Saturday, November 1, 2008

november 1, 1924

On this day in 1924, the Boston Bruins became the first American team to join the NHL. While I am not an American, I am obviously pleased to celebrate this event, and can see the significance in the larger fabric of NHL history.

The Bruins joined the league and played their first game against the Montreal Maroons, winning 2-1. The Bruins would then go on to a truly dismal 6-24 record, showing that it was tough being a Bruins fan, even in the ‘20s.

Interestingly, the arena that the Maroons played in stood directly across the street from my old house, on avenue Mont-Royal, au coin de St-Urbain. The space is now occupied by an enormous and crass grocery store, but if you are shopping for produce and look up, you can see two seats from the original Maroons arena. These seats serve as a small reminder of the historic legacy of hockey in this town, but also an ominous indication of the role that business has always played in the NHL.

Happy 84th Birthday, Bruins.

4 comments:

vulcanized rubber ovalroaster said...

Ouch, that nasty grocery store was once a hallowed hall of hockey history? Next time I'm passing by, I'll have to pop in and check out the old arena seats you say are in there. Great work. Better writing than, well... anything hockey-related.

The Editor said...

yeah, from the montreal maroons to just feeling marooned in that crazy warehouse of food. talk about 'all lost in the supermarket'.

thanks for the post, and props.

Stéfan Popović said...

Very interesting bit of history. Wow 6-24 that's an awesomely bad record... But their first logo was cool enough that it must have soothed the Bostonians' embarrassment to have such a stylish team.

The Editor said...

i've played on some teams where a 6 & 24 record would be considered a success.

but yeah, i just looooove that original b's logo. have it on a ball cap, and for the most part, i don't have stuff thrown at me when i wear it around montreal (as opposed to when i wear something with the spoked-b logo).

thanks for the comment, mans.