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Maurice Richard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maurice Richard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Position Right Wing
Shot Left
Nickname The Rocket
Height
Weight
ft 10 in (1.78 m)
180 lb (82 kg)
Pro Clubs Montreal Canadiens
Nationality Flag of Canada Canada
Born August 4, 1921,
Laval, QC, CA
Died May 27, 2000,
Montreal, QC, CA
Pro Career 1942 – 1960
Hall of Fame 1961

Joseph-Henri-Maurice "Rocket" Richard PC, CC, OQ (born August 4, 1921 in Laval, Quebec, Canada, died May 27, 2000 in Montreal, Quebec) was a professional ice hockey player, and played for the Montreal Canadiens from 1942 to 1960. The "Rocket" was the most prolific goal-scorer of his era, achieving the fabled feat of 50 goals in 50 games. He lived most of his life in Ahuntsic, Montreal.[1]

Contents

[edit] Playing career

Maurice Richard was the first to score 50 goals in one season (the 1944-45 NHL season), doing so in 50 games, and the first to score 500 goals in a career. He finished his career with 544 goals in the regular season, with 82 in the playoffs which included a record six overtime winners (only matched by Joe Sakic), and led the league in goals five times. He also amassed 421 assists for a total of 965 points in 978 games. 50 goals in 50 games continues to be a marker of scoring excellence to this day, and few players have surpassed that mark.

Richard played on eight Stanley Cup teams in Montreal, was captain of 5 straight from 1956-60, won the Hart Trophy in 1947, and was elected eight times to the first all-star team and six times to the second all-star team, and played in every National Hockey League All-Star Game from 1947 to 1959. Teamed with Elmer Lach as centre and Hector 'Toe' Blake playing left-wing, they formed the "Punch Line".

Maurice originally played wearing the jersey number "15" but changed it to "9" in honour of his first child — Huguette — who weighed nine pounds at birth. His number has been retired by the Montreal Canadiens.

Richard was the quintessential Québécois hero. He pulled off a five-goal game after a day spent moving to a house — including the piano — in 1944, and scored the series-winning goal of the 1952 Stanley Cup semifinals as blood dripped down his face from an earlier injury. Richard's role as a Québécois icon was epitomized in the short story Le chandail de hockey ("The Hockey Sweater") by Roch Carrier and in the motion picture Maurice Richard ("The Rocket") by Charles Binamé.

Richard was turned down a total of three times by the military, twice for combat and once as a machinist. The first time was in 1939 at the beginning of World War II when he was 18 and the second time the following year. X-rays showed that his ankle and femur as well as his wrists had broken and had not healed properly during Junior hockey and he was therefore unfit for military action.

In 1940, Richard inquired about a position as a machinist in the military, but was again refused citing his lack of a high school diploma or technical trade certificate. Richard tried to explain that he had dropped out of school to help his family and had been working as a machinist at a local factory since he was 16. They still refused, and he was told he needed a machinist certificate. Upon hearing this he decided to train as a machinist at the Montreal Technical School the following year and therefore fulfill his desire to help in the war effort.

The war was over before Richard received his certificate, which took four years. He was disappointed that the Canadian military had not given him the opportunity to participate in some capacity.

Although Richard was often perceived as a pre-Quiet Revolution hero excelling in an anglophone world, he always insisted that he was an apolitical man playing hockey for the love of the sport.

Richard's career began and ended before the beginning of huge salaries. The largest yearly salary he ever made was $25,000. His jersey # 9 was retired on October 6, 1960 by the Canadiens, less than a month after he announced his retirement. His brother Henri "The Pocket Rocket" Richard joined him with the Canadiens in 1955 and would go on to win 11 Stanley Cups with the team, an NHL record.

He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1961, the customary three-year waiting period being waived in his honour.

[edit] The Richard Riot

Main article: Richard Riot

On March 13, 1955, Richard was given a match penalty for deliberately injuring Hal Laycoe, in a game against the Boston Bruins. He struck an official unconscious in the melee, and as that was his second attack on an official that season alone, a hearing was held in which Richard was suspended for the balance of that season and the playoffs. Public outrage from Montreal soon poured in. NHL President Clarence Campbell did not budge, and announced that he would be attending the Canadiens' next home game against the Detroit Red Wings in four days.

Midway into the first period, Campbell arrived with his fiancee. Outraged Canadiens fans immediately began pelting them with eggs, vegetables, and various debris, with more being thrown at him each time the Red Wings scored, who built up a 4-1 lead. The continuous pelting of various objects stopped when a tear gas bomb was set off inside the Forum not far from where Campbell was sitting. The Forum was ordered evacuated and Campbell ruled the game forfeited to the Red Wings. That was the last straw, as a riot ensued outside the Forum, causing $500,000 in damage to the neighbourhood and the Forum itself. Hundreds of stores were looted and vandalized within a 15-block radius of the Forum. Twelve policemen and 25 civilians were injured. The riot continued well into the night, with police arresting people by the truckload. Local radio stations, which carried live coverage of the riot for over seven hours, had to be forced off the air. The riot was eventually over at 3 am, and left Montreal's Rue Ste-Catherine a mess.

Richard's suspension also cost him the Art Ross Trophy, the closest he ever came to winning it. When Richard's teammate Bernie Geoffrion passed him on the last day of the regular season, he was booed by the Montreal faithful. Geoffrion, a right wing, was struggling to gain recognition of his considerable talents because Gordie Howe of Detroit, Andy Bathgate of the New York Rangers, and, of course, the Rocket, were the outstanding right wings of the Original Six, the 1950s' NHL.

The Canadiens would lose the Cup final to Detroit in seven games, but would win the Cup in the year after, which came, fittingly, over the Wings — and the four years after that. Richard retired in 1960 after the Canadiens' fifth straight Stanley Cup, a record that still stands.

[edit] Honours

The monument to Richard outside Jaques Cartier Park in Gatineau, Quebec
The monument to Richard outside Jaques Cartier Park in Gatineau, Quebec

In 1999, the Maurice 'Rocket' Richard Trophy was donated by the Montreal Canadiens hockey club to the NHL to be awarded annually to the goal-scoring leader during the regular season. Richard himself had led the league in goals five times.

In 1996 at the closing of the Montreal Forum, a tearful "Rocket" received the longest standing ovation in the city's history. Over 16 minutes of adulation poured over him, chanting his name over and over again. Richard, always the reluctant hero, looked around in surprise for the first few minutes. When he realized the crowd was not letting up and their love for him real, he gave in to his popularity, and broke down in tears all the while waving and mouthing "thank you". He rarely showed this side of himself, as he always tried to remain humble. The last few minutes of adulation saw Richard closing his eyes, while the crowd chanted "GO HABS GO!" over and over again. Richard later stated that when he closed his eyes and heard the crowd, it brought him back to his younger days. He thought it was a very loving gesture by the fans.

Richard believed there was only one thing that separated him from the rest: desire. He explained in 1986, after the Canadiens won the Cup for the 23rd time:

“I simply had the same kind of determination back from the time I was a boy of 7 or 8. I just wanted to win all the time, I had no goal other than to score goals. That was all I ever had on my mind.”

[1]

Although Richard had a falling-out with the Canadiens not long after he retired in 1960, he eventually patched things up and returned to them, serving the club as an unofficial goodwill ambassador from 1991 — highlighted by the Habs' most recent (to date) Cup in 1993 — until he died. Despite being long retired by the time of his death in 2000, an estimated 115,000 people of all ages paid their respects while his body lay in state at Montreal's Molson Centre. Flags were lowered to half mast as Quebec's National Assembly was suspended for the day. He was given a state funeral that was broadcast live across Canada, the first time such an honour was accorded an athlete. Among those who attended were Howe and Jean Béliveau, various politicians (including Prime Minister of Canada Jean Chrétien, Premier of Quebec Lucien Bouchard and Governor General of Canada Adrienne Clarkson), and current team captain Saku Koivu. He was buried in the Cimetière Notre-Dame-des-Neiges in Montreal.

A junior hockey team was also named after him, the Rocket de Montreal, playing out of the Maurice Richard Arena (in 2003-04 this team moved to Prince Edward Island and is now the P.E.I. Rocket). On June 27, 2001, the Canadian government unveiled a monument in Jacques-Cartier Park, in Hull, Quebec honouring Maurice Richard. He has been inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame.

In 1967 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada (one of the first distributions of the Order) and was promoted to Companion in 1998.

In 1992, he was made a member of the Privy Council of Canada. This allowed him for the rest of his life to be known as The Honourable or L'Honorable Maurice Richard. His appointment, and those of 20 others that year by Brian Mulroney, remains somewhat controversial as traditionally being made a Privy Councillor is reserved for members of the cabinet, the Chief Justice of Canada, and certain others who need to access classified documents.

Richard was married to Lucille Norchet from September 17, 1942 until her death on July 18, 1994. They had seven children.

[edit] Depiction in popular media

  • Richard's hockey career, and in particular the folk legend of his NHL game played after having moved, was featured in Heritage Minutes (1997). Richard was played by Roy Dupuis.
  • Richard's life story was featured in a two-part, two-hour French-Canadian miniseries televised as part of the program Les Beaux Dimanches: Histoire d'un Canadien (Beautiful Sundays: Maurice Rocket Richard Story [Canada: English title]), in 1999, starring Roy Dupuis as Richard.
  • The French version of a feature film, Maurice Richard was released in November 2005; the English-subtitled version entitled The Rocket: The Maurice Richard Story was released in April 2006. The film again stars Roy Dupuis in the title role and is directed by Charles Binamé.
  • Maurice Richard was also at the heart of the popular heritage story "The Hockey Sweater." This book was originally written in French by native Quebecker and acclaimed author Roch Carrier.
  • The Jane Siberry song "Hockey" contains the line "They rioted in the streets of Montreal/When they benched Rocket Richard".
  • Was referenced in the Warren Zevon song "Hit Somebody": "His dad took the hose and froze the back yard/And little buddy dreamed he was Rocket Richard"
  • In the late 1980s, Maurice Richard starred in a commercial for a product that restored one's natural hair color. In the commercial, he mentions that he leaves a touch of grey, because his wife likes it. At that point a ref calls out, "Hey Rocket, two minutes for looking so good!" a line that has since become famous and is referenced in a song by the Canadian punk band Belvedere.

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[edit] Career statistics

    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1942-43 Montreal Canadiens NHL 16 5 6 11 4 -- -- -- -- --
1943-44 * Montreal Canadiens NHL 46 32 22 54 45 9 12 5 17 10
1944-45 Montreal Canadiens NHL 50 50 23 73 46 6 6 2 8 10
1945-46 * Montreal Canadiens NHL 50 27 21 48 50 9 7 4 11 15
1946-47 Montreal Canadiens NHL 60 45 26 71 69 10 6 5 11 44
1947-48 Montreal Canadiens NHL 53 28 25 53 89 -- -- -- -- --
1948-49 Montreal Canadiens NHL 59 20 18 38 110 7 2 1 3 14
1949-50 Montreal Canadiens NHL 70 43 22 65 114 5 1 1 2 6
1950-51 Montreal Canadiens NHL 65 42 24 66 97 11 9 4 13 13
1951-52 Montreal Canadiens NHL 48 27 17 44 44 11 4 2 6 6
1952-53 * Montreal Canadiens NHL 70 28 33 61 112 12 7 1 8 2
1953-54 Montreal Canadiens NHL 70 37 30 67 112 11 3 0 3 22
1954-55 Montreal Canadiens NHL 67 38 36 74 125 -- -- -- -- --
1955-56 * Montreal Canadiens NHL 70 38 33 71 89 10 5 9 14 24
1956-57 * Montreal Canadiens NHL 63 33 29 62 74 10 8 3 11 8
1957-58 * Montreal Canadiens NHL 28 15 19 34 28 10 11 4 15 10
1958-59 * Montreal Canadiens NHL 42 17 21 38 27 4 0 0 0 2
1959-60 * Montreal Canadiens NHL 51 19 16 35 50 8 1 3 4 2
NHL Totals 978 544 421 965 1285 133 82 44 126 188

* indicates a Stanley Cup-winning season


[edit] External links

Preceded by:
Emile Bouchard
Montreal Canadiens Captains
1956 - 60
Followed by:
Doug Harvey
Preceded by
Max Bentley
Winner of the Hart Trophy
1947
Succeeded by
Buddy O'Connor
Preceded by
Marlene Streit
Lou Marsh Trophy winner
1957
Succeeded by
Lucille Wheeler

[edit] Reference

Ramos, H., & Gosine, K. (2001). “The Rocket”: Newspaper coverage of the death of a Quebec cultural icon, a Canadian hockey player. Journal of Canadian Studies, 36(4), 9-31; 2002, JCS, 37(1), p. 250 (published erratum).

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