Bloody Rivalries Are Born

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Early hockey fights could be brutally dangerous, and the Blueshirts’ brawls were no different.

Many of their most vicious bouts featured familiar rivals for Toronto hockey fans: the Ottawa Senators and Montreal Canadiens. When the Senators came to town in 1915, several fights broke out – one so violent that Toronto’s Roy McGiffen and Ottawa’s Art Ross were arrested, released on $100 bail, and fined $1 plus costs. The following year the Canadiens paid a visit to Toronto, and a Montreal player assaulted Blueshirts’ right-winger Alf Skinner, which led to another arrest. Skinner himself was arrested two years later following a fight with the Canadiens’ Joe Hall. After several players died in the wake of on-ice brawls, some called for hockey to be banned entirely.

 

An article excerpt from the Ottawa Journal on February 18, 1915 describing the hockey game outcome between Toronto and Ottawa as well as the brawl between Mciffin and Ross. Sourced from Newspapers.com.
An article excerpt from the Ottawa Journal on February 18, 1915 describing the hockey game outcome between Toronto and Ottawa as well as the brawl between Mciffin and Ross. Sourced from Newspapers.com.

 

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