Jack Marks (ice hockey) explained

Jack Marks
Position:Right Wing
Shoots:Left
Height Ft:6
Height In:1
Weight Lbs:180
Birth Date:8 February 1882
Birth Place:Brantford, Ontario, Canada
Career Start:1904
Career End:1920
Played For:Canadian Soo (IPHL)
Brantford Indians (OPHL)
Toronto (OPHL)
All-Montreal (CHA)
Quebec Bulldogs (NHA)
Montreal Wanderers (NHL)
Toronto Arenas (NHL)
Quebec Bulldogs (NHL)

John Joseph Marks (February 8, 1882 – August 19, 1945) was a Canadian professional Hockey player who played professional ice hockey from 1906 until 1920, including 2 seasons in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Wanderers, Torontos and Quebec Bulldogs. He won 2 Stanley Cups with the Quebec Bulldogs in 1912 and 1913. He also won a third Stanley Cup with Toronto in 1918. He was born in Brantford, Ontario.

Playing career

Marks began intermediate-level play for Belleville of the Ontario Hockey Association (OHA) in 1899. He would play for Belleville for four seasons until 1904. He was suspended for a year in 1903 for playing professional baseball in 1902. When the Federal Amateur Hockey League (FAHL) started in 1904, he joined the Brockville team for two seasons. At the end of 1906, he signed up for New Glasgow's Stanley Cup challenge. For the 1907 season, he became a professional with the Canadian Soo team of the International Professional Hockey League (IPHL). In the 1907–08 hockey season, he started with the Pittsburgh Lyceum of the Western Pennsylvania Hockey League, and jumped after three games to Brantford of the Ontario Professional Hockey League (OPHL), eventually playing in the Toronto PHC's Stanley Cup challenge.He played for Brantford in 1909, and jumped to the ill-fated Canadian Hockey Association (CHA) for four games with the All-Montreal Hockey Club, returning to Brantford after the CHA demise. In 1911, he played again in the United States, playing a season of exhibition for a Chicago professional team that was attempting to start professional hockey in Chicago.

In 1911, he returned to Canada, to join the Quebec Bulldogs of the National Hockey Association, playing six seasons of the club, winners of the Stanley Cup in 1912 and 1913. When Quebec did not play in the NHL's first season of 1917–18, he was drafted to the Montreal Wanderers from Quebec for the start of the inaugural 1917–18 NHL season. After the Wanderers folded, he was assigned to the Canadiens but was loaned to the Toronto club, winning the 1918 Stanley Cup. He did not play in 1918–19 but attempted a comeback in the 1919–20 season when Quebec AC activated a team in the NHL, playing only one further game.

1909 train accident

During the 1908–09 season, while with the Brantford Indians of the OPHL, Marks and the Indians were involved in a train accident outside of Guelph on January 14, 1909, where Marks suffered season-ending injuries (broken arm and fractured ribs) when the rear coach of the Grand Trunk Railway passenger train they were traveling with ran into a ditch and overturned.[1]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGP PIMGP G A Pts PIM
1901–02Belleville IntermediatesOHA
1903–04Belleville IntermediatesOHA
1904–05Brockville HCFAHL8 6 0 6
1905–06Brockville HCFAHL6 1 0 1
1906–07New Glasgow CubsSt-Cup1 2 0 2
1906–07Canadian SooIHL14 13 10 23 26
1907–08Pittsburgh LyceumWPHL
1907–08Brantford IndiansOPHL10 10 0 10 31
1907–08Toronto ProsSt-Cup1 0 0 0 0
1908–09Brantford IndiansOPHL9 6 0 6 19
1909–10All-MontrealCHA4 7 0 7 3
1909–10Brantford IndiansOPHL4 8 0 8 15
1910–11Chicago All-AmericansCCPHL
1911–12Quebec BulldogsNHA10 4 0 4 10
1911–12Quebec BulldogsSt-Cup2 0 0 0 2
1912–13Quebec BulldogsNHA19 18 0 18 39
1912–13Quebec BulldogsSt-Cup1 2 0 2 0
1913–14Quebec BulldogsNHA20 9 6 15 32
1914–15Quebec BulldogsNHA17 7 4 11 49
1915–16Quebec BulldogsNHA23 12 0 12 40
1916–17Quebec BulldogsNHA16 0 0 0 6
1917–18Montreal WanderersNHL1 0 0 0 0
1917–18Toronto ArenasNHL5 0 0 0 0
1919–20Quebec BulldogsNHL1 0 0 0 4
NHA totals105 50 10 60 176
NHL totals7 0 0 0 4

References

General references

Notes and References

  1. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/56444539/hockey-team-in-a-wreck/ "Hockey team in a wreck"