Misplaced Pages

Troy Bruins

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Troy Bruins were an International Hockey League team based in Troy, Ohio that played from 1951 to 1959 at the Hobart Arena . Notable players were Brian Kilrea and Larry King Kwong . Goaltender Bill Tibbs won the James Norris Memorial Trophy IHL for the fewest goals against during the 1955–1956 regular season.

#785214

28-614: The Bruins were relocated by owner Ken Wilson in 1959, and admitted to the Eastern Hockey League , to play as the Greensboro Generals in the recently built Greensboro Coliseum . For the 2008-2009 season, the ECHL 's Dayton Bombers wore special Troy Bruins throwback jerseys while playing six games at Hobart Arena , before auctioning them off for charity. This American ice hockey team-related article

56-455: A .486 winning percentage. In the 1967–68 season, Olmstead coached the expansion Oakland Seals , in the NHL. Olmstead did not last the full season, stepping aside after 64 games, having only won 11 games, with a .297 winning percentage. Known as "Dirty Bertie" because of his physical playing style, Olmstead was a power forward , making hard hits and winning battles in

84-503: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about a sports team in Ohio is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Ken Wilson (ice hockey) Kenneth Athol Wilson (July 23, 1923 – April 3, 2008) was a minor league hockey general manager and owner for forty years. He was born in Craik, Saskatchewan . His career as a manager spanned sixteen years in

112-559: The 1958 NHL Intra-League Draft by the Toronto Maple Leafs, and played there until his retirement in 1962. In the 1967–68 season, Olmstead served as coach of the expansion Oakland Seals . Olmstead played in the Stanley Cup Finals in 11 of his 14 seasons in the NHL, winning it five times. He won it four times with Montreal, in 1953, 1956, 1957, 1958, and once with Toronto, in 1962, which was his last season. He

140-829: The International Hockey League , five years in the Continental Hockey League and single seasons each in the National Hockey League , Western Hockey League and Eastern Hockey League . Wilson was known for identifying young talent; his players won league-wide Rookie of the Year awards seven times. Wilson played for the Mayfair Public School hockey team in Saskatoon , Saskatchewan . In 1937, Mayfair won

168-614: The New York Rangers claimed Olmstead in the Intra-League Draft on June 4, 1962. This came as a surprise to Olmstead, who refused to report to the team. The Canadiens offered to acquire him from the Rangers, within a month; Olmstead demanded an immediate trade. Since no deal came, he retired at the age of 35. During his 14-year NHL career, Olmstead scored 181 goals and 421 assists, for 602 points; in

196-577: The Stanley Cup for the first time. Earning 45 points in 69 games, he was named to the Second All-Star Team. In the last game of the season, Olmstead bodychecked Gordie Howe , stopping him from tying Maurice Richard's record of 50 goals in a season. Olmstead played all the 70 games in the next two seasons, scoring 52 and 58 points in the 1953–54 and 1954–55 seasons, respectively. The Canadiens lost to

224-634: The 1946–47 season, Olmstead joined the Pla-Mors, finishing the season with 42 points in 60 games. In 1948–49, the Canadiens, who had originally sponsored him and owned his rights, traded him to the Chicago Black Hawks . The same season, Olmstead made his NHL debut, called up after scoring 33 goals and 44 assists, for 77 points, in 52 games with the Pla-Mors. Debuting on Christmas Day 1948, he played nine games for

252-536: The 1985-1986 season. Wilson lived in Chandler, Arizona with his wife Betty, until his death in 2008. Bert Olmstead Murray Albert Olmstead (September 4, 1926 – November 16, 2015) was a Canadian professional ice hockey left winger who played for the Montreal Canadiens , Chicago Black Hawks and Toronto Maple Leafs in the National Hockey League (NHL). Olmstead began his career with

280-626: The Black Hawks and collected two assists. Olmstead played the entire following season for the Black Hawks, appearing in 70 games and scoring 20 goals. Olmstead split the 1950–51 season between four teams, playing for all but one of them. He began the season playing for the Black Hawks franchise, playing 15 games in the NHL and 12 in the USHL, for the Milwaukee Sea Gulls. On December 2, 1950, Olmstead, with Vic Stasiuk ,

308-477: The Black Hawks in 1949. In December 1950, he was traded to the Montreal Canadiens via Detroit. Olmstead had his best statistical years playing for Montreal, leading the league in assists in 1954–55 with 48, and setting a league record for assists with 56 the following season. During this time he frequently played on Montreal's top line with Jean Beliveau and Bernie Geoffrion . Olmstead was claimed in

SECTION 10

#1732786994786

336-626: The Canadiens lost the best-of-seven Stanley Cup Finals to the Toronto Maple Leafs in five games. Olmstead and the Canadiens appeared in the Stanley Cup Finals again in the 1951–52 season, losing to the Detroit Red Wings; after recording 35 points in 69 regular season games, Olmstead was limited to an assist in 11 playoff games. In his third season with the Canadiens, Olmstead won

364-601: The J.D. McDonald Cup for the Saskatoon public schools hockey championship, with Wilson playing from the centre and left-wing positions. In 1946, Wilson moved from Trail, British Columbia to Fort Worth, Texas to play for the Rangers in the United States Hockey League (1945-51) . In 1950, Wilson became the manager of the new Hobart Arena , in Troy, Ohio . As manager, Wilson booked and promoted many of

392-558: The Leafs went on a long winning streak in order to qualify for the playoffs, but they lost to the Canadiens in the finals. After losing in the Finals the next season, and falling short of the Finals the next season, Olmstead won his fifth and final Stanley Cup in 1962, missing two months of the season with a broken shoulder, and being limited to only four out of the 12 playoff games. Following his fifth Stanley Cup win, with Toronto,

420-725: The Red Wings once more in the Stanley Cup Finals, in both seasons. In the 1954–55 season, Olmstead led the league in assists, with 48, as Montreal lost another Stanley Cup Finals to Detroit. The 1955–56 season saw the start of Montreal's five consecutive Stanley Cup championships. In that season, Olmstead played on a line with Jean Béliveau and Bernie "Boom Boom" Geoffrion . He set a record for assists, with 56, and also scored eight points in game , recording four goals and four assists, tying Rocket Richard's record. This record would be broken in 1976 by Darryl Sittler , who scored six goals and four assists, for ten points. As well as winning

448-532: The Stanley Cup, Olmstead was again named to the Second All-Star Team. Olmstead won two more Stanley Cups in the 1956–57 and 1957–58 seasons. After the conclusion of the 1957–58 seasons, doctors informed him that he had no strength left in his knees, and that he should contemplate retirement. As a result of this prognosis, the Canadiens left Olmstead unprotected in the Intra-League Draft, and he

476-485: The corners. He was not a very good skater, and thus he had to compensate by bodychecking. Olmstead was not regularly involved in fights , but in the ones he participated, the majority were started with his hits. Olmstead was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1985. Olmstead, with his wife Nora, visited the town of Okotoks , Alberta on August 13, 2005, with the Stanley Cup. He had previously declined to spend

504-881: The end of the first season. Wilson was assistant manager of the Muskegon Mohawks in the IHL for two seasons, 1970–1971 and 1971-1972. In 1972 Wilson was hired as general manager by the Des Moines , Iowa franchise in the IHL . Feeling the franchise needed a new look and image, Wilson changed the name to the Des Moines Capitols . In 1973-1974, the Capitols won the Huber Trophy and the Turner Cup. This

532-479: The leading acts of the 1950s, including the first Ohio venue for Elvis Presley on November 24, 1956, Roy Rogers , Gene Autry , Nat King Cole , Tex Ritter , Sonja Henie , Victor Borge , Liberace , Guy Lombardo , and Patti Page . Starting in 1951 and for the next eight seasons, he owned and operated the IHL team Troy Bruins . Wilson spent the 1959-1960 hockey season as EHL Greensboro Generals ' general manager. For three seasons starting in 1960, Wilson

560-651: The playoff champions. In 1966, Wilson managed the Vancouver Canucks in the Western Hockey League . Bert Olmstead was the coach. In 1967 the National Hockey League expanded and Olmstead was hired as general manager and coach of the Oakland Seals after the June 7, 1967 NHL player draft. Olmstead hired Wilson to run a farm team the following season. The entire hockey staff was fired at

588-541: The playoffs, he collected 59 points, in 115 games. In his 14 seasons, Olmstead appeared in the Stanley Cup Finals 11 times. He won five times, four of them with the Montreal Canadiens, and once with the Toronto Maple Leafs. After retiring from playing, Olmstead attempted coaching. In the 1965–66 season, Olmstead coached the Vancouver Canucks, of the WHL; he finished with a 33–35–4 record, for

SECTION 20

#1732786994786

616-598: The series against the St. Michael's Majors . Olmstead had 10 goals and eight assists in the 17 playoff games he played. He played another season in Moose Jaw, before being assigned to the Kansas City Pla-Mors of the United States Hockey League (USHL) by the Chicago Black Hawks . Olmstead played three full seasons for Kansas City, and part of another, later in 1950, for the Milwaukee Sea Gulls. In

644-494: The time 50% of Peorians were employed directly or indirectly by Caterpillar. The strike lasted the entire first hockey season. The Prancers were never able to recover from the effects of the strike and folded after the 1983-1984 season. Wilson moved to Danville, Illinois and took over full-time duties for the Danville Dashers in the Continental Hockey League for the next two seasons. He retired from hockey following

672-528: Was claimed by Billy Reay , the head coach of the Canadiens' chief rival, the Toronto Maple Leafs . Early in the 1958–59 season, Punch Imlach , the assistant general manager of the Leafs, fired Reay, installed himself as head coach, and appointed Olmstead as the playing assistant coach. This meant that while Imlach coached the team during games, Olmstead was in charge of the practices; however, Olmstead only lasted three months as assistant coach, resigning to devote more time to improving his play. The same season,

700-624: Was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1985. Olmstead was born in Sceptre , Saskatchewan , a small village with a population of less than 200, in southwestern Saskatchewan. In 1944, at the age of 18, he moved to Moose Jaw , Saskatchewan, to play junior hockey. In his first year, Olmstead and the Moose Jaw Canucks challenged for the Memorial Cup , after finishing the playoffs with a 15–1 record. They were unsuccessful in

728-710: Was the general manager of the Omaha Knights in the IHL . In 1963, Wilson moved to Toledo, Ohio , where he owned and started the Toledo Blades in the IHL . Over the next three seasons, he served as general manager and as a mid-season replacement in 1966, as coach. In 1964, the Toledo Blades won the Fred A. Huber Trophy , awarded for "Most Points in the Regular Season' and the Turner Cup awarded to

756-732: Was the only season that a Des Moines-based IHL team finished first and won the playoffs. The Capitols disbanded in 1975. Wilson managed the Flint Generals in 1975-1976 and the Dayton Gems in 1976-1977. In 1981, Wilson formed a group of investors to establish an IHL team in Peoria, Illinois . The Peoria Prancers began play in the 1982-1983 season. After years of good labor relations, the United Auto Workers went on strike against Caterpillar Inc. on October 1, 1982. At

784-561: Was traded to the Detroit Red Wings , in exchange for Lee Fogolin and Steve Black . On December 19, 1950, 17 days after the trade to Detroit, he was traded again, without ever suiting up for the Red Wings, to Montreal, for Leo Gravelle . Olmstead would never leave the NHL until his retirement in 1962, playing 39 games that season on a line with Maurice Richard and Elmer Lach , scoring 38 points. Olmstead also appeared in 11 playoff games, collecting six points, as

#785214