User:Flibirigit/ice hockey
Directory
[edit]- User:Flibirigit/did you know – DYK checklists
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox – Current projects and checklists
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox1 – Canadian ice hockey checklists
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox2 – General Canadian ice hockey
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox3 – General American ice hockey
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox4 – Canadian biography 1
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox5 – Canadian biography 2
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox6 – Canadian biography 3
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox7 – Canadian biography 4
- User:Flibirigit/sandbox8 – Canadian biography 5
- User:Flibirigit/ice hockey – General ice hockey
- User:Flibirigit/other – Other subjects
- List of citation templates
- <ref name="x">{{cite web|url=|title=|last=|first=|author-link=|date=|website=|publisher=|language=|access-date=}}</ref>
- <ref name="y">{{cite news|title=|last=|first=|author-link=|agency=|date=|newspaper=|language=|location=|page=|url=|access-date=}}</ref>
- <ref name="z">{{cite book|last=|first=|author-link=|title=|publisher=|date=|location=|pages=|url=|isbn=}}</ref>
Hockey Hall of Fame
[edit]In 1941, the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) appointed a committee to write a history of hockey in Canada, led by James T. Sutherland, including W. A. Hewitt and Quebec hockey executive George Slater.[1][2] In 1943, the committee concluded that hockey had been played in Canada since 1855, and that Kingston and Halifax had equal claims to be the birthplace of hockey, since both cities hosted games played by the Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment. The report also stated that Kingston had the first recognized hockey league in 1885, which merged into the Ontario Hockey Association in 1890.[3][4] A delegation from Kingston then went to the CAHA general meeting in 1943, and was endorsed to establish a Hockey Hall of Fame in Kingston.[2]
In September 1943, Hewitt was named to the board of directors for selecting inductees into the Hockey Hall of Fame, and sought recommendations by sportswriters from The Canadian Press and the Associated Press.[5] He was named chairman and secretary of the board of governors in 1944,[6] and the CAHA agreed to donate 25 per cent of its profits from the 1945–46 season to help erect a building for the hall of fame.[7] In May 1945, Hewitt announced that nine players were the first group of inductees into the Hockey Hall of Fame.[8] In October 1945, a special committee chosen by the board of governors named six "builders of hockey" to be added to the inaugural group of inductees.[9]
The Hockey Hall of Fame committee was incorporated in 1948, and elected an additional seven to its board of governors to give representation to a broader area.[10] Hewitt remained on the board of governors until 1950.[11] By September 1955, a building for the hall of fame had not been constructed in Kingston, when a group of businessmen from Toronto were given approval for a hall of fame building which opened at Exhibition Place in Toronto in 1961. A separate International Hockey Hall of Fame later opened in Kingston in 1965.[2]
References1
[edit]- ^ "Officers of C.A.H.A. Re-elected at Tuesday Session of Annual Meeting of Body In Calgary". Lethbridge Herald. The Canadian Press. April 16, 1941. p. 18.
- ^ a b c Fitsell, Bill (January 4, 1986). "Captains, Colonels & Kings: Capt. James T. Sutherland – The Legend Maker". The Kingston Whig-Standard. p. 12.
- ^ Edwards, Charles (January 4, 1943). "Across Canada". Winnipeg Free Press. p. 13.
- ^ "Puck Problem!!! Kingston First With Hockey?". The Winnipeg Tribune. March 17, 1943. p. 14.
- ^ "Want Writers To Name Notables". Lethbridge Herald. The Canadian Press. September 27, 1943. p. 12.
- ^ "W. A. Hewitt Is Named Chairman". Winnipeg Free Press. The Canadian Press. April 18, 1944. p. 13.; "Hewitt Chairman Of Shrine Board". The Winnipeg Tribune. April 19, 1944. p. 33.
- ^ "CAHA Heads Make Donation to Hockey's Hall of Fame". The Kingston Whig-Standard. The Canadian Press. April 17, 1945. p. 8.
- ^ "Nine for Ice Hall of Fame". Medicine Hat Daily News. The Canadian Press. May 3, 1945. p. 6.
- ^ "Six Builders of Hockey Added to Hall of Fame". Medicine Hat Daily News. The Canadian Press. October 17, 1945. p. 4.
- ^ "New Shrine Governors Are Named". The Winnipeg Tribune. January 31, 1948. p. 18.; "Incorporation of Hall of Fame Is Approved at Board Meeting". The Kingston Whig-Standard. January 31, 1948. p. 3.
- ^ "J. B. Garvin Now Heads Hall of Fame". The Kingston Whig-Standard. January 28, 1949. p. 2.; "J. B. Garvin Again Heads Hall of Fame". The Kingston Whig-Standard. March 11, 1950. p. 11.
List of members of the Hockey Hall of Fame
[edit]- updates the years of induction for builders on the list of members of the Hockey Hall of Fame (1945 to 1955?)
- see: Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Ice_Hockey#Years_of_induction_for_members_of_the_builder_category_in_1945_versus_1947
In 1941, the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) appointed a committee to write a history of hockey in Canada, led by James T. Sutherland, including W. A. Hewitt and Quebec hockey executive George Slater.[1][2] In 1943, the committee concluded that hockey had been played in Canada since 1855, and that Kingston and Halifax had equal claims to be the birthplace of hockey, since both cities hosted games played by the Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment. The report also stated that Kingston had the first recognized hockey league in 1885, which merged into the Ontario Hockey Association in 1890.[3][4] A delegation from Kingston then went to the CAHA general meeting in 1943, and was endorsed to establish a Hockey Hall of Fame in Kingston.[2]
In September 1943, Hewitt was named to the board of directors for selecting inductees into the Hockey Hall of Fame, and sought recommendations by sportswriters from The Canadian Press and the Associated Press.[5] He was named chairman and secretary of the board of governors in 1944,[6] and the CAHA agreed to donate 25 per cent of its profits from the 1945–46 season to help erect a building for the hall of fame.[7] In May 1945, Hewitt announced that nine players were the first group of inductees into the Hockey Hall of Fame.[8] In October 1945, a special committee chosen by the board of governors named six "builders of hockey" to be added to the inaugural group of inductees.[9]
The Hockey Hall of Fame committee was incorporated in 1948, and elected an additional seven to its board of governors to give representation to a broader area.[10] Hewitt remained on the board of governors until 1950.[11] By September 1955, a building for the hall of fame had not been constructed in Kingston, when a group of businessmen from Toronto were given approval for a hall of fame building which opened at Exhibition Place in Toronto in 1961. A separate International Hockey Hall of Fame later opened in Kingston in 1965.[2]
References2
[edit]- ^ "Officers of C.A.H.A. Re-elected at Tuesday Session of Annual Meeting of Body In Calgary". Lethbridge Herald. The Canadian Press. April 16, 1941. p. 18.
- ^ a b c Fitsell, Bill (January 4, 1986). "Captains, Colonels & Kings: Capt. James T. Sutherland – The Legend Maker". The Kingston Whig-Standard. p. 12.
- ^ Edwards, Charles (January 4, 1943). "Across Canada". Winnipeg Free Press. p. 13.
- ^ "Puck Problem!!! Kingston First With Hockey?". The Winnipeg Tribune. March 17, 1943. p. 14.
- ^ "Want Writers To Name Notables". Lethbridge Herald. The Canadian Press. September 27, 1943. p. 12.
- ^ "W. A. Hewitt Is Named Chairman". Winnipeg Free Press. The Canadian Press. April 18, 1944. p. 13.; "Hewitt Chairman Of Shrine Board". The Winnipeg Tribune. April 19, 1944. p. 33.
- ^ "CAHA Heads Make Donation to Hockey's Hall of Fame". The Kingston Whig-Standard. The Canadian Press. April 17, 1945. p. 8.
- ^ "Nine for Ice Hall of Fame". Medicine Hat Daily News. The Canadian Press. May 3, 1945. p. 6.
- ^ "Six Builders of Hockey Added to Hall of Fame". Medicine Hat Daily News. The Canadian Press. October 17, 1945. p. 4.
- ^ "New Shrine Governors Are Named". The Winnipeg Tribune. January 31, 1948. p. 18.; "Incorporation of Hall of Fame Is Approved at Board Meeting". The Kingston Whig-Standard. January 31, 1948. p. 3.
- ^ "J. B. Garvin Now Heads Hall of Fame". The Kingston Whig-Standard. January 28, 1949. p. 2.; "J. B. Garvin Again Heads Hall of Fame". The Kingston Whig-Standard. March 11, 1950. p. 11.
Miscellaneous
[edit]- follow up on User_talk:Flibirigit#Brampton_Steelheads, archive talk page
- revisit changes to CHL/NHL Top Prospects Game (a lot of clean up needed from new editors)
- follow up on changes at Don Cherry (see multiple talk page dicussions)
- input new travel research for Hanson Dowell, Don Johnson (sports executive), Joseph R. Byrne
- expand and implement CAHA navbox (see User:Flibirigit/sandbox1#CAHA navbox)
- write a prose section at player-coach including members of Category:Ice hockey player-coaches
Paul Loicq Award
[edit]Search foreign-language sources to update previously expanded biographies of Paul Loicq Award recipients.
- Russian: Vsevolod Kukushkin (16), Yuri Korolev (7)
Wolf-Dieter Montag
[edit]- update and introduce links to Wolf-Dieter Montag
- search Der Spiegel and Swiss newspaper archives
https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-province-wolf-dieter-montag/158692838/ The Province Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada • Sun, 23 April, 1989 Page 88 Carlyle beat odds TT News Agency
https://www.dgsp.de/news/1/458128/nachrichten/dgsp-trauert-um-dr.-med.-wolf-dieter-montag.html
Patrick Francheterre
[edit]- update and introduce links to Patrick Francheterre
- Google search "Patrick Francheterre" + "hockey" (French language in France, begin at page 3)
http://www.hockeyhebdo.com/interview-patrick-francheterre-et-pierre-dehaen,329.html
https://www.hockeyfrance.com/equipe-de-france/masculine/tous-les-entraineurs/
https://hockeyrouen.com/index.php?cat=composition&ID_Equipe=57&ID_Saison=24
https://www.bordeaux-gazette.com/Les-Boxers-glissent-un-peu-plus.html
http://www.hockeyhebdo.com/article-l-incroyable-destin-de-frank-fazilleau-,15865.html
https://www.hockeyarchives.info/memoires/monier.htm
- References
Newspaper citation updates
[edit]- copyedit additions to the baseball career section of Jackie McLeod (obtain copy of The Globe and Mail article?)
- fix citations added to United States Amateur Hockey Association (clip two newspapers from this edit and add proper citation templates)
- The New York Times available on newspapers.com from 1851-1922 (need papers from January 20, 1928, November 10, 1930). Search other newspapers for an equivalent Associated Press agency piece? (possibly Pittsburgh, where William S. Haddock lived)
Allan Cup Hockey
[edit]- updates to Allan Cup Hockey: wait until schedule is released in November? (help requested at User talk:Buffalkill)
- The Hamilton Steelers (ice hockey) became the Stoney Creek Tigers.[1][2][3]
- new team in Richmond Hill, Ontario for the 2024–25 season.[4][5]
British National League
[edit]- add sources to British National League (1996–2005)
- https://www.britishicehockey.co.uk/post/the-history-of-ice-hockey-in-england/
- https://www.hockeyarchives.info/archives.htm#a1901 (statistical archives)
- https://www.icehockeyannual.co.uk/history_of_british_ice_hockey.php (not an RS, but gives hints where to look)
IIHF honours
[edit]- research new IIHF honours for standalone articles
- The IIHF will introduce a new Media Award which will be presented annually to a member of print, television, or radio. The inaugural honouree is Al Michaels, whose famous call of "Do you believe in Miracles?" helped define the most important win in United States hockey history. The Historical Committee also voted to award the Milestone Award to the 1998 Czech Republic men's national ice hockey team that won Olympic gold.[1]
- search whether the new media award has an official name, does it meet GNG?
- search for other milestone awards, does it meet GNG?
References3
[edit]- ^ Podnieks, Andrew (15 January 2024). "IIHF names new Hall of Fame Class". International Ice Hockey Federation. Retrieved 12 May 2024.