With the Stanley Cup playoffs now in full swing, here are images of five groups of people who each have some unusual common connection among themselves in the history of the quest for hockey's "Holy Grail." Your challenge is to first identify the individuals within each of the five groups, and then to determine what are the unique relationships they have both to each other, and then to the history in the quest for the Cup.
Have fun!!!

"The Ultimate Prize"
"...also well suited for a quick round of golf..."

After losing,
3-1, to the
Toronto Maple Leafs at the
Forum in the first game of their
1944 Stanley Cup semi-final series, the
Montreal Canadiens took the next three contests by
5-1, 2-1, and
4-1 scores to set up a potential series clinching game back in Montreal on March 30. Habs' goalie
Bill Durnan was perfect through the first two periods while Leafs' netminder
Paul Bibeault -- who had played the previous
two seasons with the Canadiens -- had already been solved
four times so it looked pretty bleak for the Leafs when the puck was dropped for the final frame, but they could not have possibly imagined
how bad things would get as the Habs would use those final twenty minutes to set a bevy of
scoring records which are still standing today after
64 years!
While Durnan watched comfortably from the Habs' crease which the Leafs were still unable to dent, his teammates scored a playoff record
seven more times in the final frame which also set the post season mark for
largest shut-out win at
11-0, largest
margin of victory at
eleven goals as well, and between
7:58 and
10:33 of the period, the
fastest four goals by one team as
Toe Blake scored twice (at
7:58 and
8:37) followed by
Maurice Richard at
9:17 and
Ray Getliffe at
10:33 to give them the quartette of markers in just
2:35. And as if this were not enough,
Buddy O'Connor solved Bibeault for a fifth Montreal goal
1:01 later at
11:34 for a record
five goals in
3:36 as well!! The Canadiens would then go on to sweep the
Chicago Black Hawks in the finals giving the Habs their first Stanley Cup title since
1931.
"Dirigo"
Three players tied for
leading scorer in the
1929 Stanley Cup playoffs --
Butch Keeling of the
New York Rangers, and
Andy Blair and
Ace Bailey of the
Toronto Maple Leafs. All three of these marksmen did so with just
three points each with Keeling and Blair both notching
three goals and Bailey with
a goal and
two assists. Three points is the
fewest to qualify for a leading scorer by an NHL player in the post season -- and Bailey's
one goal also makes him the
"lowest" scorer to accomplish the same feat. (Two other NHL'ers would later tie for leading scorer in the play-offs with just one goal but also had more points as Boston's
Cooney Weiland (
1-5) tied teammate
Marty Barry (
3-3) with
six points overall in
1930, and Toronto's
Charlie Conacher (
1-4) tied fellow Leaf
Busher Jackson (
3-2) and the Montreal Maroons'
Cy Wentworth (
3-2) and
Baldy Northcott (
4-1) with
five in
1935.
Reggie "The Rifle" Leach of the
Philadelphia Flyers captured both the
Conn Smythe Trophy as the
MVP in the
1976 Stanley Cup playoffs (even though the Flyers lost to the
Montreal Canadiens in the finals), and was also the post season's
leading scorer with
24 points in
19 goals and
5 assists in
16 games. Leach's 19 goals that year still stands as the
most collected by a leading scorer in the play-offs. (Edmonton's
Jari Kurri also scored 19 goals in a playoff year when he notched
31 points (19-12) in
1985 but teammate
Wayne Gretzky finished with a record
47 overall post season points on
17 goals and
30 assists for the Oilers.)
"...an Aesopian yin and yang..."

In the spring of
1936, right wing
Modere "Mud" Bruneteau was an all but annonymous 21- year old rookie on the
Detroit Red Wings who had only played in half of that club's regular season games (
24 of
48) in
1935-36 and collected just
two career points (both goals) as an NHL'er. On
March 24, 1936, he took to the ice in Montreal for his first ever
Stanley Cup game facing the
Montreal Maroons, but the time he took off his uniform off many,
many hours later his name would be engraved in the hearts and minds of hockey fans forever.
Normie Smith was in goal for the Wings while 1935
Vezina Trophy winner
Lorne Chabot minding the twine for the Maroons, and both were perfect through
sixty minutes of regulation thus sending the contest into overtime at
0-0 -- and that's the way it would remain for almost
six full overtime periods! It finally ended when Bruneteau beat Chabot at
16:30 of that sixth overtime with just the third goal (and also third overall NHL point) of his career (as well as his first ever in the playoffs) to give the Wings a
1-0 victory in the longest game in NHL history at
176:30. That record still stands today
seventy-two years later. The Red Wings would go on to sweep the best-of-three series from the Maroons and then defeat the
Toronto Maple Leafs in the finals, three-games-to-one, to capture their
first ever Stanley Cup championship. Ironically the Leafs only win in the finals came in game three which they won,
4-3, in the
fourth overtime period!
The current record for the
fastest playoff overtime goal came half a century after Bruneteau's marathon winner. After losing the first game of the
1986 Stanley Cup finals,
5-2, to the
Calgary Flames on
May 16th, the visiting
Montreal Canadiens were in danger of going down on May 18th by two games when game two was knotted at
2-2 at the end of sixty minutes. Surprisingly rookie Habs' coach
Jean Perron sent out his checking line of
Brian Skrudland, Mike McPhee and
Claude Lemieux to begin overtime which, in hindsight, proved to be a "genius" move. After winning the opening face-off, Skrudland and McPhee unexpectedly found themselves on a 2-on-1 break which, after faking a shot, McPhee used to slip the puck to Skrudland who cut to the net and calmly redirected it past a surpised
Mike Vernon just
nine seconds into overtime. The Canadiens would go on to sweep the next three games to capture their
23rd Stanely Cup title.
"...the long and the short of it..."

In the
1930 Stanley Cup playoffs
Montreal Canadiens' Hall of Fame goaltender
George Hainsworth set the now still standing
78-year old record for the longest shut-out streak in post season play at
270:08. It began on
March 28th after he gave up a goal to
Murray Murdoch of the
New York Rangers at
15:34 of the first period of game one of a best-of-three semi final series, the only goal he allowed in the tilt which was won by the Habs,
2-1, at
8:52 of the
fourth overtime. Hainsworth entered the second game of the set with a
113:18 shutout streak which he extended to
173:18 on March 30 in a
2-0 shut-out which sent the Habs on to a best-of-three final series with the defending Champion
Boston Bruins. Hainsworth pitched another shut-out in the first game of that series which Montreal won,
3-0, and held Boston off the board in game two until the Bruins'
Eddie Shore finally ended it at
16:50 of the second period to give Hainsworth a remarkable
four-and-a-half hours of playing time without allowing a goal. The Canadiens eventually won the game, 4-3, to capture the Cup.
Glenn Hall, who is also a Hall of Famer, has the
"distinction" of having the
shortest "shut-out streak" in play-off history at just
five seconds. On
April 11, 1965, Hall was beaten twice by Detroit's
Norm Ullman at
17:35 and
17:40 of the second period of game five of their semi final series with Hall's
Chicago Blackhawks on their way to a
4-2 win and three-games-to-two lead in the best of seven series. Hall shut Detroit out,
4-0, in game six, however, and then eliminated the Red Wings in game seven with a
4-2 victory at the Olympia. Hall and the Blackhawks then took the
Montreal Canadiens to a
seventh game in the finals but lost to the Habs,
4-0, in the title game.
"...one futile figure, or three..."

Although he never played a game in the
NHL, hardnosed defenseman
Patrick J. "Pat" Kelly has been a fixture in the minor leagues for more than
half a century as a
player, coach, manager, and
league executive. Kelly spent the majority of his playing career (
1956-72) in the
EHL with the
Greensboro Generals, Jersey Devils, and
Clinton Comets while also serving as player/coach with Jersey and Clinton. Kelly later coached the
SHL Charlotte Checkers and spent one season behind the bench of the
WHA Birmingham Bulls in
1976-77 before finally getting a call to the
NHL as
head coach of the lowely
Colorado Rockies in
1977. Although that club finished with a record of
19-40-21, amazingly it qualified for the
1978 Stanley Cup playoffs facing off against the powerhouse
Philadelphia Flyers in a
best-of-three preliminary round. Incredibly game one in Philadelphia was tied at
2-2 after sixty minutes thanks to the fine work former Flyer goalie
Doug Favell who stopped
41 of
43 Flyer shots while the Rockies only magaged
16 on
Bernie Parent. The prospect of going to Colorado for a do-or-die game did not sit well with the Flyers, however, and so they made quick work of the overtime with
Mel Bridgman ending it in just
23-seconds. The Flyers again outshot the Rockies by a wide margin in game two (
45-17), and again Favell was brilliant, but the Flyers prevailed,
3-1, thus ending Pat Kelly's first -- and what would prove to be his only -- Stanley Cup experience at
two games coached,
no wins. No coach to have stood behind an NHL bench had less success. After a
3-14-4 start in
1978-79 Kelly was replaced behind the Rockies' bench by
Aldo Guidolin but almost immediately took over the
AHL Rochester Americans. He continued coaching in the minor pros until
1989 when he became the first
Commissioner of the
ECHL. When he retired from that post in
1996 the ECHL playoff championship trophy, the
Kelly Cup, was named in his honor.
Current
Calgary Flames' GM
Darryl Sutter also has a record of futility. In
fourteen years of coaching in the NHL he stood behind the bench for
101 games of
Stanley Cup action of which
26 were with the
Chicago Blackhawks (
11-15) in
three playoff years,
42 with th
e San José Sharks (
18-24) in
5 post seasons, and
33 with the
Calgary Flames (
18-15) in
2 play-offs for a total of
47 wins and
54 losses in
10 trips to the play-offs as a coach. In all those post seasons, however, his clubs only made it past the second round twice -- in
1995 with Chicago (losing to Detroit in the semi finals five games) and with Calgary in
2004 losing to
Tampa Bay in the finals in
seven games. Although he came within a hair's breadth of winning the Cup in
2004, Darryl Sutter's 101 games behind the bench in the Stanley Cup playoffs is the
most by any coach
without ever winning a Cup title.