Hall, ironman goaltender with record 502 consecutive starts, dies at 94
Hall of Famer won Vezina Trophy 3 times, along with Conn Smythe and Calder in 18-year career
He was number 355 on the list.
Glenn Hall, a member of the Hockey Hall of Fame whose streak of 502 consecutive starts by a goaltender – 552 including Stanley Cup Playoffs – is among the most untouchable records in sports, died Wednesday in a Stony Plain, Alberta hospital. He was 94.
Hall spent 10 of his 18 NHL seasons with the Chicago Black Hawks -- the team's name was then two words -- with whom he won the Stanley Cup in 1961 and earned the nickname "Mr. Goalie." He finished his NHL career with a record of 407-326-164, a 2.50 goals-against average and 84 shutouts, his shutout total ranking fourth all-time in the NHL.
"Glenn Hall was the very definition of what all hockey goaltenders aspire to be. Aptly nicknamed 'Mr. Goalie,' Glenn was sturdy, dependable, and a spectacular talent in net," said NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman in a statement. "He set the bar for consistency with a goaltending ironman record of 502 consecutive regular-season games played for the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks. That record, set from 1955-56 to 1962-63, still stands, probably always will, and is almost unfathomable – especially when you consider he did it all without a mask.
"Glenn was a true star, whose career was filled with accomplishment and accolades. From the moment he stepped foot in an NHL crease, Hall excelled. He won the Calder Trophy with the Red Wings, earned every win for the Blackhawks in their run to the 1961 Stanley Cup, and captured a Conn Smythe Trophy despite losing in the Final with the St. Louis Blues. A seven-time, first-team NHL All-Star – an honor bestowed on him more than any other goalie – Hall is an honored member of the Hockey Hall of Fame and was selected as one of the NHL’s 100 Greatest Players.
"The National Hockey League family mourns the passing of a legend of the game and sends our heartfelt condolences to Glenn’s children Pat, Lindsay, Tammy, and Leslie as well as the entire Hall family."
Many of Hall's heroics came after he was mildly sick to his stomach with nervous energy before the start of a game.
"I always felt I played better if I was sick before the
game," he once said, stories of his illness often greatly exaggerated.
"If I wasn't sick, I felt I hadn't done everything I could to try to
win."
Black Hawks teammate Ed Litzenberger would spin the nickname "Mr. Goalie" into "Ghoulie" for Hall's ghostly white complexion before a game.
Born Oct. 3, 1931, in Humboldt, Saskatchewan, from where his minor hockey career took him to the Ontario major-junior Windsor Spitfires from 1949-51, Hall spent the better part of four seasons in the minor leagues.
He toiled with the Indianapolis Capitals (1951-52) and Edmonton Flyers (1952-55) of the Western Hockey League before becoming the Detroit Red Wings' starter in 1955-56 season, following Terry Sawchuk's trade to the Boston Bruins.
Hall made his NHL debut against the Canadiens at the
Montreal Forum on Dec. 27, 1952, frantically summoned from the Western Hockey
League's Edmonton Flyers during the Christmas break.
At home in Humboldt, Hall received a telegram from Flyers GM Bud Poile.
"Tried to phone," Poile's wire began. "You are to catch Flight No. 10 out of Saskatoon 3:45 a.m. 26th of December for Montreal. Sawchuk is hurt and Detroit are bringing you up. I will have your equipment on the plane. ..."
Sawchuk had taken a shot in the foot in practice, breaking a bone in his instep, and the urgent call went to the club's primary affiliate to fetch a replacement for the one-goalie parent team. Hall stuffed the telegram in his bag and was driven 70 miles from Humboldt to Saskatoon for his flight to Montreal.
Somehow, his equipment never caught up. Hall arrived at the Forum a few hours before the 8:15 p.m. face-off searching in vain for his duffel bag.
Red Wings trainer Ross "Lefty" Wilson played goal
in practices for Detroit, giving Sawchuk a break. Three times during the 1950s
– against the Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs, and once for the Boston Bruins
against his own club – Wilson would be pressed into emergency fill-in duty.
So, it was Wilson to whom Hall turned that night in Montreal, a nervous 21-year-old borrowing his trainer's awful equipment and dull skates. Despite all of that, he was excellent in a 2-2 tie, playing five more games – four wins and a tie – before Sawchuk returned and Hall was shipped back to the minors.
Hall finished his 1955-56 NHL rookie season with a .925 save percentage, 2.10 goals-against average, and 12 shutouts, winning the Calder Trophy as the NHL's top rookie. He was named a First-Team All-Star for the first of a record seven times.
But after a 38-win season in 1956-57, Hall was on the move; he was shipped to the Black Hawks on July 23, 1957, packaged with Red Wings superstar Ted Lindsay in exchange for Chicago goalie Hank Bassen and skaters Johnny Wilson, Forbes Kennedy and Bill Preston.
By then, Hall had started and finished 140 consecutive regular-season games. He didn't miss a second of action during his first five seasons with Chicago, a stretch in which he was a First-Team or Second-Team All-Star four times and sparked the Black Hawks to the Stanley Cup in 1961, ending the Canadiens' unprecedented run of five consecutive championships.
The streak lasted until back problems forced him to leave a
game on Nov. 7, 1962 and sit out Chicago's next game on Nov. 10.
Amazingly, he did it all without a mask; Hall didn't use one until late in his career with the St. Louis Blues.
"Our first priority was staying alive," he told Sports Illustrated in 1992. "Our second was stopping the puck."
Hall would be the pioneering grandfather of the butterfly style of goaltending that became the standard years after he retired, further developed by Chicago's Tony Esposito and Patrick Roy of the Canadiens. He would drop to his knees, spread his legs to take away the bottom of the net and rely on his gloves to deal with high shots.
Hall was 35 when the Black Hawks made him available in the 1967 NHL Expansion Draft. He was snapped up by the Blues on June 6 and talked out of a planned retirement to help the first-year team reach the Stanley Cup Final.
Although the Canadiens swept the series, Hall was voted the 1968 Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP, the second player from the losing team – Detroit goalie Roger Crozier the first in 1966 – to be so recognized.
He teamed with another veteran, Jacques Plante, to get the
Blues back to the Final in each of the next two seasons, winning his third
Vezina Trophy (1962-63, 1966-67) when he shared it with Plante in 1968-69.
Hall hung up his pads after going 13-11-8 with a 2.42 goals-against average in 1970-71. He still owns the record for goaltenders by being voted to the First-Team All-Star seven times, the last as a 37-year-old with the Blues in 1968-69.
After his playing days were done, Hall spent most of his time at his farm in Stony Plain, land he had purchased in 1965. The town's arena was named in his honor for Canada's Centennial year in 1967.
Elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1975, his name was etched on the Stanley Cup three times: in 1951-52 (though he never played a game that season as an occasional practice goalie for Detroit), misspelled Glin Hall, which later was changed to Glen Hall, an "n" missing; with Chicago in 1960-61; and with the 1988-89 Calgary Flames, for whom he worked as the team's goaltending consultant.
Hall was featured with a 2002 Canada Post stamp and
medallion, voted among the 100 Greatest NHL Players during the League's
Centennial in 2017 and in 2023, was elected to the St. Louis Blues Hall of
Fame. His life has recently been celebrated in the award-winning feature-length
documentary film "Mr. Goalie," which premiered last October in
Windsor, Ontario, where he played his junior hockey.
After finishing his junior years playing for the Humboldt
Indians and the Windsor Spitfires, he signed with the Detroit Red Wings in
1949.
October 3,
1931
Humboldt, Saskatchewan, Canada
Died January 7, 2026
(aged 94)
Stony Plain, Alberta, Canada
Height 5 ft 11 in (180
cm)
Weight 190 lb (86 kg;
13 st 8 lb)
Position Goaltender
Caught Left
Played for
Detroit Red Wings
Chicago Black Hawks
St. Louis Blues
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA SV% GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1947–48 Humboldt
Indians N-SJHL 5 5 0 0 300 17 0 3.40 — 2 0 2 120 15 0 7.50 —
1948–49 Humboldt
Indians N-SJHL 24 13 9 2 1420 86 1 3.63 — 7 3 4 420 36 0 5.14 —
1949–50 Windsor
Spitfires OHA-Jr. 43 31 11 1 2580 152 0 3.53 — 11 6 5 660 37 0 3.36 —
1950–51 Windsor
Spitfires OHA-Jr. 54 32 18 4 3240 167 6 3.09 — 8 — — 480 30 0 3.75 —
1951–52 Indianapolis
Capitals AHL 68 22 40 6 4190 272 0 3.89 — — — — — — — — —
1952–53 Edmonton
Flyers WHL 63 27 27 9 3780 207 2 3.29 — 15 10 5 905 53 0 3.51 —
1952–53 Detroit
Red Wings NHL 6 4 1 1 360 10 1 1.67 .931 — — — — — — — —
1953–54 Edmonton
Flyers WHL 70 29 30 11 4200 259 0 3.70 — 13 7 6 783 44 2 3.37 —
1954–55 Edmonton
Flyers WHL 66 38 18 10 3960 187 5 2.83 — 16 11 5 1000 43 1 2.58 —
1954–55 Detroit
Red Wings NHL 2 2 0 0 120 2 0 1.00 .967 — — — — — — — —
1955–56 Detroit
Red Wings NHL 70 30 24 16 4200 147 12 2.10 .921 10 5 5 604 28 0 2.78 .908
1956–57 Detroit
Red Wings NHL 70 38 20 12 4200 156 4 2.23 .926 5 1 4 300 15 0 3.00 .884
1957–58 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 70 24 39 7 4200 200 7 2.86 .908 — — — — — — — —
1958–59 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 70 28 29 13 4200 208 1 2.97 .897 6 2 4 360 21 0 3.50 .909
1959–60 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 70 28 29 13 4200 180 6 2.57 .917 4 0 4 249 14 0 3.37 .892
1960–61 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 70 29 24 17 4200 176 6 2.51 .920 12 8 4 772 26 2 2.02 .936
1961–62 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 70 31 26 13 4200 185 9 2.64 .913 12 6 6 720 31 2 2.58 .924
1962–63 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 66 30 20 15 3910 166 5 2.55 .916 6 2 4 360 25 0 4.17 .896
1963–64 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 65 34 19 11 3860 148 7 2.30 .930 7 3 4 408 22 0 3.24 .889
1964–65 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 41 18 17 5 2440 99 4 2.43 .920 13 7 6 760 28 1 2.21 .925
1965–66 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 64 31 24 7 3747 164 4 2.63 .914 6 2 4 347 22 0 3.80 .874
1966–67 Chicago
Black Hawks NHL 32 19 5 5 1664 66 2 2.38 .920 3 1 2 176 8 0 2.73 .923
1967–68 St.
Louis Blues NHL 49 19 21 9 2858 118 5 2.48 .912 18 8 10 1111 45 1 2.43 .916
1968–69 St.
Louis Blues NHL 41 19 12 8 2354 85 8 2.17 .928 3 0 2 131 5 0 2.29 .931
1969–70 St.
Louis Blues NHL 18 7 8 3 1010 49 1 2.91 .904 7 4 3 421 21 0 2.99 .907
1970–71 St.
Louis Blues NHL 31 13 11 8 1761 71 2 2.42 .917 3 0 3 180 9 0 3.00 .864
NHL totals 906 407 326 162 53,544 2,230 84 2.49 .917 115 49 65 6,899 320 6 2.78 .911

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