Hall of Fame forward Elmer Lach dies at 97
He was not on the list.
Elmer Lach, a Hockey Hall of Fame member who won the Hart
Trophy in 1945 while centering the famous "Punch Line" with Maurice
Richard and Toe Blake, and helped the Montreal Canadiens win the Stanley Cup
three times, died Saturday at age 97, the Canadiens announced.
Lach was born in Nokomis, Saskatchewan, on Jan. 22, 1918. He
played 14 seasons in the NHL, all with Montreal, before retiring after the
1953-54 season. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1966.
"The National Hockey League deeply mourns the passing
of Elmer Lach -- center on Montreal's legendary 'Punch Line' with Toe Blake and
Maurice Richard, owner of the sole assist on Richard's 50th goal in 50 games in
1944-45 and someone who, at 97 years of age, was just a few months younger than
the League itself," NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said in a statement.
"The League sends heartfelt condolences to the family and friends of this
three-time Stanley Cup champion, two-time scoring champion and 1945 Hart Trophy
winner."
Lach had been the oldest living NHL player, according to The
Associated Press.
Early on he played for the Regina Abbotts, Weyburn Beavers and the Moose Jaw Millers.
He joined the Canadiens in 1940, but it wasn't until the
1943-44 season that coach Dick Irvin put him between Blake, a veteran left
wing, and Richard, a 22-year-old right wing trying to shake the tag of being
injury-prone. The line clicked instantly, providing the talent and toughness
that helped Montreal win the Stanley Cup in 1944 and 1946.
Lach's crowning individual achievement was winning the Hart
as the NHL's MVP in 1944-45. He finished with 26 goals and an NHL-record 54
assists for a League-leading 80 points in a 50-game season. Winning the Hart
was all the more impressive because he had to beat out Richard, his linemate,
who became the first player to score 50 goals in 50 games. The Punch Line's 220
combined points set an NHL record that lasted more than a decade.
When Lach won the scoring title again in 1947-48, one year
after he missed much of the season with a fractured skull, he was the first
recipient of the Art Ross Trophy, which is still given to the NHL's leading
regular-season scorer.
Lach scored the Cup-winning goal in 1953, but after several
injuries, he retired a year later. When he did, he was the League's all-time
leading scorer with 623 points (including 215 goals) in 664 games, all with
Montreal. He had 19 goals and 64 points in 76 Stanley Cup Playoff games.
Following his retirement, Lach was a prominent figure at
Canadiens games and events, as well as a successful businessman. As part of their
centennial celebration in 2009, the Canadiens retired Lach's No. 16, which had
been previously raised to the rafters in 1975 to honor one of his protégés,
Henri Richard.
"Every member of the Canadiens organization is
profoundly saddened and touched by the death of Mr. Lach," Canadiens
president Geoff Molson said. "Elmer Lach was a determined player who
enjoyed a great career with the Canadiens and who became an important part of
the community in Montreal. On behalf of the Molson family and all members of
the organization,
I offer my sincere condolences to the members of his
family."
Throughout Lach's retirement, he demonstrated the kind of
toughness that was a signature trait during his playing days, a period that saw
him break his nose seven times, crack his jaw twice, shatter his cheekbone and
sever two veins on a skate blade. In 2005, Lach, then 87, refused to
acknowledge any pain when he sustained a double fracture to his ankle. A month
after his 93rd birthday in 2011, Lach fell shoveling snow at his home in Pointe
Claire, Quebec, and broke his hip. He returned home 12 weeks later, joking with
Montreal Gazette sportswriter Dave Stubbs that "I was still breathing,
which was good.”
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