Frank Glass Explained

Position:Left wing/Rover
Height Ft:5
Height In:10
Weight Lb:190
Shoots:Left
Played For:Montreal St. Lawrence
Montreal St. Charles
Montreal Wanderers
Montreal Canadiens
Career Start:1904
Career End:1912
Birth Date:10 February 1884
Birth Place:Broughty Ferry, Scotland, GBR
Death Place:Morrisburg, Ontario, Canada

Frank "Pud" Glass (February 10, 1884  - March 2, 1965) was a Scottish-Canadian professional ice hockey player who played in various professional and amateur leagues, including the National Hockey Association and Eastern Canada Amateur Hockey Association. He was a member of the Montreal Wanderers' Stanley Cup champion teams in the 1905–06, 1906–07, 1907–08 and 1909–10 seasons. He was the captain of Montreal Wanderers when they won their fourth Stanley Cup.

Playing career

Frank Glass was born in Broughty Ferry, Scotland,[1] but raised in Canada. He played hockey in his neighbourhood of Pointe-Saint-Charles in Montreal. His first senior team was the Montreal Wanderers, then an amateur team for the 1904–05 season.He would play for the Montreal Wanderers for seven seasons. In 1906, he became a professional paid player on the Wanderers, one of five out of a roster of nine. He first signed a contract with the Montreal Hockey Club, then chose not to report and signed with the Wanderers instead for more money. His situation caused a problem for the league, which eventually allowed him to play for the Wanderers and fined him $50. A similar situation occurred before the 1907–08 season and Glass was again fined and threatened with league expulsion if he signed two contracts again. During his time with the Wanderers the Wanderers were the top team in the country, winning league championship and Stanley Cups from 1906 until 1910. In 1911–12, his final season, he played for the Montreal Canadiens.

Frank Glass grew up in the same neighbourhood of Pointe-Saint-Charles in Montreal as fellow Montreal Wanderers player Ernie "Moose" Johnson, and the two were inseparable companions off the ice and also teamed well together on the ice.[2] Glass and Johnson played together on the 1902–03 Montreal St. Lawrence team in the Montreal City Hockey League before rejoining in the 1906 season on the Montreal Wanderers in the ECAHA. At the onset of the 1905–06 season Brooklyn Skating Club manager Tom Howard tried to acquire both Glass and Johnson to his club, but the AAHL rules committee ruled the Canadians ineligible to play with the American club on counts of professionalism.[3]

Deployment and playing style

Outside of the left wing position, Glass also played as a rover, the more free-roaming position in the seven man game between defence and the forward line. The March 21, 1908 issue of the Ottawa Citizen, in a review of the players on the Montreal Wanderers, claimed that Glass' greatest strength as a player was his checking.[4] The newspaper claimed that Glass' effectiveness as a player was not evidently visible to the spectators:

Career statistics

MCHL = Montreal City Hockey League

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGGPG
1901–02 Montreal St. Lawrence MCHL
1902–03 Montreal St. Lawrence MCHL
1903–04 Montreal St. Charles MCHL
6 9
Montreal Wanderers10 10
1906 Montreal Wanderers2 3
Montreal WanderersECAHA 10 13
1907 Montreal WanderersStanley Cup 6 8
Montreal WanderersECAHA 9 3
1907–08 Montreal WanderersStanley Cup 5 6
Montreal WanderersECHA 12 18
1909 Montreal WanderersStanley Cup 2 5
Montreal Wanderers12 15
1910 Montreal WanderersStanley Cup 1 0
Montreal WanderersNHA 16 17
NHA 16 8
Senior Totals91931622

See also

References

General references

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statutory registers - Births - Search Results. 23 January 2022 . . subscription .
  2. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1946&dat=19340310&id=uS0rAAAAIBAJ&sjid=EZkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6919,1424103 "Turning Back Hockey's Pages"
  3. https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/53936967/ "Hockey players barred by league"
  4. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/61259229/who-wanderers-are/ "Who Wanderers Are"