ottawa Senators in a best-of-five series to become the PCHA's first Stanley Cup champions.

 
1914–15 Portland Rosebuds.

The league expanded into the United States in 1914 (Portland, Oregon) and again in 1915 (Seattle, Washington). In 1916, the Portland Rosebuds became the first American team to play for the Stanley Cup and the following year the Seattle Metropolitans became the first American team to win the Cup—forever changing the mandate of the Cup, which had initially been to recognize the top hockey club in Canada.

Relations with the NHA turned sour in 1915, with the Patricks accusing the league of reneging on their agreements. In retaliation, the PCHA again went on a raid for NHA players, particularly ones with the Toronto Blueshirts. Five players from Toronto became the core of the new Seattle team.

In 1918, the PCHA introduced playoffs for the first time. Until that year, the team with the best record over the season had been declared the champion and challenged for the Stanley Cup. With the creation of playoffs, it was the winner in the post-season who would be league champion.

In 1921, the Western Canada Hockey League, another western major league of hockey, was formed, and the Stanley Cup playoffs were modified to include teams from the WCHL. The following two years, which would turn out to be the last two years of the PCHA, the league played interleague games with the WCHL. In the last year of the PCHA, all three remaining teams finished with losing records.

In 1924, the Seattle Metropolitans folded, and the two remaining teams in Vancouver and Victoria joined the WCHL (renamed the Western Hockey League), putting an end to the PCHA. The Victoria Cougars would win the Stanley Cup in 1925, but this win would be the last by a non-NHL team, and the last by a team from the west coast until the Anaheim Ducks won the Stanley Cup in 2007.

The merged league did not last long, as the WHL was unable to match the NHL's American expansion and its player salaries, which led the Patrick brothers to sell players or, in the case of the Portland Rosebuds and the Victoria Cougars, the team itself. The expansion Chicago Black Hawks bought the Rosebud players for a reported $15,000, while the expansion Detroit team bought the Victoria players for $25,000 and named itself the Detroit Cougars in tribute; this team became the present-day Detroit Red Wings.

Innovations edit

The league introduced numerous innovations to the sport of ice hockey:

  • blue lines and goal creases
  • forward passing
  • penalty shots
  • playoffs
  • removed rule that goalies must stay on their feet

The PCHA also developed a farm system for players, and were the first Canadian league to expand into the United States.[5]

The PCHA is also credited with introducing numbers to player sweaters for identification purposes (starting in 1911–12),[6] but this had been had also been experimented with in the NHA at the same time.[7]

Women's ice hockey edit

 
Vancouver Amazons with the Alpine Club Cup in the 1921–22 season. Lester and Frank Patrick's brother Guy coached the team.

As early as January 1916, Frank and Lester Patrick talked of the formation of a women's league to complement the Pacific Coast Hockey Association.[8] The proposal included teams from Vancouver, Victoria, Portland and Seattle. The league never formed.

In February 1921, Frank Patrick announced a women's international championship series that would be played in conjunction with the Pacific Coast Hockey Association.[9] The three teams that competed were the Vancouver Amazons, Victoria Kewpies, and Seattle Vamps.

On February 21, 1921, the Seattle Vamps competed against the Vancouver Amazons in Vancouver, and were vanquished by a 5-0 score. Two days later, the Vamps played against a team from the University of British Columbia and won the game. Jerry Reed scored three goals (a hat trick) in the game for the Vamps. In both games, the Vancouver media referred to the Seattle team as the Seattle Sweeties.[10] The Amazons would travel to Seattle and defeat them again. On March 2, 1921, the Vamps were defeated by the Kewpies 1-0 in Seattle. In the rematch on March 12, the Vamps travelled to Victoria. The result was a 1–1 tie, and Jerry Reed scored the goal for Seattle. The goaltender for the Vamps was Mildren Terran.[10] After the 1921 season, the Vamps and the Kewpies ceased operations.

Seasons of play edit

Season Teams Champion
1912 New Westminster Royals, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Senators New Westminster Royals
1912–13 New Westminster Royals, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Senators Victoria Senators
1913–14 New Westminster Royals, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Aristocrats Victoria Aristocrats
1914–15 Portland Rosebuds, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Aristocrats Vancouver Millionaires
1915–16 Portland Rosebuds, Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Aristocrats Portland Rosebuds
1916–17 Portland Rosebuds, Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Millionaires, Spokane Canaries Seattle Metropolitans
1917–18 Portland Rosebuds, Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Millionaires Vancouver Millionaires (two-game playoff against Seattle)
1919 Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Aristocrats Seattle Metropolitans (two-game playoff against Vancouver)
1919–20 Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Aristocrats Seattle Metropolitans (two-game playoff against Vancouver)
1920–21 Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Aristocrats Vancouver Millionaires (two-game playoff against Seattle)
1921–22 Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Millionaires, Victoria Aristocrats Vancouver Millionaires (two-game playoff against Seattle)
1922–23 Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Maroons, Victoria Cougars Vancouver Maroons (two-game playoff against Victoria)
1923–24 Seattle Metropolitans, Vancouver Maroons, Victoria Cougars Vancouver Maroons (two-game playoff against Seattle)

All-Star teams and other awards edit

Career leading scorers edit

GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points

Player GP G A Pts
Mickey MacKay 245 200 90 290
Cyclone Taylor 137 158 104 262
Tommy Dunderdale 239 193 60 253
Frank Foyston 239 186 61 247
Smokey Harris 251 155 89 244
Bernie Morris 163 154 76 230
Eddie Oatman 191 123 75 198
Frank Fredrickson 161 131 61 192
Lloyd Cook 222 107 57 164
Jack Walker 225 85 65 150

Source: Bowlsby 2012, p. 378[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Whitehead 1980, pp. 103–105
  2. ^ Whitehead 1980, p. 106
  3. ^ Whitehead 1980, p. 107
  4. ^ Whitehead 1980, pp. 115–117
  5. ^ Boileau & Wolf 2002, p. 51
  6. ^ Whitehead 1980, p. 127
  7. ^ Bowlsby 2012, p. 20
  8. ^ Norton 2009, p. 120.
  9. ^ Norton 2009, p. 115.
  10. ^ a b Norton 2009, p. 119.
  11. ^ Bowlsby 2012, p. 378

References edit

  • Boileau, Ron; Wolf, Philip (2002), "The Pacific Coast Hockey Association: Innovative Pioneer League Took Top Hockey West", in Diamond, Dan (ed.), Total Hockey: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Hockey League (Second ed.), New York: Total Sports Publishing, pp. 51–54, ISBN 1-892129-85-X
  • Bowlsby, Craig H. (2012), Empire of Ice: The Rise and Fall of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association, 1911–1926, Vancouver: Knights of Winter, ISBN 978-0-9691705-6-3
  • Coleman, Charles L. (1964), The Trail of the Stanley Cup, Volume 1: 1893–1926 inc., Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt Publishing, OCLC 957132
  • Cosentino, Frank (1990), The Renfrew Millionaires: The Valley Boys of Winter 1910, Burnstown, Ontario: General Store Publishing House, ISBN 0-919431-35-6
  • Holzman, Morey; Nieforth, Joseph (2002), Deceptions and Doublecross: How the NHL Conquered Hockey, Toronto: Dundurn Press, ISBN 1-55002-413-2
  • McKinley, Michael (2000), Putting a Roof on Winter: Hockey's Rise from Sport to Spectacle, Vancouver: Greystone Books, ISBN 1-55054-798-4
  • Norton, Wayne (2009), Women on Ice: The Early Years of Women's Hockey in Western Canada, Ronsdale Press, ISBN 978-1-55380-073-6
  • Ross, J. Andrew (2015), Joining the Clubs: The Business of the National Hockey League to 1945, Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press, ISBN 978-0-8156-3383-9
  • Whitehead, Eric (1977), Cyclone Taylor: A Hockey Legend, Toronto: Doubleday Canada, ISBN 0-385-13063-5
  • Whitehead, Eric (1980), The Patricks: Hockey's Royal Family, New York City: Doubleday, ISBN 0-385-15662-6
  • Wong, John (2018), "The Patricks's Hockey Empire: Cultural Entrepreneurship and the Pacific Coast Hockey Association, 1911–1924", The International Journal of the History of Sport, 35 (7–8): 673–693, doi:10.1080/09523367.2018.1540411
  • Wong, John Chi-Kit (2012), "Boomtown Hockey: The Vancouver Millionaires", in Wong, John Chi-Kit (ed.), Coast to Coast: Hockey in Canada to the Second World War, Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press, pp. 223–257, ISBN 978-0-8020-9532-9
  • Wong, John Chi-Kit (2005), Lords of the Rinks: The Emergence of the National Hockey League 1875–1936, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, ISBN 0-8020-8520-2

External links edit

  • Internet Hockey Database - standings and statistics

pacific, coast, hockey, association, confused, with, pacific, collegiate, hockey, association, pcha, professional, hockey, league, western, canada, western, united, states, which, operated, from, 1911, 1924, when, then, merged, with, western, canada, hockey, l. Not to be confused with Pacific Collegiate Hockey Association The Pacific Coast Hockey Association PCHA was a professional ice hockey league in western Canada and the western United States which operated from 1911 to 1924 when it then merged with the Western Canada Hockey League WCHL The PCHA was considered to be a major league of ice hockey and was important in the development of the sport of professional ice hockey through its innovations Pacific Coast Hockey AssociationSportIce hockeyFounded1911Inaugural season1912Ceased1924CountriesCanada United StatesLastchampion s Vancouver MaroonsMost titlesVancouver Millionaires MaroonsThe league was started by the Patrick family professional hockey players from Montreal building new arenas in Vancouver and Victoria British Columbia After a few years of play the league was accepted by the Stanley Cup trustees as being of a high enough standard that teams from its league were accepted for Stanley Cup challenges Starting in 1915 the league entered into an agreement where the Stanley Cup was to be contested between the National Hockey Association and the PCHA after the regular seasons were finished The league struggled to make money and various teams moved into different cities in an attempt to be successful financially Eventually the league to survive merged with the WCHL in 1924 Contents 1 History 2 Innovations 3 Women s ice hockey 4 Seasons of play 5 All Star teams and other awards 6 Career leading scorers 7 See also 8 References 9 References 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp Lester Patrick nbsp Frank Patrick After playing for the Renfrew Millionaires in 1910 the brothers Frank and Lester Patrick moved west to Nelson British Columbia to work in their father Joe s lumbering business Lester and Frank had both played with the Nelson Hockey Club in the West Kootenay Hockey League priorly during the 1908 09 season After Joe Patrick decided to sell the business in January 1911 the Patricks decided then to form a new professional ice hockey league risking the family fortune The decision was made to put new rinks in Vancouver and Victoria British Columbia locations which necessitated the use of artificial ice as the locations climate prevented natural ice Three teams the New Westminster Royals the Victoria Senators and the Vancouver Millionaires would be formed The Patricks moved quickly buying property for the arenas in February Ground was broken for the arenas in April and the arenas were completed in December Victoria s arena seated 4 000 and cost 110 000 and the flagship arena in Vancouver had 10 500 seats and cost 210 000 to build 1 Once it became clear that the arenas would be built in time the Patricks raided the National Hockey Association NHA for players although with only three teams and no substitutes the entire league only had 23 players under contract including two reserves in case of injury All players were paid by the league unlike the NHA with its competing teams The PCHA distributed players amongst the teams Newsy Lalonde of the Canadiens would be the most notable player to move west to play for Vancouver The league was formally organized on December 7 1911 to be run by Frank and Lester who would also play for and manage the Vancouver and Victoria teams 2 The Victoria arena would open to the public on Christmas Day 1911 and the first game of the PCHA was played on January 3 1912 only a year after the Patricks decided to form the new league 3 The first league championship for the Patterson Cup trophy was won by the New Westminster Royals nbsp New Westminster Royals in 1912 first champions of the Patterson Cup The league did not challenge for the Stanley Cup the first year Despite the raiding of the NHA a March 1912 west coast tour of the NHA s all stars was arranged billed as a sort of World Series of hockey The NHA all stars included Cyclone Taylor a marquee name in the East who had injured his hand refereeing a benefit game for Bruce Ridpath before coming out west and didn t play the first two games After the PCHA all stars won the first two games 10 4 and 5 1 leaving the series outcome in no doubt the NHA manager Art Ross decided to let Taylor play at the Patrick s request Taylor would put on an outstanding display of ice hockey prowess for the British Columbia fans and receive a two minute ovation Taylor already rumoured to have signed with Vancouver would later turn down a contract offer of the Ottawa Hockey Club of the NHA to join the Millionaires in December 1912 for a yearly salary of 1 800 the top salary of any player at the time 4 For the 1912 13 season the PCHA continued to raid the east for players Besides Taylor Goldie Prodgers Eddie Oatman Jack McDonald and Ernie Johnson moved out west although Newsy Lalonde returned to Montreal The New Westminster rink to be built by local interests was not ready and the Royals continued to play in Vancouver Victoria would win the season and the club arranged for an exhibition series of the Stanley Cup champion Quebec Bulldogs Victoria would defeat the Bulldogs two victories to one During the 1913 14 season the PCHA and the NHA started to act together coming to agreements to recognize each other s player suspensions and contracts and instituting a controlled draft process to facilitate the transfer of players In a further agreement the champions of each league would face each other for the Stanley Cup After the 1914 season league champion Victoria came east to play the first World Series of hockey challenge series with the Toronto Blueshirts for the Stanley Cup After the series the Stanley Cup trustees came to agreement with the NHA and PCHA and the challenge era of the Stanley Cup came to an end Yearly playoffs between the leagues would become the new manner of deciding the Stanley Cup champion In the 1914 15 season Vancouver defeated the Ottawa Senators in a best of five series to become the PCHA s first Stanley Cup champions nbsp 1914 15 Portland Rosebuds The league expanded into the United States in 1914 Portland Oregon and again in 1915 Seattle Washington In 1916 the Portland Rosebuds became the first American team to play for the Stanley Cup and the following year the Seattle Metropolitans became the first American team to win the Cup forever changing the mandate of the Cup which had initially been to recognize the top hockey club in Canada Relations with the NHA turned sour in 1915 with the Patricks accusing the league of reneging on their agreements In retaliation the PCHA again went on a raid for NHA players particularly ones with the Toronto Blueshirts Five players from Toronto became the core of the new Seattle team In 1918 the PCHA introduced playoffs for the first time Until that year the team with the best record over the season had been declared the champion and challenged for the Stanley Cup With the creation of playoffs it was the winner in the post season who would be league champion In 1921 the Western Canada Hockey League another western major league of hockey was formed and the Stanley Cup playoffs were modified to include teams from the WCHL The following two years which would turn out to be the last two years of the PCHA the league played interleague games with the WCHL In the last year of the PCHA all three remaining teams finished with losing records In 1924 the Seattle Metropolitans folded and the two remaining teams in Vancouver and Victoria joined the WCHL renamed the Western Hockey League putting an end to the PCHA The Victoria Cougars would win the Stanley Cup in 1925 but this win would be the last by a non NHL team and the last by a team from the west coast until the Anaheim Ducks won the Stanley Cup in 2007 The merged league did not last long as the WHL was unable to match the NHL s American expansion and its player salaries which led the Patrick brothers to sell players or in the case of the Portland Rosebuds and the Victoria Cougars the team itself The expansion Chicago Black Hawks bought the Rosebud players for a reported 15 000 while the expansion Detroit team bought the Victoria players for 25 000 and named itself the Detroit Cougars in tribute this team became the present day Detroit Red Wings Innovations editThe league introduced numerous innovations to the sport of ice hockey blue lines and goal creases forward passing penalty shots playoffs removed rule that goalies must stay on their feetThe PCHA also developed a farm system for players and were the first Canadian league to expand into the United States 5 The PCHA is also credited with introducing numbers to player sweaters for identification purposes starting in 1911 12 6 but this had been had also been experimented with in the NHA at the same time 7 Women s ice hockey edit nbsp Vancouver Amazons with the Alpine Club Cup in the 1921 22 season Lester and Frank Patrick s brother Guy coached the team As early as January 1916 Frank and Lester Patrick talked of the formation of a women s league to complement the Pacific Coast Hockey Association 8 The proposal included teams from Vancouver Victoria Portland and Seattle The league never formed In February 1921 Frank Patrick announced a women s international championship series that would be played in conjunction with the Pacific Coast Hockey Association 9 The three teams that competed were the Vancouver Amazons Victoria Kewpies and Seattle Vamps On February 21 1921 the Seattle Vamps competed against the Vancouver Amazons in Vancouver and were vanquished by a 5 0 score Two days later the Vamps played against a team from the University of British Columbia and won the game Jerry Reed scored three goals a hat trick in the game for the Vamps In both games the Vancouver media referred to the Seattle team as the Seattle Sweeties 10 The Amazons would travel to Seattle and defeat them again On March 2 1921 the Vamps were defeated by the Kewpies 1 0 in Seattle In the rematch on March 12 the Vamps travelled to Victoria The result was a 1 1 tie and Jerry Reed scored the goal for Seattle The goaltender for the Vamps was Mildren Terran 10 After the 1921 season the Vamps and the Kewpies ceased operations Seasons of play editSeason Teams Champion1912 New Westminster Royals Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Senators New Westminster Royals1912 13 New Westminster Royals Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Senators Victoria Senators1913 14 New Westminster Royals Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Aristocrats Victoria Aristocrats1914 15 Portland Rosebuds Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Aristocrats Vancouver Millionaires1915 16 Portland Rosebuds Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Aristocrats Portland Rosebuds1916 17 Portland Rosebuds Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Millionaires Spokane Canaries Seattle Metropolitans1917 18 Portland Rosebuds Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Millionaires Vancouver Millionaires two game playoff against Seattle 1919 Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Aristocrats Seattle Metropolitans two game playoff against Vancouver 1919 20 Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Aristocrats Seattle Metropolitans two game playoff against Vancouver 1920 21 Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Aristocrats Vancouver Millionaires two game playoff against Seattle 1921 22 Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Millionaires Victoria Aristocrats Vancouver Millionaires two game playoff against Seattle 1922 23 Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Maroons Victoria Cougars Vancouver Maroons two game playoff against Victoria 1923 24 Seattle Metropolitans Vancouver Maroons Victoria Cougars Vancouver Maroons two game playoff against Seattle All Star teams and other awards edit1913 14 Hugh Lehman New Westminster goal Moose Johnson New Westminster and Frank Patrick Vancouver on defence Cyclone Taylor Vancouver rover and Tom Dunderdale Victoria Eddie Oatman New Westminster and Dubbie Kerr Victoria forward 1914 15 Hugh Lehman Vancouver goal Moose Johnson Portland and Lester Patrick Victoria on defence Cyclone Taylor Vancouver rover and Mickey MacKay Vancouver Eddie Oatman Portland and Frank Nighbor Vancouver forward 1916 17 Frank Foyston Seattle most valuable player 1917 18 Cyclone Taylor Vancouver most valuable playerCareer leading scorers editGP Games Played G Goals A Assists Pts Points Player GP G A PtsMickey MacKay 245 200 90 290Cyclone Taylor 137 158 104 262Tommy Dunderdale 239 193 60 253Frank Foyston 239 186 61 247Smokey Harris 251 155 89 244Bernie Morris 163 154 76 230Eddie Oatman 191 123 75 198Frank Fredrickson 161 131 61 192Lloyd Cook 222 107 57 164Jack Walker 225 85 65 150Source Bowlsby 2012 p 378 11 See also editList of Stanley Cup champions List of pre NHL seasons List of ice hockey leaguesReferences edit Whitehead 1980 pp 103 105 Whitehead 1980 p 106 Whitehead 1980 p 107 Whitehead 1980 pp 115 117 Boileau amp Wolf 2002 p 51 Whitehead 1980 p 127 Bowlsby 2012 p 20 Norton 2009 p 120 Norton 2009 p 115 a b Norton 2009 p 119 Bowlsby 2012 p 378References editBoileau Ron Wolf Philip 2002 The Pacific Coast Hockey Association Innovative Pioneer League Took Top Hockey West in Diamond Dan ed Total Hockey The Official Encyclopedia of the National Hockey League Second ed New York Total Sports Publishing pp 51 54 ISBN 1 892129 85 X Bowlsby Craig H 2012 Empire of Ice The Rise and Fall of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association 1911 1926 Vancouver Knights of Winter ISBN 978 0 9691705 6 3 Coleman Charles L 1964 The Trail of the Stanley Cup Volume 1 1893 1926 inc Dubuque Iowa Kendall Hunt Publishing OCLC 957132 Cosentino Frank 1990 The Renfrew Millionaires The Valley Boys of Winter 1910 Burnstown Ontario General Store Publishing House ISBN 0 919431 35 6 Holzman Morey Nieforth Joseph 2002 Deceptions and Doublecross How the NHL Conquered Hockey Toronto Dundurn Press ISBN 1 55002 413 2 McKinley Michael 2000 Putting a Roof on Winter Hockey s Rise from Sport to Spectacle Vancouver Greystone Books ISBN 1 55054 798 4 Norton Wayne 2009 Women on Ice The Early Years of Women s Hockey in Western Canada Ronsdale Press ISBN 978 1 55380 073 6 Ross J Andrew 2015 Joining the Clubs The Business of the National Hockey League to 1945 Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 3383 9 Whitehead Eric 1977 Cyclone Taylor A Hockey Legend Toronto Doubleday Canada ISBN 0 385 13063 5 Whitehead Eric 1980 The Patricks Hockey s Royal Family New York City Doubleday ISBN 0 385 15662 6 Wong John 2018 The Patricks s Hockey Empire Cultural Entrepreneurship and the Pacific Coast Hockey Association 1911 1924 The International Journal of the History of Sport 35 7 8 673 693 doi 10 1080 09523367 2018 1540411 Wong John Chi Kit 2012 Boomtown Hockey The Vancouver Millionaires in Wong John Chi Kit ed Coast to Coast Hockey in Canada to the Second World War Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Press pp 223 257 ISBN 978 0 8020 9532 9 Wong John Chi Kit 2005 Lords of the Rinks The Emergence of the National Hockey League 1875 1936 Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 8520 2External links editInternet Hockey Database standings and statistics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pacific Coast Hockey Association amp oldid 1191458785, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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