Original Six Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The Original Six is the the term used by fans of ice hockey to refer to the six National Hockey League teams that existed before the league's expansion in 1967. They are:- Montreal Canadiens (1909, joined NHL 1917)
- Toronto Maple Leafs (1917)
- Boston Bruins (1924)
- Detroit Red Wings (1926)
- Chicago Blackhawks (1926)
- New York Rangers (1926)
The small league meant that the number of players at the NHL level was also small, and so the quality of play was high. There was none of the dilution of talent seen in the NHL in the later "expansion era". The same teams would play each other up to 14 times each season; rivalries would develop, and it was easy for fans to become familiar with all of the players. The league at times played to 95% capacity.
Some criticise the era as having too easy of a playoff system (Only 2 teams were eliminated after the 50-60-70 game regular seasons), for featuring too many dominant teams (Montreal never missed the playoffs from 1945-1967, Toronto missed once, and Detroit missed twice, while the other 3 teams competed for one birth), and for having very autocratic and monopolistic practices by the owners. Increased pressure of an opposing league forming and lucrative US TV contracts convinced the six owners to go ahead with expansion.
The "Original Six era" is often referred to with great
respect and nostalgia by hockey fans, particularly fans of
the six teams who are old enough to remember it. (And perhaps
most fondly by fans of the Toronto Maple Leafs, who
were one of the league's best teams up to 1967, winning the
Stanley Cup that year, but then collapsed into mediocrity and
as of 2004, have never come close to winning it again.)
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