词条 | 1913–14 Ottawa Senators season | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
Season=1913–14| year=1913| League=NHA| LeagueRank=4th| Record=11–9–0| HomeRecord=7–3–0| RoadRecord=4–6–0| GeneralManager=Percy Lesueur |Arena=The Arena| GAALeader=Clint Benedict (3.3)| GoalsLeader=Jack Darragh (22)| GoalsFor=65| GoalsAgainst=71| Team=Ottawa Senators| Coach=Alf Smith }} The 1913–14 Ottawa Senators season was the 29th season of the Ottawa Hockey Club, sixth season of the National Hockey Association (NHA). Ottawa placed fourth in the NHA, and did not qualify for the playoffs. Team businessThe team signed a two-year deal to return to the Arena. The team was the prime tenant, with games on Wednesdays and Saturdays, and practice time on Tuesdays and Thursdays and more time if needed.[1] The season was profitable for the club. Receipts were recorded as $25,000, allowing the club to pay off a $4,000 debt from the previous season and record a $3,000 surplus.[2] Pre-seasonLichtenhein of the Wanderers offered to sell Harry Hyland to Ottawa for $1,500, but was turned down.[3] The team sold the contracts of Fred Lake, Joe Dennison and Clint Benedict to the Toronto Ontarios.[4] Although there was doubt the players would report, Lake and Dennison played for the Ontarios while Benedict returned to the Senators. Allan Wilson was signed as a free agent away from the Maritime Hockey League. A deal was made to ship Skene Ronan to Vancouver for Carl Kendall but Ronan refused to go and turned down all offers from the Vancouver owners. Regular seasonHighlightsOttawa put together a seven-game winning streak but it was not enough as the Canadiens, Toronto and Quebec placed ahead of Ottawa. Percy LeSueur played well in a splitting of the goaltender duties with Clint Benedict, but the team did not have enough offence, scoring only 65 goals in 20 games. Final standings{{1913–14 NHA standings |team=OTT}}Schedule and results
Goaltending averages
Scoring leaders
PlayoffsThe Senators did not qualify for the playoffs. The Vancouver Millionaires came east for exhibition games, playing in Ottawa on March 7, 1914, defeating Ottawa 7–3 with former Ottawa star Fred Taylor excelling for Vancouver.[5] Roster
Source: Kitchen, pp. 344–345 See also
References1. ^{{cite news |work=Ottawa Citizen |date=November 14, 1913 |title=Ottawas Sign To Play At Arena; Two Year Contract Has Been Closed |page=9 |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=oGouAAAAIBAJ&sjid=TdkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=7114%2C1274736}} 2. ^{{cite news |work=The Globe |location=Toronto |date=April 2, 1914 |title=Ottawa Club Had Best Season Of Its Career |page=13}} 3. ^{{cite news |work=Daily Telegraph |date=December 19, 1913 |title=Want To Sell Hyland |page=11}} 4. ^{{cite news |work=Montreal Gazette |date=November 10, 1913 |title=Ontarios Buy Players |page=18 |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=wIguAAAAIBAJ&sjid=PIEFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2780%2C1146042}} 5. ^{{cite news |work=The Globe |date=March 9, 1914 |page=11 |title="Cyclone" Fred Taylor Toyed with Ottawa}}
last=Coleman |first=Charles |title=The Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol. 1, 1893–1926 inc. |year=1966 |publisher=NHL }}
2 : 1913–14 in Canadian ice hockey by team|Ottawa Senators (original) seasons |
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