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Robert MacDougall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Canadian ice hockey player and businessman
For the Scottish entomologist, seeRobert Stewart MacDougall.
Ice hockey player
Robert MacDougall
Black-and-white photo of a sitting man wearing a sweater-like hockey jersey and holding a hockey stick
MacDougall in the team picture of the Montreal Victorias in 1895
Born(1876-03-02)March 2, 1876
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
DiedMarch 26, 1950(1950-03-26) (aged 74)
PositionForward
Played forMontreal Victorias (1893-1899)

Robert Ernest MacDougall (March 2, 1876[1] – March 26, 1950) was a notableCanadianice hockey player and businessman. He played in the early days of organized ice hockey, before professionalism. He played the position of forward for theMontreal Victorias and was a member of fiveStanley Cup-winning teams.[2]

Personal life

[edit]

MacDougall was born inMontreal,Quebec. He attended Bishop's College School boarding school inLennoxville as a youth. At BCS he played hockey with future Victorias teammatesHartland MacDougall (no relation) andErnie McLea. At age twelve, MacDougall played on the BCS first team of ice hockey, and is noted as one of the youngest to ever do so.[1]

After ice hockey, MacDougall would become a partner with Hartland MacDougall in the stock-trading firm MacDougall & MacDougall of Montreal. The company continues today as MacDougall MacDougall & MacTier.[citation needed]

Playing career

[edit]

Macdougall was the highest scoring forward before the 1900s in Stanley Cup play.[citation needed] MacDougall scored a confirmed total of 49 goals in 36 recorded games.[citation needed] Overshadowed today by the likes of teammates andHall of FamersGraham Drinkwater andMike Grant, MacDougall was consistently one of the Montreal Victorias' highest scoring forwards. Later in life his career would take an approach to banking (working alongsideHartland MacDougall of no relation) and he would leave the sport of hockey near the end of the Montreal Victorias' championship run.[3]

Championship controversy

[edit]

Near the end of MacDougall's career he would generally only play championship games due to his work schedule. In his last season his career would end in some controversy. In the 1899Stanley Cup Finals, with Montreal leading a total goal series with 4 goals to 2 against theWinnipeg Victorias, with about 12 minutes left in the game, MacDougall slashed Winnipeg'sTony Gingras. As Gingras was carried off the ice, referee Bill Findlay only called MacDougall for a two-minute minor. Angry that he should have been assessed a larger penalty, Winnipeg went into their dressing room in protest. Insulted, Findlay abruptly went home, but returned after officials followed him on a sleigh and persuaded him to return. Once back at the rink, the referee gave Winnipeg 15 minutes to return to the ice themselves. They refused and thus Findlay disqualified the team and declared Montreal the winners. 4,000 were attending the Winnipeg Auditorium rink to hear returns of the game by telegraph.[4]

Career statistics

[edit]
  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1893–94Montreal VictoriasAHAC12--2------------
1894Montreal VictoriasStanley Cup----------1101--
1894–95Montreal VictoriasAHAC810010------------
1895–96Montreal VictoriasAHAC610010------------
1896Montreal VictoriasStanley Cup----------22--1--
1896–97Montreal VictoriasAHAC811--11------------
1897–98Montreal VictoriasAHAC812012------------
1898–99Montreal VictoriasCAHL2707------------
1899Montreal VictoriasStanley Cup----------32--2--

Notes:

  • Led league in scoring in 1895–96 (bold denotes league leader)
  • Statistics do not include non-regular-season tournaments. Statistics for 1893–94 and 1896–97 are not fully available.Globe and Mail editions from 1897 indicate that Robert MacDougall played out the full season and is credited for scoring a minimum of 2 goals, perhaps more. Scoring summaries for most games were not published.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abPatriquin, J. Graham (1978).From Little Forks to Moulton Hill.Sherbrooke,Quebec: Progressive Publications. RetrievedFebruary 7, 2014.
  2. ^Trail to the Stanley Cup vol. 1 by C. Coleman
  3. ^"1896 Montreal Victorias Reclaim Cup in Challenge".Eyes On The Prize. 8 March 2007.
  4. ^"Winnipeg's Story".The Globe. February 20, 1899. p. 10.
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