1967 Stanley Cup Finals

1967 Stanley Cup Finals
Teams123**456Games
Toronto Maple Leafs 2332434
Montreal Canadiens  6 0 26 1 1 2

* indicates periods of overtime.

Location:Montreal, QC (Montreal Forum) (1,2,5)
Toronto, ON (Maple Leaf Gardens) (3,4,6)
Format:Best-of-seven
Coaches:Toronto: Punch Imlach
Montreal: Toe Blake
Captains:Toronto: George Armstrong
Montreal: Jean Beliveau
Dates:April 20 to May 2, 1967
MVP:Dave Keon
Series-winning
goal:
Jim Pappin (19:24, second, G6)
 < 1966Stanley Cup Finals1968 > 

The 1967 Stanley Cup Final was a best-of-seven series played between the Montreal Canadiens and the Toronto Maple Leafs. The Maple Leafs would win the series four games to two to win their thirteenth Stanley Cup. As of 2015, this is Toronto's most recent Stanley Cup championship, most recent appearance in the championship final, and with the Chicago Blackhawks ending a 49-year Cup drought with their victory in the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals, is tied for the longest-active championship drought in the NHL with the St. Louis Blues (who have never won since joining the NHL in 1967). The 1967 Stanley Cup Final was also the last Stanley Cup Final in the Original Six Era.

Paths to the Final

This was the last Stanley Cup before the 1967 expansion which meant only three series in total were played in the playoffs. Montreal defeated New York to advance to the finals and Toronto defeated Chicago.

The series

The average age of the Leafs' players was 31, the oldest lineup to win the Cup.[1] Johnny Bower was 42 and Allan Stanley was 41. Dave Keon won the Conn Smythe Trophy.

Montreal won the opener 6–2, soundly trouncing Toronto. For the second game, Terry Sawchuk was replaced with Bower and provided the Leafs with a shutout win 3–0. Bower was in net for game three won 3–2 on Bob Pulford's overtime goal. This game has been described as "one of the most exciting games ever played".[2]

Bower was injured before game four and Sawchuk had to take over. Al Smith was called up from the minors to served as back-up for the fourth and fifth games. The Canadiens defeated the Leafs 6–2 again, this time in Toronto to even the series. Sawchuk would play very well in the next two games, backstopping the Leafs to the Cup. In the sixth game Bower returned to the line-up as back up. Jim Pappin scored his seventh goal of the playoffs and Sawchuk stopped 41 shots helping Toronto win the cup. Pappin had four goals and four assists in the Final series.

Date Visitors Score Home Score Notes
April 20 Toronto2 Montreal 6
April 22 Toronto 3 Montreal 0
April 25 Montreal 2 Toronto 3 2OT
April 27 Montreal 6 Toronto 2
April 29 Toronto 4 Montreal 1
May 2 Montreal 1 Toronto 3

Game 1

April 20 Toronto Maple Leafs 2–6
1 – 2, 1 – 2, 0 – 2
Montreal Canadiens Montreal Forum

Toronto Maple Leafs 1967 Stanley Cup champions

Roster

  Centres
  Wingers
  Defencemen
  Goaltenders


  Coaching and administrative staff

Stanley Cup engraving

Won all 4 Stanley Cups in 6 Years with Toronto 1962, 1963, 1964, 1967

George Armstrong, Bob Baun, Johnny Bower, Larry Hillman, Tim Horton, Red Kelly, Dave Keon, Frank Mahovlich, Bob Pulford, Eddie Shack, Allan Stanley (11 players), Stafford Smythe, Harold Ballard, John Bassette, Punch Imlach, King Clancy, Bob Haggart, Tom Nayler (7 non-players), Bob Davidson, Karl Elieff (were part of all 4 cups, but were not included on the cup each season.)

See also

Notes

  1. Stanley Cup. p. 42.
  2. McFarlane(1973), pg. 171

References

Preceded by
Montreal Canadiens
1966
Toronto Maple Leafs
Stanley Cup Champions

1967
Succeeded by
Montreal Canadiens
1968
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.