“The Silver Fox” and “Red Light” Miller by George Grimm

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Rangers’ patriarch Lester Patrick cemented his place in Blueshirt lore on the evening of April 7th 1928. After eliminating both the Pittsburgh Pirates and Boston Bruins, the Rangers were playing the second game of the Stanley Cup finals against the Montreal Maroons who had won the opener 2-0 behind the steady goaltending of Clint Benedict.

Early in the second period Ranger goaltender Lorne Chabot was struck in the left eye by a shot from the stick of Nels Stewart and was forced to leave the game. Patrick, the Rangers coach and GM, found himself without a goaltender since they did not bring along a spare netminder, even though all of the games would be played in Montreal due to the circus taking over Madison Square Garden.

Patrick asked Montreal coach and GM Eddie Gerrard for permission to use Alex Connell of the Ottawa Senators who was a spectator at the game as a replacement. Connell was one of the better goaltenders in the league at the time and so Gerrard refused. Patrick then asked for permission to use minor league goalie Hugh McCormick but that request was also denied. He was then given 10 minutes to produce a goaltender or the Rangers would have to forfeit the game.

“The place became bedlam,” author Eric Whitehead wrote of the Rangers locker room in his book, The Patricks – Hockey’s Royal Family. “Well-meaning outsiders burst in with suggestions for ways out of the dilemma.”

Ranger defenseman Leo Bourgault volunteered to take Chabot’s place in goal, but Frank Boucher and Bill Cook, the team captain told Lester that having Bourgault in goal would leave the team short a valuable player. Instead they suggested that Patrick himself strap on the pads, promising that the team would block as many shots as possible and keep the Maroons’ skaters away from his net.

Patrick thought about it for a few minutes and finally called out to trainer Harry Westerby, “Harry I’m going in goal”. He then told Westerby to gather Chabot’s equipment and get him a clean set of underwear and socks. During the commotion, Odie Cleghorn, the coach of the Pittsburgh Pirates, wandered into the Ranger dressing room and Lester asked him to run the bench for him while he was in the net. Yes the NHL was a much different place back then.  

Patrick, “The Silver Fox”,  was forty-four years old at the time, thirteen years older than his captain Bill Cook and nine years the senior of Montreal goaltender Clint Benedict. But he had suited up for one game as a defenseman the previous season and it would not be Patrick’s first experience between the pipes. Years earlier as a defenseman in the Pacific Coast Hockey Association, he had occasionally gone into the net when his team’s goaltender was penalized. In one game he even skated the length of the ice and scored after blocking a shot.

 

Patrick was welcomed onto the ice with what could be called bemused applause. Montreal Star sports editor Baz O’Meara described the bizarre scene thusly,  “There was ‘Laughing Lester,’ who has done everything in hockey sauntering out with a little black cap askew over his whitening thatch, his lanky legs upholstered by brown pads that seemed to fit him like his father’s old trousers…”

Patrick made a great show of the situation, pointing at the Maroons and yelling “Let them shoot!” But wiser heads prevailed. Before the faceoff, Cleghorn gathered the skaters around him and said, “Stay back to protect Lester. Don’t let ’em get close. Wait for a break. If you can protect Lester one goal might win it.”

When the game resumed the Rangers checked frantically in front of their coach. The Maroons managed to get a few shots off but they were blocked by Patrick and the period ended, still tied at 0-0.

Bill Cook then scored thirty seconds into the third period to give the Rangers the lead which they held onto until Nels Stewart scored to tie the score with 5:40 left in the period.

The game went into sudden death overtime and the Maroons were sure that the old man in the net would fold under the pressure. But Patrick held on, stopping an early surge by the Maroons. The momentum of the play changed quickly and soon Frank Boucher grabbed a loose puck and stickhandled past a Montreal defenseman and beat Benedict with a hard, low shot for the game winner.

Lester Patrick was the hero. The Rangers jumped over the boards and hoisted their GM-coach-goaltender on their shoulders and carried him off the ice.

As Eric Whitehead concluded, “An ageless and unquenchable love of the fray and the courage of an old bull seal returned to protect his herd. Yes, it was vintage Patrick family stuff!”

Patrick was lucky. He turned out to be a hero when it could have very easily gone the other way. But knowing that he couldn’t pull off another miracle, the next game he knew he needed to find another goaltender for the rest of the series.

 

Patrick asked the Maroons for permission to use either George Hainsworth or Charlie Gardiner for the rest of the series. Both were top goalies in the league at the time and so Gerard of course refused to allow the Rangers to use either of them. Working on the premise that any goalie is better than no goalie, out of desperation Patrick submitted Joe Miller’s name. Joe had finished the season with an 8-16-4 record, allowing 77 goals in 28 games for the last place New York Americans and had picked up the nickname “Red Light” Miller for all the goals that he had allowed.  Gerard agreed to allow the Rangers to use Miller, most likely assuming that his Maroons now had the Stanley Cup in the bag.

 

The twenty-seven year old Miller had wrapped up his season with the Americans on March 22nd and was at home in Morrisburg, Ontario when he was summoned to Montreal by Patrick.

 

Joe played well in the third game of the series but the Rangers were shut out 2-0 by Benedict, giving the Maroons a two games to one lead in the five-game series. In the fourth game Miller protected a one-goal lead and shut out Montreal 1-0, evening the series at two games apiece.

 

Miller’s shining moment came in the fifth game on April 14th when he too suffered an eye injury when struck by a shot from the stick of Hooley Smith. The game was delayed for ten minutes as Miller was helped into the dressing room for repairs. When he returned his right eye was nearly swollen shut but the courageous netminder held his ground as the Blueshirts beat the Maroons 2-1 to win the franchise’s first Stanley Cup.

 

Miller was returned to the Americans following theplayoffs, but the next season he was sent to Pittsburgh along with $20,000 for goaltender Roy “Shrimp” Worters. Miller played for two seasons with the Pirates and then moved with the franchise to Philadelphia where they became the Quakers. He then retired in 1932 after a season in the IHL.

 

Miller went from the NHL’s outhouse to its penthouse in a matter of weeks. He’s a prime example of a goalie being only as good as the team in front of him. He spent four seasons in the NHL playing for some bad teams and posted a 24-87-16 record with 16 shutouts and arespectable 2.92 GAA in 127 games.

 

But when the pressure was on, with a good team in front of him, Joe proved to be a quality netminder. In his only playoff appearances, he went 2-1 with one shutout, a 1.00 GAA and a Stanley Cup. You can’t beat that!

 

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George Grimm is the former publisher of Sportstat… The Ranger Report and columnist for the Blueshirt Bulletin. He currently writes the Retro Rangers column for Insidehockey.com. His book “We Did Everything But Win” about the Emile Francis era Rangers was published in 2017 and he is currently working on a book about the history of Ranger goaltenders.

246 responses to ““The Silver Fox” and “Red Light” Miller by George Grimm”

  1. Pete Avatar
    Pete

    As of right now one of Spooner and Names look to be on the 4th line, so not sure where even those two guys they just signed would fit.
    —-
    Dave, those are all very late round picks tho (with the exception of Gropp), so may not get anything out of any of them. Need to stop stockpiling so many bottom pair lefty D and bringing in at least one or 2 more high end forwards and then some that could fill in middle 6.

  2. Bdl Avatar
    Bdl

    I find it very interesting that Karlsson has not been traded yet, and camp opens in a few short weeks. Do they actually bring him to training camp and create a circus atmosphere?

  3. Norm Merton Avatar

    Drop the damn puck already.

  4. cooscoos Avatar

    norm: an analogous quantity used to represent the magnitude of a vector.

  5. AnthonyM Avatar

    Coos – Sorry about the delayed response, but I had a doctor’s appointment and had to run some errands. The Pelham restaurant is the Pelham Cafe – which is really a diner and had been open for about 10 years.

    Also that THE-Panarin-Chytil would have to be The Bread Line 2.0 because the Boucher-Cook Brothers Line was known as The Bread Line.

    I see that our old buddy/whipping boy Tanner Glass signed to play in France. I would rather have seen the Rangers bring him back than keep McLeod.

    I expect to see some prognosticators pick the Rangers to finish #32 this year – finishing behind the expansion-team-to-be Seattle Seals/Totems/Metropolitans/Krakken/BettmanMoneyGrabs.

  6. cooscoos Avatar

    Glass hired to kick some French azz.

  7. cooscoos Avatar

    Norman Mailer’s Village Voice totally defunct. And another one bites the dust. Sayonara.

  8. jpp Avatar
    jpp

    I had to ‘adjust’ to white people at posh trinity college. I feel ya Lebron, what’s the beef

  9. jpp Avatar
    jpp

    My guess is the offers Dorion is getting are on par with deadline rental prices and this organization has misplayed this hand from the call. It’s not surprising. Karlsson is handpicking his spot, otherwise it’s straight rental and the prices turn your stomach when you realize Erik karlsson is walking out the door.

    Seguin should go UFA. Dallas is never gonna get over the hump. Not enough there, too middling. Changing things up coach-wise is an attempt to change the taste of the same ingredients.

    If I can sign all 3. I sign all 3. Counting this year which will be total rebuild and more assets. I’m totally game with a top 5 pick this year, what we are already have in the pipeline, and seguin/karlsson/panarin. If I’m in the room and I’m going thru all the scenarios and paths and circling which ones really sound like a recipe. If I could nab all 3, knowing I’m picking top 5, and what I have in the pipeline. What ‘plan’ has a better percentage of leading to a team that can win the thing. People are crazy saying ooo the times not right. It would be a freakin trifecta, there is no wrong time for something like that, you jump at it.

  10. cregg7 Avatar
    cregg7

    Damn jpp. Utopia scenerio there. I like it!!!

  11. Rick Carpiniello (@RickCarpiniello) Avatar

    How much would the Rangers love it if big Gettinger ever developed a little nastiness. Alas, it may never happen.

  12. cooscoos Avatar

    Watching Rangers/Jackets replay, 2 periods waiting for a check. Oh, Miller delivers one – that’s it?

  13. jpp Avatar
    jpp

    https://mobile.twitter.com/NYRangers/status/1035633766969102337/photo/1

    Picture them saying ‘we’re all rich… you rich? I’m rich. Skjel your a rich B’

  14. cooscoos Avatar

    Quinn better have them finishing checks and at least one line forechecking with vigor or I won’t even watch early season. Seen enough timidity.

  15. cooscoos Avatar

    Gettinger 6’6, 220, meaning he’s 6’4 and a half, 210. Unless he’s fat, like Kreider, and needs to shed 15-20 lbs. 🙂

  16. Whiskey India Charlie Kilo Yankee Avatar
    Whiskey India Charlie Kilo Yankee

    I have a stoopid yahoo fantasy football draft in an hour and I am not prepared.

  17. Old Ranger Fan Avatar
    Old Ranger Fan

    One week to Traverse City. Is that the smell oh hockey?

  18. CCCP Avatar
    CCCP

    American football sucks.

  19. St Pete Eli Avatar
    St Pete Eli

    Good morning Boneheads welcome to Saturday! Lose for Hughes!

  20. ilb2001 Avatar
    ilb2001

    NEW POST