1929–30 NHL season explained

1929–30 NHL season
League:National Hockey League
Sport:Ice hockey
Duration:November 14, 1929 – April 3, 1930
Season:Regular season
No Of Games:44
No Of Teams:10
Season Champs:Boston Bruins
Mvp:Nels Stewart (Maroons)
Mvp Link:Hart Memorial Trophy
Top Scorer:Cooney Weiland (Bruins)
Conf1:Canadian Division
Conf1 Champ:Montreal Maroons
Conf2:American Division
Conf2 Champ:Boston Bruins
Finals:Stanley Cup
Finals Link:1930 Stanley Cup Finals
Finals Champ:Montreal Canadiens
Finals Runner-Up:Boston Bruins
Nextseason Link:1930–31 NHL season
Prevseason Link:1928–29 NHL season
Nextseason Year:1930–31
Prevseason Year:1928–29
Seasonslistnames:NHL

The 1929–30 NHL season was the 13th season of the National Hockey League. Ten teams played 44 games each. The Montreal Canadiens upset the heavily favoured Boston Bruins two games to none in the Stanley Cup Finals.

League business

The league instituted in the new rules the standard dimensions for ice hockey rinks, that of × . The already-built Boston Garden × and the Chicago Stadium ×, which were smaller were exempt from the new rule.

To combat low scoring, the off-side rules were rewritten. Players were now allowed forward passing in the offensive zone, instead of only in the defensive and neutral zones. Players were now allowed to enter the offensive zone before the puck. The only off-side rule left was that passing was not allowed from one zone to another. The changes led to abuse: players sat in front of the opposing net waiting for a pass. It was joked that players like the Maroons' Nels Stewart and the Bruins' Cooney Weiland were "setting up 'light housekeeping' at the opposition goal crease." The rule was changed in mid-season and players were no longer allowed to enter the offensive zone before the puck.

Arena changes

The Chicago Black Hawks moved from the Chicago Coliseum to the Chicago Stadium in December 1929 after Paddy Harmon was removed from the presidency of the Stadium in November. Harmon had not been able to negotiate a deal with the Black Hawks, but within weeks of his ouster the Stadium's board of directors agreed to the Black Hawks' terms of per night and a guaranteed Sunday afternoon slot. The gate receipts for the Black Hawks increased to nearly triple the previous season's receipts. The team grossed and attendance jumped to 186,920.

Teams

1929-30 National Hockey League
DivisionTeam City Arena Capacity
Canadian
Montreal CanadiensMontreal, QuebecMontreal Forum12,500
Montreal MaroonsMontreal, QuebecMontreal Forum12,500
New York AmericansNew York, New YorkMadison Square Garden15,925
Ottawa SenatorsOttawa, OntarioOttawa Auditorium7,500
Toronto Maple LeafsToronto, OntarioArena Gardens7,500
AmericanBoston BruinsBoston, MassachusettsBoston Madison Square Garden13,909
Chicago Black HawksChicago, IllinoisChicago Coliseum (Nov.)
Chicago Stadium (Dec. 1929 onward)
6,000
16,000
Detroit CougarsDetroit, MichiganDetroit Olympia15,000
New York RangersNew York, New YorkMadison Square Garden15,925
Pittsburgh PiratesPittsburgh, PennsylvaniaDuquesne Garden5,000

Regular season

Cooney Weiland of the Boston Bruins took advantage of the rule changes and smashed the old NHL scoring record with 73 points. Weiland and Tiny Thompson, who won the Vezina Trophy with a 2.23 goals against average, led the Bruins to a final season standings record of 38 wins, 5 losses, and 1 tie. The Bruins set three impressive NHL records including most wins in the regular season (38), highest winning percentage (0.875), and most consecutive home ice wins (20).

The 1943–44 Montreal Canadiens and the 1944–45 Montreal Canadiens would tie the record for most wins in a season at 38. But the record remained unbroken for 21 years until March 11, 1951, when the 1950–51 Detroit Red Wings notched their 39th victory in a much longer 70-game season. The record for consecutive wins at home would stand for 82 years, being matched by the 1975–76 Philadelphia Flyers and finally surpassed on February 14, 2012, by the 2011–12 Detroit Red Wings. As of no team has ever won 38 of their first 44 games or broken the Bruins' single season winning percentage record of 0.875.[1]

Conn Smythe brought up two outstanding forwards, Harvey "Busher" Jackson, and Charlie Conacher, and combined with Joe Primeau, the Kid Line was born. Conacher actually scored on his first shift in the NHL. Jackson got his nickname Busher from Tim Daly, the Toronto trainer, when asked by Daly to assist with some sticks. "I'm a hockey player, not a stickboy", Jackson told Daly, who replied, "Why you fresh young busher!" And it was Busher Jackson from that day on.

On January 7, 1930, Clint Benedict became the first goalie in NHL history to don a protective face mask. He did so for five games to protect a broken nose. The next time a mask made its way into the NHL was almost 30 years later when Jacques Plante wore one in a game on November 1, 1959.

Frank Frederickson badly injured his knee and the Pittsburgh Pirates fortunes went from bad to worse.

Eddie Gerard resigned as manager-coach of the Montreal Maroons. He was replaced as manager by team president James Strachan. Dunc Munro was hired as coach and led the team to first place in the Canadian Division.

There was a well-founded rumour that Gerard would take the coaching reins of Ottawa from Newsy Lalonde when Lalonde was not well. Dave Gill filled in during his absence and the team did much better and made the playoffs. Gerard turned down the coaching job.

Final standings

GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals For, GA = Goals Against
Teams that qualified for the playoffs are highlighted in bold.

Playoffs

Quarterfinals

(C3) Ottawa Senators vs. (A3) New York Rangers

Semifinals

(C2) Montreal Canadiens vs. (A3) New York Rangers

Stanley Cup Finals

See main article: article and 1930 Stanley Cup Finals. After defeating the Montreal Maroons and after having not lost consecutive games all season, the Boston Bruins were swept by the Montreal Canadiens two games to none in a best-of-three series. The first game saw Boston play way below its usual form. The Canadiens then won the Stanley Cup with a 4–3 victory in game two. The Canadiens went 5–0–1 in the playoffs, making them one of the few Stanley Cup-winning teams in history to not lose a game in the playoffs.

Awards

Nels Stewart won the Hart Trophy for the second time. Frank Boucher won the Lady Byng for the third consecutive year. Tiny Thompson won the Vezina for the first time. Thompson would go on to win the trophy four times.

1929–30 NHL awards
O'Brien Cup


(Canadian Division champion)

Montreal Maroons
Prince of Wales Trophy


(American Division champion)

Boston Bruins
Hart Trophy


(Most valuable player)

Nels Stewart, Montreal Maroons
Lady Byng Trophy


(Excellence and sportsmanship)

Frank Boucher, New York Rangers
Vezina Trophy


(Fewest goals allowed)

Tiny Thompson, Boston Bruins

Player statistics

Scoring leaders

Note: GP = Games played, G = Goals, A = Assists, PTS = Points, PIM = Penalties in minutes

PLAYERTEAMGPGAPTSPIM
Boston Bruins 44 43 30 73 27
New York Rangers 42 26 36 62 16
Boston Bruins 44 41 20 61 48
New York Rangers 44 29 30 59 56
Ottawa Senators 44 36 22 58 70
Montreal Maroons 44 39 16 55 81
Montreal Canadiens 44 40 10 50 72
New York Americans 44 28 22 50 15
Ottawa Senators 44 29 20 49 119
Boston Bruins 42 18 31 49 39
Source: NHL.

Leading goaltenders

Note: GP = Games played; Mins = Minutes played; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average

PlayerTeamGPWLTMinsGASOGAA
Boston Bruins 44 38 5 1 2680 98 3 2.19
Montreal Maroons 30 16 10 4 1897 74 2 2.34
Montreal Canadiens 42 20 13 9 2680 108 4 2.42
Chicago Black Hawks 44 21 16 9 2750 111 3 2.42
Ottawa Senators 44 21 15 8 2780 118 3 2.55
Source: NHL.[2]

Coaches

American Division

Canadian Division

Debuts

The following is a list of players of note who played their first NHL game in 1929–30 (listed with their first team, asterisk(*) marks debut in playoffs):

Last games

The following is a list of players of note that played their last game in the NHL in 1929–30 (listed with their last team):

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NHL Team Records. HockeyCentral.co.uk. June 13, 2016.
  2. Web site: 1929–1930 – Regular Season – Goaltender – Goalie Season Stats Leaders – Goals Against Average . nhl.com . June 21, 2012.