1936 Stanley Cup Finals

1936 Stanley Cup Finals
Teams 1 2 3* 4 Games
Detroit Red Wings  3 9 3 3 3
Toronto Maple Leafs  1 4 4 2 1
* - Denotes overtime period(s)
Location: Detroit (Olympia) (1,2)
Toronto (Maple Leaf Gardens) (3,4)
Format: best-of-five
Coaches: Detroit: Jack Adams
Toronto: Dick Irvin
Captains: Detroit: Doug Young
Toronto: Hap Day
Dates: April 5 to April 11, 1936
Series-winning
goal:
Pete Kelly (9:45, third, G4)
 < 1935 Stanley Cup Finals 1937 > 

The 1936 Stanley Cup Final NHL championship series was contested by the Detroit Red Wings and the Toronto Maple Leafs. This was Detroit's second appearance in the Final and Toronto's sixth. Detroit would win the series 3–1 to win their first Stanley Cup.

Contents

Path to the Final

Detroit defeated the defending champion Montreal Maroons in a best-of-five 3–0 to advance to the final. The Leafs had to play a total-goals series; 8–6 against Boston Bruins, and win a best-of-three 2–1 against the New York Americans.

The series

Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Detroit Red Wings

Date Away Score Home Score Notes
April 5 Toronto Maple Leafs 1 Detroit Red Wings 3
April 7 Toronto Maple Leafs 4 Detroit Red Wings 9
April 9 Detroit Red Wings 3 Toronto Maple Leafs 4 OT
April 11 Detroit Red Wings 3 Toronto Maple Leafs 2

Detroit wins best-of-five series 3–1.

Detroit Red Wings 1936 Stanley Cup champions

Roster

  Centres
  Wingers
  Defencemen
  Goaltenders


  Non-players
  • James E. Norris Sr. (President/Owner), James D. Norris Jr. (Vice President/Owner)
  • Arthur Wirtz Sr. (Secretary-Treasurer/Owner), Jack Adams (Manager-Coach)
  • Frank "Honey" Walker (Trainer), John Gilles (Business Manager)
  • Carl Mattson† (Ass’t Trainer/qualified)

Stanley Cup engraving

Detroit: "City of Champions"

When the Lions won the 1935 NFL Championship Game, the City of Detroit was mired in the Great Depression, which had hit Detroit and its industries particularly hard. But with the success of the Lions and other Detroit athletes in 1935, Detroit's luck appeared to be changing, as the City was dubbed the "City of Champions."[1] The Detroit Tigers also won the 1935 World Series, and when the Detroit Red Wings won the 1935–36 Stanley Cup championship, the city had seen three major league championships in less than a year. Detroit's "champions" included Detroit's "Brown Bomber," Joe Louis, the heavyweight boxing champion; native Detroiter Gar Wood who was the champion of unlimited powerboat racing and the first man to go 100 miles per hour on water; Eddie "the Midnight Express" Tolan, a black Detroiter who won gold medals in the 100- and 200-meter races at the 1932 Summer Olympics.

See also

References & notes

  1. ^ [1]
Preceded by
Montreal Maroons
1935
Detroit Red Wings
Stanley Cup Champions

1936
Succeeded by
Detroit Red Wings
1937