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This is a list of player movements that occurred in the 1918-19 season of the National Hockey League.
Players | Last Team | Years in the NHL |
---|---|---|
Art Brooks (G) | Toronto Hockey Club | 1918-19 |
Harry Hyland (RW) | Ottawa Senators | 1918-19 |
Jack Laviolette (D/W) | Montreal Canadiens | 1918-19 |
George O'Grady (D) | Montreal Wanderers | 1918-19 |
Evariste Payer (C/LW) | Montreal Canadiens | 1918-19 |
Art Ross (D) | Montreal Wanderers | 1918-19 |
Hamby Shore [1] (D/LW) | Ottawa Senators | 1918-19 |
Raymie Skilton (D) | Montreal Wanderers | 1918-19 |
Ken Thompson (C/LW) | Montreal Wanderers | 1918-19 |
November 28, 1918 | To Montreal Canadiens Cash | To Ottawa Senators Tommy Smith |
December 14, 1918 | To Toronto Arenas Rusty Crawford | To Ottawa Senators future considerations (loan of Harry Cameron) |
The Stanley Cup is the championship trophy awarded annually to the National Hockey League (NHL) playoff champion. It is the oldest existing trophy to be awarded to a professional sports franchise in North America, and the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) considers it to be one of the "most important championships available to the sport". The trophy was commissioned in 1892 as the Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup and is named after Lord Stanley of Preston, the Governor General of Canada, who donated it as an award to Canada's top-ranking amateur ice hockey club. The entire Stanley family supported the sport, the sons and daughters all playing and promoting the game. The first Cup was awarded in 1893 to the Montreal Hockey Club, and winners from 1893 to 1914 were determined by challenge games and league play. Professional teams first became eligible to challenge for the Stanley Cup in 1906. In 1915, the National Hockey Association (NHA) and the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA), the two main professional ice hockey organizations, reached an agreement in which their respective champions would face each other annually for the Stanley Cup. It was established as the de facto championship trophy of the NHL in 1926 and then the de jure NHL championship prize in 1947.
Hobart Amory Hare "Hobey" Baker was an American amateur athlete of the early twentieth century. Considered the first American star in ice hockey by the Hockey Hall of Fame, he was also an accomplished American football player. Born into a prominent family from the Philadelphia area, he enrolled at Princeton University in 1910. Baker excelled on the university's hockey and football teams, and became a noted amateur hockey player for the St. Nicholas Hockey Club in New York City. He was a member of three national championship teams, for football in 1911 and hockey in 1912 and 1914, and helped the St. Nicholas Club win a national amateur championship in 1915. Baker graduated from Princeton in 1914 and worked for J.P. Morgan Bank until he enlisted in the United States Army Air Service. During World War I he served with the 103rd and the 13th Aero Squadrons before being promoted to captain and named commander of the 141st Aero Squadron. Baker died in December 1918 after a plane he was test-piloting crashed, hours before he was due to leave France and return to America.
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The following lists events that happened during 2000 in Sweden.