Jack Marshall
Hockey Hall of Fame, 1965
Born (1877-03-14)March 14, 1877
St. Vallier, Quebec, Canada
Died August 7, 1965(1965-08-07) (aged 88)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada[1]
Height 5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Weight 160 lb (73 kg; 11 st 6 lb)
Position Centre/Defence
Shot Right[2]
Played for Montreal Wanderers
Toronto Blueshirts
Montreal Shamrocks
Toronto Professionals
Winnipeg Victorias
Winnipeg Hockey Club
Playing career 18981917

John Calder Marshall (March 14, 1877 – August 7, 1965) was a Canadian ice hockey player. Marshall played for the Winnipeg Victorias, Montreal HC, Montreal Shamrocks, Montreal Wanderers, Toronto Pros and Toronto Blueshirts. Marshall was a member of six Stanley Cup championship teams for four clubs. He won his first Stanley Cup in 1901 with Winnipeg Victorias. He then joined the Montreal HC and won two more Cups in 1902 and 1903. He also won the Stanley Cup with Montreal Wanderers in 1907 and 1910. Marshall won his sixth and final Cup as a player-manager with the Toronto Blueshirts in 1914.

Marshall was the first player to win six Stanley Cup titles. He was also the first player to win the Stanley Cup while playing for four clubs. His teammate on the 1914 Stanley Cup winning Toronto Blueshirts, goalie Hap Holmes, tied the record in 1925 while backstopping the Victoria Cougars to a Stanley Cup victory.[3] Marshall was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1965.[1]

Playing career

Born in Saint-Vallier, Quebec, south-east of Quebec City, Marshall moved to Montreal and played high school hockey for Pointe-Saint-Charles, starting in 1894. In 1898, he made the jump to senior level play when he moved out west and started play with the Winnipeg Hockey Club intermediates,[4] and later with the Winnipeg Victorias. He played with the Victorias until 1901, winning the Stanley Cup in a challenge with the Montreal Shamrocks.

After the season, he moved back home and joined the Montreal Hockey Club. As one of the "Little Men of Iron", the club won the Stanley Cup in 1902 and 1903. Along with several other players of the club, he left in 1903 to form the new Montreal Wanderers. He played two seasons with the Wanderers before he moved to Toronto. In 1905–06, he played with the new Toronto Professionals in exhibition play. In 1906, he returned to Montreal, and he played for the Montreal Montagnards in 1907, joining the Wanderers after the Montagnards disbanded. The Wanderers won the ECAHA title that season and successfully defended their Stanley Cup championship of 1906 in challenges.

However, Marshall did not stay with the club beyond that season. He moved to the Montreal Shamrocks and played two seasons for the Shamrocks before returning to the Wanderers for the 1910 NHA season. He helped the Wanderers to another Stanley Cup win that season, the club's last in its history. He stayed with the organization until 1912, when he returned to Toronto to join the new Toronto Hockey Club team. After Bruce Ridpath retired as manager in 1913, Marshall took on the responsibility while continuing to play for the team. He would win another Stanley Cup with the Torontos in 1914. The following season was cut short due to appendicitis and he only played four games. In all, he played three seasons for the Torontos before he returned to the Wanderers in 1915 for two seasons, before retiring from hockey in 1917.

Marshall died in Montreal on August 7, 1965, aged 88.[5]

Playing style

Jack Marshall was a strong all-round player, and over the course of his career he tried out almost every position the seven-man game had to offer. During his junior years in Pointe-Saint-Charles in Montreal, beginning in 1894, he started out as a goaltender. Although he was a right-handed shot he would later play on the left wing with the Winnipeg Victorias in the Manitoba Hockey Association, because the team lacked adequate enough left-handed options. With the Montreal Wanderers he first played as a centre forward, and in the second half of his career as a defenceman.[6] He also played occasionally at right wing and as a rover.

In the January 21, 1901 issue of the Winnipeg Tribune Marshall was described as "not a big man physically" but "solidly built, tough and enduring." The newspaper also remarked that he played "a neat speedy and cool-headed game, very free from fouls or off-sides" and that he "is an excellent shot on goal and can supply the place of any man on the forward line who may get hurt."[4]

Outside of hockey Marshall was also prominent in basketball, and he also played soccer and rugby football.[6]

Career statistics

Jack Marshall, fourth from left in the back row, with the 1913–14 Toronto Blueshirts.
    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GPGAPtsPIM GPGAPtsPIM
1899–1900 Winnipeg Hockey Club MHA Int
1900–01 Winnipeg Victorias MHA
1900–01 Winnipeg Victorias St-Cup 2000
1901–02 Montreal HC CAHL 8110118
1901–02 Montreal HC St-Cup 32028
1902–03 Montreal HC CAHL 28083
1902–03 Montreal HC St-Cup 47072
1903–04 Montreal Wanderers FAHL 4110116
1903–04 Montreal Wanderers St-Cup 11010
1904–05 Montreal Wanderers FAHL 8170179
1906–07 Montreal Montagnards FAHL 36060
1906–07 Montreal Wanderers ECAHA 36060
1906–07 Montreal Wanderers St-Cup 11010
1907–08 Montreal Shamrocks ECAHA 92002013
1908–09 Montreal Shamrocks ECHA 121001014
1909–10 Montreal Wanderers NHA 122028
1909–10 Montreal Wanderers St-Cup 10000
1910–11 Montreal Wanderers NHA 51012
1911–12 Montreal Wanderers NHA 30000
1912–13 Toronto Blueshirts NHA 153038
1913–14 Toronto Blueshirts NHA 2033616 20000
1913–14 Toronto Blueshirts St-Cup 31012
1914–15 Toronto Blueshirts NHA 40118
1915–16 Montreal Wanderers NHA 151012
1916–17 Montreal Wanderers NHA 80003
ECAHA/ECHA totals 243603627
NHA totals 801041447 20000
St-Cup totals 1512012

Awards and achievements

  • Scored six goals in a game versus Ottawa on January 20, 1904
  • Scored five goals in a game twice, both versus Montreal, on December 29, 1908, and February 8, 1909.
  • Stanley Cup Championships (1901, 1902, 1903, 1907, 1910, & 1914)
  • Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1965

References

  1. 1 2 Hockey Hall of Fame 2003, p. 69.
  2. "Casual Close-Ups – Another angle on the all-star business" Montreal Gazette, Dec. 7, 1939 (pg. 14)
  3. "Players on Stanley-Cup Winning Teams". National Hockey League. Retrieved April 13, 2010.
  4. 1 2 "Stanley Cup team goes east today" – "Mr. J. C. Marshall" Winnipeg Tribune, Jan. 24, 1901 (pg. 7). Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  5. "Jack Marshall Dead At 88" The Gazette (Montreal). (pg. 23). Retrieved 2020-10-27.
  6. 1 2 "Turning Back Hockey's Pages" D. A. L. MacDonald. Montreal Gazette. Feb. 13, 1934 (pg. 14). Retrieved 2021-05-08.
General
  • Coleman, Charles (1966). The Trail of the Stanley Cup, vol. 1, 1893–1926 inc. National Hockey League.
  • Hockey Hall of Fame (2003). Honoured Members: Hockey Hall of Fame. Bolton, Ontario: Fenn Publishing. ISBN 1-55168-239-7.
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