The Original Six are the six teams (Boston Bruins, Chicago Black Hawks, Detroit Red Wings, Montreal Canadiens, New York Rangers, and Toronto Maple Leafs) that composed the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 25 seasons between the 1942–43 season and the 1967 NHL Expansion. The name is something of a misnomer, since there were other NHL franchises that ceased operations before 1942, including some that were founded before some of the Original Six. The term dates from the 1967 expansion which added six new franchises; hence the six expansion teams and the "Original Six".
In the 1952–53 season, CBC began televising Hockey Night in Canada as a simulcast to the radio calls, joining the games in progress either 30 minutes or 60 minutes after the opening faceoff. Until 1961, the CBC was the only operating television network in Canada. Not only that, it was likely that not all Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens playoff games were televised in the early years, including to their local markets.
Year | Round | Series | Games covered | Play-by-play | Colour commentator(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1953 | Semifinals | Montreal-Chicago | Games 1–2, 5–7 (joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | |
1954 | Semifinals | Detroit-Toronto | in Toronto (joined-in-progress) | Foster Hewitt | |
Montreal-Boston | in Montreal (joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | |||
1955 | Semifinals | Detroit-Toronto | in Toronto (joined-in-progress) | Foster Hewitt | |
Montreal-Boston | in Montreal (joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | |||
1956 | Semifinals | Montreal-New York Rangers | Games 1–5 (joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | |
Detroit-Toronto | Games 3–5 (joined-in-progress) | Foster Hewitt | |||
1957 | Semifinals | Montreal-New York Rangers | Games 1–5 (Games in Montreal joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | |
1958 | Semifinals | Montreal-Detroit | Games 1–4 (joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | |
New York Rangers-Boston | Games 3, 6 (joined-in-progress) | Foster Hewitt (Game 3) Danny Gallivan (Game 6) | |||
1959 | Semifinals | Montreal-Chicago | Games 1–6 (Games 1–5 joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | |
Boston-Toronto | Games 1–7 (joined-in-progress)[1][2][3][4] | Bill Hewitt | Foster Hewitt | ||
1960 | Semifinals | Montreal-Chicago | Games 1–4 (joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | |
Toronto-Detroit | Games 1–6 (joined-in-progress) | Bill Hewitt | Foster Hewitt | ||
1961 | Semifinals | Montreal-Chicago | Games 1–6 (Games in Montreal are joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy (in Montreal) |
Toronto-Detroit | Games 1–5 (Games in Toronto are joined-in progress) | Bill Hewitt | Foster Hewitt (in Toronto) | ||
1962 | Semifinals | Montreal-Chicago | Games 1–6 (Games 1–5 joined-in-progress) | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
Toronto-New York Rangers | Games 1–6 (Games 1–5 joined-in-progress) | Bill Hewitt | Jack Dennett (in New York City) | ||
1963 | Semifinals | Toronto-Montreal | Games 1–5 (joined-in-progress)[5] | Bill Hewitt (in Toronto) Danny Gallivan (in Montreal) |
Guest sportswriters (in Toronto) Keith Dancy (in Montreal) |
Chicago-Detroit | Game 6 | Bill Hewitt | |||
1964 | Semifinals | Montreal-Toronto | Games 1–7 (Games 1–6 joined-in-progress)[6][7] | Danny Gallivan (in Montreal) Bill Hewitt (in Toronto) |
Keith Dancy (in Montreal) Guest sportswriters (in Toronto) |
Chicago-Detroit | Games 2, 5, 7 (joined-in-progress) | Bill Hewitt | Guest sportswriters | ||
1965 | Semifinals | Detroit-Chicago | Games 2, 5, 7 (Games 2, 5 joined-in-progress)[8][9][10][11] | Bill Hewitt | Jim Morrison (Game 7) |
Montreal-Toronto | Games 1–6 (joined-in progress)[12][13][14] | Danny Gallivan (in Montreal) Bill Hewitt (in Toronto) |
Keith Dancy (in Montreal) Guest sportswriters (in Toronto) | ||
1966 | Semifinals | Montreal-Toronto | Games 1–4[15][16] | Danny Gallivan (in Montreal) Bill Hewitt (in Toronto) |
Keith Dancy (in Montreal) Brian McFarlane (in Toronto) |
Chicago-Detroit | Games 5–6 | Bill Hewitt | Brian McFarlane | ||
1967 | Semifinals | Chicago-Toronto | Games 1–6 (Games 1–4, 6 joined-in progress)[17][18] | Bill Hewitt | Brian McFarlane |
Montreal-New York Rangers | Games 1–4 | Danny Gallivan | Dan Kelly (in Montreal) Dick Irvin Jr. (in New York) |
There was no American network television coverage of the Stanley Cup playoffs until 1965–66 (which also marked the first telecasts of an NHL game in color), the second to last season of the Original Six era. The earliest known American television coverage of any kind occurred in 1956, when Games 3 and 5 of the Montreal-New York Rangers playoff series were televised in the New York area on WPIX 11 at 9 p.m. local time. Bud Palmer worked play-by-play for those games on WPIX while and Jack McCarthy hosted from the studio.
Year | Round | Series | Games covered | Network | Play-by-play | Color commentator(s) |
1966 | Semifinals | Games 2, 5 | Chicago-Detroit | NBC | Win Elliot | Bill Mazer |
1967 | Semifinals | Game 5 | Chicago-Toronto | CBS | Jim Gordon | Stu Nahan |