1912–13 Ottawa Senators season

The 1912–13 Ottawa Senators season was the 28th season of play of the Ottawa Hockey Club. Ottawa placed fifth and missed the playoffs.

1912–13 Ottawa Senators
League5th NHA
1912–13 record9–11–0
Goals for87
Goals against81
Team information
CoachPete Green
CaptainPercy Lesueur
ArenaThe Arena
Team leaders
GoalsHarry Broadbent (20)
Goals against averageClint Benedict (2.8)

Team business

In this season, the Ottawa Hockey Club became more commonly known as the 'Ottawa Senators'. The organization remained known as the Ottawa Hockey Association.

The lease of the Arena was held up over a dispute of the percentages. The Club wanted to continue at 70% of gate revenues, while Ted Dey, owner of the Arena, was demanding that the Club accept 60%.[1]

Off-season

The league added two new teams in Toronto, the Torontos and the Tecumsehs. Former Ottawa player Bruce Ridpath became Toronto's first manager. The new teams recruited their own players and no players moved from other NHA teams to Toronto. However, the PCHA went after NHA players and Ottawa's Cyclone Taylor and Dubby Kerr moved west to play in the PCHA. Taylor, who had been barred from joining the Senators by the Wanderers, became eligible to play for the Senators when the Wanderers dropped their interest in him, but he chose to move out west where he would remain for the rest of his life. Marty Walsh, who had become a part-time player in the 11–12 season, retired. Two new players joined the Senators lineup this season, Punch Broadbent and Clint Benedict, who would both play for Ottawa into the 1920s.[2] Defenceman Horace Merrill, who had previously been a spare for the Senators, joined them full-time this season.

Regular season

Broadbent led the team with 20 goals in 20 games in his first season. Benedict would post his first shutout in the NHA on February 12, 1913, against the Tecumsehs.

Final standings

National Hockey Association
GP W L T GF GA
Quebec Bulldogs20164011275
Montreal Wanderers20101009390
Toronto Hockey Club2091108695
Montreal Canadiens2091108381
Ottawa Senators2091108781
Toronto Tecumsehs2071305998

[3]

Note: W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, GF= Goals For, GA = Goals Against

Results

Month Day Visitor Score Home Score Record
Dec. 28Ottawa3Quebec70–1
Jan. 1Toronto1Ottawa71–1
4Ottawa7Canadiens32–1
8Ottawa1Tecumsehs42–2
11Ottawa5Wanderers112–3
15Wanderers1Ottawa93–3
18Canadiens6Ottawa03–4
22Tecumsehs4Ottawa3 (7' overtime)3–5
25Ottawa9Toronto54–5
29Quebec5Ottawa34–6
Feb. 1‡Canadiens1Ottawa25–6
5‡Ottawa0Toronto25–7
8‡Quebec4Ottawa15–8
12Tecumsehs0Ottawa116–8
15Ottawa3Canadiens27–8
19Ottawa2Wanderers87–9
22Wanderers3Ottawa98–9
26Ottawa3Tecumsehs48–10
Mar. 1Toronto2Ottawa39–10
5Ottawa6Quebec89–11

‡ Played with rover (7 man hockey)

Goaltending averages

Name Club GP GA SO Avg.
Benedict, Clint Ottawa41112.8
LeSueur, Percy Ottawa16704.4

Scorers

Name GP G
Harry Broadbent2020
Skene Ronan2018
Jack Darragh2015
Hamby Shore2015
Horace Merrill105
Joe Dennison124
Eddie Lowrey134
Fred Lake134
Tom Westwick122

Post-season Exhibition series

After the season a series was arranged between Ottawa and Montreal Wanderers and Quebec to play in New York. Ottawa and Montreal played first, with the winner to play-off against Quebec. After the Wanderers defeated Ottawa 10–8 (3–2, 7–6), the Wanderers won the two-game series against Quebec 12–10 (9–5, 3–5).

Date Winning Team Score Losing Team Location
March 8, 1913Montreal Wanderers3–2OttawaSt. Nicholas Rink, New York
March 10, 1913Montreal Wanderers7–6Ottawa
March 13, 1913Montreal Wanderers9–5Quebec
March 15, 1913Quebec5–3Montreal Wanderers
Sources
  • "WANDERERS TAKE GAME FROM OTTAWA; Canadian Hockey Teams Make Thrilling Spectacle on Ice in St. Nicholas Rink". New York Times. March 11, 1913. p. 9.
  • "CANADIAN HOCKEY THRILLS AT RINK; Wanderers of Montreal Defeat Quebec Team in Brilliant Match, 9 to 5". New York Times. March 14, 1913. p. 10.
  • "WANDERERS WIN HOCKEY SERIES; St. Nicholas Rink Packed for Final Canadian Game Won by Quebec". New York Times. March 16, 1913. p. S2.

See also

References

  1. "Hockey Trouble Looms Up Again". Toronto World. December 7, 1912. p. 4.
  2. Coleman p. 235
  3. Standings: Coleman, Charles (1966). Trail of the Stanley Cup, vol. 1, 1893-1926 inc. National Hockey League. p. 239.
  • Coleman, Charles (1966). The Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol. 1, 1893–1926 inc. NHL.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.