Frank McGee (ice hockey)

Frank McGee (ice hockey)

Infobox Ice Hockey Player



image_size = 233px
position = Centre
played_for = Ottawa Hockey Club
shot = Left
height_ft = 5
height_in = 6
nationality = CAN
birth_date = birth date|mf=yes|1882|11|04|mf=y
birth_place = Ottawa, Ontario, CA
death_date = death date and age|mf=yes|1916|09|16|1882|11|04
death_place = Courcelette, France
career_start = 1903
career_end = 1906
halloffame = 1945

Francis "Frank" Clarence McGee, (1882-11-04 – 1916-09-16) was a legendary ice hockey player during the early days of hockey for the Ottawa Hockey Club, nicknamed the "Silver Seven". [cite web
last=Houston
first=William
title=Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
url=http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=7583
publisher=Library and Archives Canada
accessdate=2008-05-22
He himself had the nickname "One-Eyed Frank".The Ottawa Hockey Club was given the nickname after the players (seven on the roster) were each given silver nuggets to the players after the 1903 Stanley Cup win. The players were not allowed to be paid money, under the rules of the time.
] Although McGee was blind in one eye, he scored 14 goals in one Stanley Cup game, and five or more goals in a game eight times. Despite a brief senior career — only 45 games over four seasons — he led the Silver Seven in its reign as Stanley Cup champions for four seasons (1903–06), playing both centre and rover. [cite web |url=http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SilverwareTrophyWinners.jsp?tro=STC |title=Silverware -- NHL Trophies - Stanley Cup |accessdate=2008-05-22 |publisher=Hockey Hall of Fame In 1906, The Silver Seven were the existing title holders and won two challenges. After the end of the regular season, the Montreal Wanderers tied for the league championship. A playoff was organized and the Wanderers won the Cup. It is considered by the Hockey Hall of Fame, among others, that there were two champions for 1906. There are other years with multiple winners in the age when the Stanley Cup could be won by challenge outside of league play.] During World War I, he enlisted in the Canadian Army and died in battle in France. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1945.

Personal life

Frank McGee came from a prominent Canadian family. His late uncle, Thomas D'Arcy McGee, had been a Father of Confederation. His father, John Joseph McGee, was clerk of the Privy Council (considered the top civil servant position). He had five brothers and two sisters.Citation|title=Ottawans in casualties, Lt. Frank McGee's Death Was Officially Announced Saturday|newspaper=The Ottawa Citizen|date=1916-09-25 |pages=pg. 6] His brother Jim was also a noted athlete in football and ice hockey before dying in a horse-riding accident in May 1904. [cite news|work=The Globe |date=May 15, 1904 |title=Sad Death of Ottawa's Captain|page=9]

After his education in Ottawa, McGee worked for the Canadian government Department of Indian Affairs, but he had a passion for sports and played lacrosse and rugby and excelled at ice hockey. While playing half-back for his rugby team, Ottawa City, he was a member of the team that won the Dominion championship in 1898. He played for the Ottawa Hockey Club from 1902 until 1906.

He enlisted in the military and fought in World War I for the 43rd Regiment (Duke of Cornwall’s Own Rifles) as a lieutenant in the 21st Infantry Battalion, starting in May 1915. That December he suffered a knee injury, and was sent to England to recover. He was given the choice of a posting in Le Havre away from the action, but chose to return to his battalion at the front. He returned to the 21st Battalion in August 1916 for the Battle of the Somme and was killed in action on 1916-09-16 near Courcelette, France. His brother Charles also died in action, in May 1915.

It is not known how McGee was allowed into the army with sight in only one eye. In his certificate of examination, the medical officer wrote that McGee could "see the required distance with either eye." According to McGee's nephew, Frank Charles McGee, his uncle tricked the doctor. When he was asked to cover one eye and read the chart he covered his blind eye, and when required to cover the other eye he switched hands instead of eyes.cite web
last=Houston
first=William
title=Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
url=http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=7583
publisher=Library and Archives Canada
accessdate=2008-05-22
] His medical history only lists "good" for his vision.

Hockey career

On 1900-03-21, the young and promising McGee lost use of an eye during an amateur game for a local Canadian Pacific Railway team [cite web |url=http://www.collectionscanada.ca/hockey/024002-119.01-e.php?&hockey_id_nbr=40&&PHPSESSID=acfdkh1snm735bpvqi3ri1pg66 |publisher=Library and Archives Canada |title=Item Display: Backcheck: A Hockey Retrospective |accessdate=2008-05-22 Also attributed to a game between Ottawa Aberdeens against Hawkesbury] from a "lifted puck." [In those days, it was common play, before icing rules for the defence to shoot the puck up into the air ('lifting it' with the blade of the stick) into the other team's end of the rink and all players would then skate to the other end to recover it. Nowadays, the term is "dump and chase", though it must be shot from no further than the half-way 'centre' red line.] He retired from playing, becoming a referee.McKinley(2006), pg. 31] By 1903, he missed playing the sport so much that he joined the Ottawas despite the risk of permanent blindness. McGee was the youngest member of the team and stood only five feet six inches tall in a brutal sport; regardless, he excelled.

He was considered an outstanding playmaker and deadly scorer. He scored two goals in his first game with Ottawa.cite web
url=http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=P194506&type=Player&page=bio&list=ByName#photo
title=Legends of Hockey: Frank McGee Biography
publisher=Hockey Hall of Fame
accessdate=2008-05-22
] On a number of occasions, he scored several goals in a single game, the most famous being his 14 goal effort in a 23-2 victory over the team from Dawson City, on 1905-02-07. It was the most lopsided playoff game in Stanley Cup history. It remains to this day the most goals scored by a single player in a Stanley Cup hockey game, and has not been surpassed in any professional match. [Beddoes(1990), pg. 40] He scored five or more goals in eight other senior matches; his highest single-game total in regular season play was eight on 1906-03-03 against the Montreal Hockey Club. [Coleman(1966), pg. 122]

His linemates included future Hall of Famers Alf Smith, Harry Westwick, Billy Gilmour and Tommy Smith. Frank Patrick, a contemporary of McGee's and like him a member of the Hockey Hall of Fame, described McGee: "He was even better than they say he was. He had everything - speed, stickhandling, scoring ability and was a punishing checker. He was strongly built but beautifully proportioned and he had an almost animal rhythm."

After Ottawa lost the Stanley Cup to the Montreal Wanderers in 1906, McGee retired at just 23 years old. His retirement is attributed to his government position not allowing him to travel. He retired after scoring 135 goals in 45 games (both league and challenge).cite web
publisher=Hockey Hall of Fame
title=Legends of Hockey: Frank McGee Statistics
url=http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=p194506&type=Player&page=statsawards&list=ByName#photo
accessdate=2008-05-22
] Only Russell Bowie rivals his average of 3 goals per game.

McGee was one of the original players inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame at its founding in 1945. Five years later, a poll of sports editors of Canadian newspapers selected the Silver Seven as the country’s outstanding team in the first half of the 20th century. In 1966, he was inducted into the Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame. [cite web |url=http://www.ottawasportshalloffame.com/Inductees/tabid/1604/Default.aspx |title=Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame - Inductees |accessdate=2008-05-22 |publisher=Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame]

Career statistics

*Source [http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=p194506&page=statsawards&list=ByName#photo "Legends of Hockey: Frank McGee"] . Hockey Hall of Fame. Accessed April 22, 2008

ee also

* Ottawa Senators (original)
* 1903 CAHL season
* 1904 CAHL season
* 1904–05 FAHL season
* 1906 ECAHA season

Footnotes

References

*
*
*

External links

*
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=7583 Dictionary of Canadian Biography online]
* [http://www.collectionscanada.ca/hockey/024002-119.01-e.php?&hockey_id_nbr=40&&PHPSESSID=acfdkh1snm735bpvqi3ri1pg66 Obituary, as reproduced on the Library and Archives Canada web site]


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