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What Is the Stanley Cup? (What Was?)

Product ID : 34570863


Galleon Product ID 34570863
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About What Is The Stanley

Product Description Ice hockey fans will pull on their skates and gear up for this Who HQ title about the Stanley Cup Finals--the National Hockey League's championship games. Out of the thirty-two pro hockey teams that compete, only one can call itself the champion and proudly hoist up the Stanley Cup--the oldest sports trophy in the world! From the formation of the leagues and the crowning of the first championship-winning team, to the Rangers' Stanley Cup curse and the uncertain fate of the teams during the Spanish flu epidemic, this book recounts the highs and lows of this exciting ice hockey series. About the Author Gail Herman has written several biographies and nonfiction books, including Who Is Wayne Gretzky? and What Is the World Series? Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. What Is the Stanley Cup?   Each June, a series of hockey games ends by crowning a championship team. The winner is the number one team in the United States and Canada, and perhaps the world.   The Stanley Cup is considered the most difficult sports championship to win, with thirty-one teams in the National Hockey League, sixteen teams in the playoffs, and three rounds of best-of-seven-games series before the finals.    Whew!   The prize is the Stanley Cup itself—the oldest and most famous sports trophy in the world. Its origins go back more than a hundred years. Thousands of fans have lined up around the world just to catch a glimpse of it.   After the final buzzer of the final game, the captain of the winning team is presented with the Cup. He lifts it high overhead. He circles the rink, his teammates following in a parade. In turn, they each take a lap with the prize.   Some players kiss it. Some cry. And some are surprised by its weight. (It weighs 34½ pounds.)   All these players know they hold history in their hands. The same “Presentation Cup,” topped with a copy of the original trophy’s bowl, has been awarded for more than fifty years.    Thousands of names are engraved in the bowl and on its bands—names of winning teams from the 1890s and, later, player, coach, and staff-member names.   Some teams listed—like the Vancouver Millionaires and the Montreal Wanderers—haven’t been around for almost a century.   Since 1995, the trophy travels the globe for about three hundred days each year. (The rest of the time, it’s on display at the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto, Ontario.) Each championship team member spends a day with “Stanley.”    It’s been to hometowns in the United States and Canada, plus Russia, the Czech Republic, Sweden, Finland, and even the tropical Bahamas. It’s been used as a bowl for popcorn, ice cream, cereal, and dog food. And two babies have been christened in it.   It’s the stuff of tradition and legend. And it all started with one man: a British lord, Frederick Arthur Stanley.     Chapter 1: The Start of It All   Ice hockey has roots in ball-and-stick games, dating back to the earliest civilizations. In colder climates, people played these sports on frozen ponds, eventually on skates. Canada, though, is considered the true birthplace of hockey, combining these games and First Nations (Canadian indigenous people) traditions. In Montreal, James Creighton, the “Father of Organized Hockey,” introduced the first real rules, holding an “official” hockey game indoors—using a puck instead of a ball—in 1875.   During the sport’s early years, players didn’t wear helmets, padding, or goalie masks. They stayed on the ice every second of the game. There were no nets, just posts hammered into the ice.   In June 1888, Lord Frederick Arthur Stanley and his family arrived in Canada. Queen Victoria of England had named him governor-general. At the time, Canada was a “dominion”—or territory—of England. The governor-general was appointed by the British king or queen to govern Canada.   None of the Stanleys knew about hockey. But Lord Stanley and his eight children loved sports. A