David B. Purvis's NHL Hockey Fan Profile

Profile photo

Profile photo

Brief description

Hockey Expert

Who am I?

Husband, Father and Grandfather, retired autoworker, 53 years old

Interests

History, Hockey, Hockey History, Music and Alcohol

Company / Institution

Chrysler Canada Limited

Main Skills

English, Hockey Knowledge, Parenting

David B. Purvis's comment wall

David B. Purvis
Thursday 30th April 2009, 3:14pm
Watch for my next blog, complete with mystery question!!!
David B. Purvis
Monday 27th April 2009, 12:55pm
Stay tuned to this site for interesting hockey stories and trivia!!

David B. Purvis's Weblog Posts


STANLEY CUP posted on 05/01/2009

      Nova Scotia also claims to have had the first hockey game played at King's College near Windsor Nova Scotia. The game was popular there and spread to places like Kingston Ontario and Montreal Quebec, and every town and village in between and soon spread to the Western Provinces of Canada. Women also loved to play, and even the daughter of Lord Stanley Preston, Isobel, played for Government House as early as 1889. Another team was the Rideau Ladies Hockey Team while out west a prominant player was Annie McIntyre, well known across the Prairies as a star player. Soon special padding was developed for goaltenders and rules were fine tuned, with leagues like the NHA and PCHA. The very first Stanley Cup match was played between the Montreal AAAs and the Ottawa Capitals.

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HOCKEY PIONEERS posted on 04/30/2009
   The early days of hockey featured games on frozen rivers, lakes and ponds. Skates were crude and player's padding as we know it was non-existant, and they used sticks fashioned from tree branches, often from hornbeam trees which is also known as ironwood. Leather skates with  better blades appeared in the 1860's. One of the first games took place on March 3, 1875 in Montreal with nine players per team competing for a wooden puck. No forward passes were allowed and the rules were much similar to rugby, and the game itself resembled the hurling games played in The United Kingdom. By 1883 the generally accepted riule of seven skaters per side was practiced, but still there were still no boards and players usually wore turtleneck sweaters and wool caps. Some players had huge

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Hockey History Hotline posted on 04/27/2009
    Hockey is a way of life. It is an industry, a hobby, a passion, a religion, a career, all rolled into one. There are many experts, pretend experts and varied opinions about stategy and team play on the ice. Conditioning rituals and workout drills are many and debated about as to their  usefullness or uselessness. I will try to write about only the facts and legends of the game, and leave the philisophy to the geniouses. Let's focus on the colourful careers and exciting players who have entertained us since our childhoods, and before we came along, in our Grandparents early years of radio broadcasts and newspaper reports. Since this is our first "column", I'll keep it short-Welcome to Hockey History Hotline!!

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