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Gerry McNeil : ウィキペディア英語版
Gerry McNeil

Gerald George McNeil (April 17, 1926 – June 17, 2004) was a professional ice hockey goaltender who won two Stanley Cups with the Montreal Canadiens in the 1950s.
Gerald “Gerry” McNeil was a professional hockey player who career spanned 1943-60. Born to Peter McNeil and Rose Dyotte (dit Gyotte) in 1926, he led the Montreal Canadiens (NHL) to the Stanley Cup Finals all four seasons (1950 to ’54) in which he was their number one goalie. (This stretch was the first four of ten consecutive appearances in the Cup Finals for the Habs, 1951-60.) He won the Cup with a shutout in overtime in 1953, the night before his 27th birthday. McNeil first signed with the Canadiens in 1943 when he was only 17, and while playing with their farm team, the Montreal Royals, he practiced with the Habs whenever they were in Montreal. (Teams dressed only one goalie for games at this time but obviously need two for scrimmages.) The Royals were part of the Quebec Senior Hockey League (QSHL). McNeil won the Byng of Vimy award for the most valuable player three times in the QSHL, and the Royals won the Allen Cup (the national championship for Canadian senior hockey) in 1947.〔Charles Halpin, “Royals McNeil Unanimous Choice on Third Gazette All-Star Squad,” The Gazette 12 Mar. 1949: 21. See also The Goaltender Homepage, http://www.hockeygoalies.org/bio/mcneil.html “Our History: The Historical Website of the Montreal Canadiens.” http://ourhistory.canadiens.com/player/Gerry-McNeil, and “Hockey DB.com.” http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php?pid=3627. Accessed 27 Feb. 2012.〕

McNeil was called up from Cincinnati in March 1950 when Bill Durnan was hit in the head with a skate blade. Goalies did not wear masks at the time and were expected to play every minute of every game. McNeil recorded a 1.50 GAA (goals against average) over six games and preserved Durnan’s sixth and final Vezina Trophy (then awarded to the goalie of the team with the fewest goals against). This rookie performance earned him “the Schaefer player of the week” award.〔“National League,” The Hockey News 18 Mar. 1950: 9.〕 Durnan returned but felt he had lost his edge, so he announced that he would not suit up for a playoff game against the Rangers. At first McNeil refused to take what he considered to be “Bill’s spot,” so Durnan was asked to talk to his understudy in a private part of the Forum dressing room. Both men shed tears, as the “torch” was passed down. McNeil then succeeded Durnan as the Habs goalie.〔D’Arcy Jenish, The Montreal Canadiens: 100 Years of Glory (Toronto: Doubleday, 2008), 126–27.〕

McNeil actually played every game for the Habs from March 1950 to November 1952 (this streak included two entire 70-game seasons, 1950–51 and 1951–52). In the ’51 playoffs, McNeil went 214 minutes of shutout hockey against the powerful Red Wings in a stretch that included two marathon overtime games—both at the Detroit Olympia. Thirty eight of his sixty two saves in Game One were made in extra time, a performance that prompted Jack Adams, the manager of the Red Wings, to remark, “It was like running into one-hit pitching your first time out. The greatest goalkeeping this team ever faced.”〔Quoted by Brian Kendall, Shutout: The Legend of Terry Sawchuk (Toronto: Penguin Books, 1996), 42.〕 The Canadiens managed to win both games on overtime goals by Maurice Richard and a stellar performance by McNeil, who was dubbed by the Detroit press, “the magician.”〔Paul Chandler, “League’s Ignored Goalie is Magician,“ The Detroit News 28 Mar. 1951: 57.〕 When the Canadiens went on to eliminate the heavily favored Red Wings, their coach, Tommy Ivan, remarked, “Gerry McNeil was the difference. He was terrific in their net.”〔Quoted by Dink Carroll, “Playing the Field,” The Gazette 9 Apr. 1951: 22.〕
McNeil recorded 10 shutouts in the 1952-53 season. He had to be good for the Habs to succeed since they only scored 155 goals in 70 games (or 2.21 GPG). The last game of the regular season was against Detroit at the Olympia, and with 49 goals, Gordie Howe was set to match and perhaps beat Richard’s record of 50 in a season (actually 50 in 50 games in 1943-44). Howe had five shots against McNeil that night but he couldn’t beat the Hab goalie who was heard telling Richard when the game ended, “well Rock, he’ll have to start over at one again.”〔Quoted in Dick Irvin, The Habs: An Oral History of the Montreal Canadiens, 1940-80 (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1992), 94.〕 McNeil’s Stanley Cup victory a few weeks later was immortalized in Wayne Johnston’s novel, The Divine Ryans.〔See Wayne Johnston, The Divine Ryans (Toronto: Vintage, 1990), 152–56.〕
McNeil is the only NHL goalie to have been involved in three Stanley Cup winning overtime games (and all three victories came on home ice). The win in 1953 came at the Forum. In 1951 he lost when Bill Barilko pinched in from the blue line and scored from a scramble. The 1951 Finals remain the only best-of-seven series in which every game had to be decided in overtime. Barilko’s goal became famous due to the Turofsky picture (see below) and the fact that Barilko would die in a small-plane accident the following summer. In 1954 McNeil suffered another overtime loss; this time in game seven when the puck was deflected past him by his teammate Doug Harvey. He retired that summer but returned to professional hockey a year later, filling in for an asthmatic Plante at the beginning of the 1956-57 season.
McNeil was a notorious prankster.〔See Mike Wyman, “A Master Prankster: McNeil Legend Lives On,” The Hockey News, Collector’s Edition Fall, 2005: 153.〕 Once he impersonated a teammate and went to the front desk of the hotel to say that he was on a special medication that had to be taken every hour on the hour—“keep calling my room throughout the night no matter how angry I get.” The player in question could barely keep his eyes open during the team meeting the following morning.
After sitting out the 1954-55 season, McNeil returned to professional hockey with the Montreal Royals and then played two seasons with the Rochester Americans before finishing his professional career where he was born, Quebec City. Perfectly bilingual, McNeil, whose paternal Quebec roots can be traced back to 1779, always felt part of the Canadiens’ family. Aside from a year in Cincinnati and two more in Rochester, he lived his entire life in the province of his birth, the last forty years in Montreal where he was a regular participant at Canadien oldtimer and alumni events.
McNeil was known to play his best when it mattered most. He finished his NHL career with a 2.32 GAA for the regular season and a 1.89 in the playoffs (268 games). He appeared in three All Star games (1951, ‘52 and ’53) and posted a 2.00 GAA. His 28 regular season shutouts earned him an NHL Milestone Award in 1982.
McNeil was married to Theresa Conway (1927–2009) for 58 years, and the couple had four children (six grandchildren). After retiring from hockey, McNeil worked as a sales representative for a number of organizations. His last position was regional sales manager for Thomas Adams, a Seagram’s company. He spent a number of winters in Panama City Beach with his hockey buddies: Elmer Lach, Kenny Mosdell and Maurice Richard. He joined the first two as pall-bearers at Richard’s funeral in May 2000 and died himself of cancer in 2004.〔See David Naylor, “NHL Goalie Made Hockey History” The Globe and Mail 26 July 2004: R5.〕
==Career statistics==


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