Toronto Professional Hockey Club

Toronto Professional Hockey Club
City Toronto, Ontario
League Ontario Professional Hockey League
Founded 1906
Operated 1906–1909
Home arena Mutual Street Rink
Owner(s) Percy Quinn
Championships
Stanley Cups None

The Toronto Professional Hockey Club was Toronto's first professional ice hockey team, founded in 1906. The team played the 1906–07 season in exhibition games against other professional teams. In 1908, they were founding members of Canada's first fully professional ice hockey league the Ontario Professional Hockey League (OPHL). The club operated for two seasons in the OPHL, 1908 and 1909, before disbanding. The club challenged unsuccessfully for the Stanley Cup in 1908.

The team featured several prominent players of the time, including Newsy Lalonde who would be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame and Bruce Ridpath, who would manage the Toronto entry in the National Hockey Association (NHA), fore-runner of the National Hockey League (NHL).

Contents

History

The Toronto Hockey Club was founded in 1906 to introduce professional hockey to Toronto. The International Hockey League (IHL) had been operating since 1904. Toronto would play its first game on December 28, 1906 against the Canadian Soo team of the IHL, losing 7–0 at the Mutual Street Rink in Toronto.[1] Despite this inauspicious start, the club would continue, and would help found the Ontario Professional Hockey League in December 1907, beginning play in 1908. The team won the league championship in their first OPHL season.

Part of the series on
Evolution of the Toronto Maple Leafs
Teams
Toronto Pro HC (OPHL) (1908–1909)
Toronto Blueshirts (NHA, NHL) (1912–1918)
Toronto Arenas (NHL) (1918–1919)
Toronto St. Patricks (NHL) (1919–1927)
Toronto Maple Leafs (NHL) (1927–present)
Ice hockey portal ·

1908 Stanley Cup challenge

On March 14, 1908, the team played a Stanley Cup challenge match against the Montreal Wanderers in Montreal. The Wanderers won the game 6-4.

Toronto March 1908 Stanley Cup Challenge Roster

Notable players

References

  1. ^ "Canadian Soo Beat Toronto". The Globe: p. 23. December 29, 1906. 

External links