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Ted Kennedy and Jim Thomson: Shared
Captains 1956-57
Sid Smith: 1955-56
Ted Kennedy: 1948-55
Syl Apps: 1945-48
Syl Apps: 1940-43
Bob Davidson: 1943-45
Red Horner: 1938-40
The Stanley Cup winning teams: 1931-32 1941-42
1944-45 1946-47 1947-48 1948-49 1950-51 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 1966-67
Charlie Conacher: 1937-38
Hap Day: 1927 -37
Meet the Men in Masks
Turk Broda: 1936-52
Terry Sawchuk: 1964-67
Don Simmons: 1961-64
Jacques Plante and his Invention:
1970-73
Johnny Bower: 1956-70
Turk Broda: 1936-52
Dunc Wilson: 1973-75
Gary Smith: 1965-67
Doug Favell: 1973-76
Paul Harrison: 1976-81
Jim Rutherford: 1980-81
Jiri Crha: 1979-81
Alan Bester: 1983-91
Don Beaupre: 1995-97
Felix Potvin: 1991-99
Grant Fuhr: 1991-93
Darren Puppa: 1992-93
Curtis Joseph: 1998-2002
Damian Rhodes: 1990-96
Stanley Cup Teams: 13
1917-18 Toronto Arenas
1921-22: Toronto Saint Pats
1931-32: Toronto Maple Leafs
1941-42 Toronto Maple Leafs
1944-45 Toronto Maple Leafs
1948-49 Toronto Maple Leafs
1946-47 Toronto Maple Leafs
1947-48 Toronto Maple Leafs
1950-51 Toronto Maple Leafs
1961-62 Toronto Maple Leafs
1962-63 Toronto Maple Leafs
1963-64 Toronto Maple Leafs
1966-67 Toronto Maple Leafs
Maple Leaf Stories Facts and Stories:
William "Bashin' Bill" Barilko (born March 25, 1927 in Timmins, Ontario – died August 26, 1951 near Cochrane, Ontario) was a Canadian hockey player who played his entire National Hockey League career for the Toronto Maple Leafs. Barilko scored this famous overtime goal in April 1951 in game five of the Stanley Cup finals versus Montreal. Later that year in August he disappeared during a fishing trip when his plane crashed. The wreckage of the plane was not discovered until June of 1962.
Bob Baun: Baun's career-making night was the sixth game of the 1964 Stanley Cup final, with Baun playing for the Toronto Maple Leafs against Detroit. Baun describes what happened halfway through the third period with the score tied 3-3 at the Detroit Olympia: "I got hit in the foot by a shot by Gordie Howe, so they took me to the Olympia infirmary. His foot did turn out to be broken. Baun later jokingly called it "the best break I ever had"?but that didn't stop him. And for the Leafs, it was a good thing the stalwart defenseman decided to rejoin the action in game six. Just two minutes into the overtime, Baun made himself a hockey legend. He took a pass from Bob Pulford near the blue line. His shot deflected off the skate of Detroit's Bill Gadsby, past Terry Sawchuk and into the net.
Darryl Sittler: On February 7, 1976, he produced the greatest offensive game in the history of the National Hockey League, guaranteeing his place in the record books even after Wayne Gretzky had come and gone. Toronto was hosting the Boston Bruins, a team on a seven-game winning streak. The Bruins had recently reacquired Gerry Cheevers, but coach Don Cherry wanted to give the goalie a rest before his upcoming Boston homecoming and started rookie netminder Dave Reece instead. The Leafs beat up the Bruins 11-4, but Sittler was the big story. He had two assists in the first period, three goals and two assists in the second and another hat trick in the third. The total of six goals and four assists set a league record for points in one game that had previously been held by Maurice "Rocket" Richard with eight.
Johnny Bower: Bower, like his other five Original Six brethren, became famous for his fearless play. Maskless, he never shied away from an attacking player and in fact patented the most dangerous move a goalie can make - the poke-check. Diving head-first into the skates of an attacking player at full speed, Bower would routinely flick the puck off that player's stick and out of harm's way. One time he got a skate in his cheek, knocking a tooth out through his cheek. He suffered innumerable cuts to his mouth and lips and lost virtually every tooth in his mouth from sticks and pucks, but almost to his last game, he never wore a mask. And under the confident eye of coach Punch Imlach, Bower got better and better. He led the Leafs into the playoffs his first season with a miracle comeback ending to the schedule, and then lost two finals in a row before winning three consecutive Stanley Cup championships - 1962 to 1964.
History of the Leafs In Pictures:
Part One the Early Years: 1917 to 1950