Bobby orr
Pierre Dagenais
Montreal canadiens - Bleu, blanc, rouge!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMkzx1k8SXQ
Andrei Kovalenko of the Montreal Canadiens
Joe Malone, he scored seven goals in one game. it was part of his season in which he scored 44 goals in 20 games for the 1917 Montreal Canadiens.
I'm assuming here you mean pulling a goalie at the end of a game for an extra attacker. If so, it was first done by Boston Bruins coach Art Ross in the second game of a playoff series against the Canadiens on March 26, 1931. Bruins didn't score with the extra attacker and Montreal didn't get an empty net goal. The game ended in a 1-0 score for Canadiens.
Pierre Dagenais
Montreal canadiens - Bleu, blanc, rouge!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMkzx1k8SXQ
Andrei Kovalenko of the Montreal Canadiens
Goal tender, Carey Price. 2010-2011 season.
Game one had the Montreal Wanderers defeat the Toronto Arenas, 10-9 and saw Dave Ritchie of Montreal score the first goal in NHL history, an event that was witnessed by a lowly 700 fans.In the second game the Montreal Canadiens defeated the Ottawa Senators, 7-4.
The NHL started play on Dec. 19, 1917 with two games. Both were in Montreal with the Montreal Wanderers beating the Toronto Arenas 10-9 and the Canadiens defeating the Ottawa Senators 7-4. A player named Dave Ritchie of the Wanderers has the honour of scoring the first goal in NHL history.
Larry Robinson,bob gainey Bob Gainey wasn't a defenseman, he was a left winger.
Joe Malone, he scored seven goals in one game. it was part of his season in which he scored 44 goals in 20 games for the 1917 Montreal Canadiens.
It's one of three: GO! HABS GO! or Olé Olé Olé or Nanananah, nanananah, Hey, hey Good-bye! "Bleu, Blanc, Rouge!"? "Halte la, halte la, les Canadiens sont la!"? Or are you talking about the Habs goal song? In about 1890, Les Montagnards, a Montreal snowshoe club, used to sing a rallying song called Halte là ! Halte là ! Les Montagnards sont là... Adopted by their hockey team, the song was later adopted by the Canadiens Hockey Club as Halte là ! Halte là ! les Canadiens sont là...
I'm assuming here you mean pulling a goalie at the end of a game for an extra attacker. If so, it was first done by Boston Bruins coach Art Ross in the second game of a playoff series against the Canadiens on March 26, 1931. Bruins didn't score with the extra attacker and Montreal didn't get an empty net goal. The game ended in a 1-0 score for Canadiens.
Since the 1967 NHL expansion, only one team - the 1975-76 Montreal Canadiens - has gone through an entire season without allowing a short-handed goal. As of this writing, the 2008-09 Philadelphia Flyers are 10 games away from tying that feat.
Damphousse