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Jacques Plante

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Position Goaltender
Caught Left
Nickname Jake the Snake
Height
Weight
ft 0 in (1.83 m)
175 lb (80 kg)
Pro Clubs Montreal Canadiens
New York Rangers
St. Louis Blues
Toronto Maple Leafs
Boston Bruins
Edmonton Oilers
Nationality Image:Flag of Canada.svg Canada
Born January 17, 1929,
Shawinigan Falls, Québec
Pro Career 19521975
Hall of Fame 1978

</div></div> Joseph Jacques Omer "Jake the Snake" Plante (born January 17, 1929, in Shawinigan Falls, Québec; died February 27, 1986, in Sierre, Switzerland,) was a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender.

Contents

[edit] Assessments and contributions

Jacques Plante began playing in the NHL in 1952 for the Montreal Canadiens, where he became well known and played the majority of his career. He was a flamboyant, popular player, known for raising his arms high over his head in a "V" victory salute when his team won a key game.

Despite chronic asthma, Plante was one of the greatest goalies of all time, and his contributions to playing the position of goaltender are beyond those of any other individual. Plante was the first goalie to skate behind the net to stop the puck. He also was the first to raise his arm on an icing call to let his defencemen know what was happening. He perfected a stand-up, positional style, cutting down the angles. Finally, he was a pioneer of stickhandling and headmanning the puck; before his time, goaltenders passively stood in the net and simply deflected pucks to defencemen or backchecking forwards. He was the first goaltender to write a how-to book (The Art of Goaltending).

Jacques Plante puts on his mask on November 2, 1959 His most enduring contribution to the game, however, occurred as a result of an incident on November 1, 1959. He was hit in the face by a shot from New York Rangers player Andy Bathgate, needing to go to the dressing room for stitches. When he returned, he was wearing a crude goalie mask. His coach, Toe Blake, was livid, but he had no other goalie to call upon and Plante refused to return to the goal unless he kept the mask. Blake agreed on the condition that Plante discard the mask when the cut healed. Only Camille Henry beat him in that game, which the Canadiens won 3-1. In the ensuing days Plante refused to discard the mask, and as the Canadiens continued to win, Blake became less obstinate. The winning streak stretched to 18 games. Plante didn't wear the mask, at Blake's request, against Detroit on March 8, 1960. The Canadiens lost 3-0, and the mask returned for good the next night. Plante subsequently designed his own mask and masks for other goalies. Although Plante was not the first NHL goalie known to wear a face mask (Montreal Maroons goaltender Clint Benedict had done so thirty years before), Plante introduced the mask as everyday equipment, which continues to this day.

[edit] Playing career

After a minor league apprenticeship with the senior league Montreal Royals and the Buffalo Bisons of the American Hockey League, Plante was called up to the Canadiens for good towards the end of the 1954 season, wresting the starting job away from incumbent Gerry McNeil while recording a spectacular 1.59 goals against average. He went on to record two shutouts in the playoffs (in which the Habs lost the Cup to the Detroit Red Wings) and had the starting job for good the next season. The following year Plante backstopped the Canadiens to the first of an unequalled five straight Stanley Cup championships, as well as the first of five straight Vezina trophies as the league's leading goaltender, a mark that has likewise never been equalled. He punctuated the streak with winning the Hart Memorial Trophy as the league's MVP in 1962, the last time any goaltender would win it until Dominik Hasek did in 1997.

By the 1963 season, however, the pressures of playing in Montreal had worn heavily on the high-strung Plante. He nonetheless led the league in shutouts and missed leading the league in goals against by a whisker, but the high-flying Canadiens fell to third place that year, and management felt the need for a change. He was duly traded in the offseason to the New York Rangers with Phil Goyette and Don Marshall for Dave Balon, Leon Rochefort, Len Ronson and Gump Worsley. Plante played another two lackluster seasons for the hapless Rangers - relegated to backup duty behind longtime minor leaguer Marcel Paille in 1965 - before announcing his retirement at the age of 36. His retirement caught general manager Emile Francis off guard, and Francis was angry. He'd just obtained Ed Giacomin from Providence of the AHL and counted on Plante to guide the rookie during the 1965-66 season. But Plante stood firm. The Rangers got some consolation when they drafted Don Simmons in the intra-league draft.

In September of 1967, however, he was lured back to the NHL by former Canadiens teammate Bert Olmstead, who had been named coach and general manager of the expansion California Seals. Plante signed a training camp tryout contract with the Seals, but his reserve rights still belonged to the Rangers and no reasonable deal for his services could be made. He left the Seals' training camp and returned to his retirement.

But another chance to play was offered to him by the St. Louis Blues, who had claimed him off the Rangers' roster in the Intra-League Draft on June 8th, 1968. His return to the NHL was successful, as he and teammate Glenn Hall backstopped the Blues to the Stanley Cup Finals in 1969. They shared the Vezina Trophy as best goaltenders in the league that season.

He played another splendid season in St. Louis, but with up-and-coming goalie Ernie Wakely on the team, the aged Plante was sold to the Toronto Maple Leafs in May, 1970. In his first season with the Leafs he proved he was not past it by leading the league with the third lowest goals against average (1.88) of the entire expansion era (up to the last few seasons) and was named a league Second Team All-Star.

His third season was not as successful, and he was traded again near the end of the 1973 season for his last hurrah to the Boston Bruins for goaltender Ed Johnston and a first round draft choice. He recorded a long-remembered shutout in his Bruins debut against Chicago and remained very effective in eight regular-season games, but was ineffective in two playoff games, and at age 44, Plante's long NHL career was finally over. Only Hall and Frank Brimsek had been named to more season-ending All-Star teams.

[edit] Retirement and death

He joined the rival World Hockey Association in 1973 as general manager of the Quebec Nordiques, but lasted only one season there before being lured out of retirement yet again to play for the WHA team which held his playing rights: the Edmonton Oilers. He played one season for the Oilers before retiring for the third and final time at age 46, after which time he served as a goaltending coach and European scout for the Blues. A surprising punctuation to his career came in December, 1975, when the Montreal Juniors of the major junior Quebec league played an exhibition game against the powerful Soviet Central Red Army hockey team. Plante was asked to play goal for the junior leaguers, who beat the Soviets 2-1.

Jacques Plante died of a heart attack in Switzerland, where he had been living for a number of years. He already was dying of stomach cancer. He was 57 years old. The main arena in Shawinigan was renamed Arena Jacques Plante in his honour after his death.

Plante was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1978. His jersey number (#1) was retired by the Montreal Canadiens on October 7, 1995.

The Jacques Plante Memorial Trophy is awarded to the top goaltender in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.

[edit] Career achievements and honours

  • Retired second in league history in goaltender wins (currently third), fourth in shutouts and fourth in games played (currently eighth).
  • Won the Vezina Memorial Trophy as top goaltender of the Quebec Senior Hockey League in 1953.
  • Won the NHL's Vezina Trophy in 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1962 and 1969.
  • Led the league in goals against average in 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1962, 1969 and 1971, the most number of times of any goaltender.
  • Was named a NHL First Team All-Star in 1956, 1959, 1962.
  • Was named a NHL Second Team All-Star in 1957, 1958, 1960 and 1971.
  • Won the Hart Memorial Trophy in 1962.
  • Played in eight All-Star games in 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1962, 1969 and 1970.
  • In 1998, he was ranked number 13 on The Hockey News' list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players, the second-ranked goalie behind Terry Sawchuk.

[edit] Career statistics

[edit] Regular season

   
Season Team League GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA
1947-48 Montreal QJHL 2 0 0 2 120 5 0 2.50
1947-48 Quebec QJHL 31 18 11 1 1840 87 2 2.84 64 42 12 10 3840 119 7 1.86
1956-57 Montreal NHL 61 31 18 12 3660 123 9 2.02
1957-58 Montreal NHL 57 34 14 8 3386 119 9 2.11
1958-59 Montreal NHL 67 38 16 13 4000 144 9 2.16
1959-60 Montreal NHL 69 40 17 12 4140 175 3 2.54
1960-61 Montreal EPHL 8 3 4 1 480 24 0 3.00
1960-61 Montreal NHL 40 22 11 7 2400 112 2 2.80
1961-62 Montreal NHL 70 42 14 14 4200 166 4 2.37
1962-63 Montreal NHL 56 22 14 19 3320 138 5 2.49
1963-64 New York NHL 65 22 36 7 3900 220 3 3.38
1964-65 New York NHL 33 10 17 5 1938 109 2 3.37
1964-65 Baltimore AHL 17 6 9 1 1018 51 1 3.01
1968-69 St. Louis NHL 37 18 12 6 2139 70 5 1.96
1969-70 St. Louis NHL 32 18 9 5 1839 67 5 2.19
1970-71 Toronto NHL 40 24 11 4 2329 73 4 1.88
1971-72 Toronto NHL 34 16 13 5 1965 86 2 2.63
1972-73 Toronto NHL 32 8 14 6 1717 87 1 3.04
1972-73 Boston NHL 8 7 1 0 480 16 2 2.00
1974-75 Edmonton WHA 31 15 14 1 1592 88 1 3.32
NHL CAREER TOTALS 837 434 247 146 49533 1965 82 2.38
WHA CAREER TOTALS 31 15 14 1 1592 88 1 3.32

[edit] Post season

   
Season Team League GP W L T MIN GA SO GAA
1947-48 Quebec QJHL 9 4 5 0 545 28 2 3.08
1948-49 Quebec QJHL 13 7 6 0 790 43 0 3.27
1949-50 Montreal QSHL 6  ??  ??  ?? 360 20 0 3.33
1950-51 Montreal QSHL 7 2 5 0 420 26 1 3.71
1951-52 Montreal QSHL 7 3 4 0 420 21 1 3.00
1952-53 Montreal NHL 4 3 1 0 240 7 1 1.75
1953-54 Montreal NHL 8 5 3 0 480 15 2 1.88
1954-55 Montreal NHL 12 6 4 0 640 30 0 2.81
1955-56 Montreal NHL 10 8 2 0 600 18 2 1.80
1956-57 Montreal NHL 10 8 2 0 616 18 1 1.75
1957-58 Montreal NHL 10 8 2 0 618 20 1 1.94
1958-59 Montreal NHL 11 8 3 0 670 28 0 2.51
1959-60 Montreal NHL 8 8 0 0 489 11 3 1.35
1960-61 Montreal NHL 6 2 4 0 412 16 0 2.33
1961-62 Montreal NHL 6 2 4 0 360 19 0 3.17
1962-63 Montreal NHL 5 1 4 0 300 14 0 2.80
1964-65 Baltimore AHL 5 2 3 0 315 14 1 2.67
1968-69 St. Louis NHL 10 8 2 0 589 14 3 1.43
1969-70 St. Louis NHL 6 4 1 0 324 8 1 1.48
1970-71 Toronto NHL 3 0 2 0 134 7 0 3.13
1971-72 Toronto NHL 1 0 1 0 60 5 0 5.00
1972-73 Boston NHL 2 0 2 0 120 10 0 5.00
NHL CAREER TOTALS 112 71 37 0 6652 240 14 2.16

[edit] Quotes

"Suppose you were working at your job one day, and you made a little mistake. Then all of a sudden a red light went on over your desk, and fifteen thousand people stood up and yelled at you that you sucked?" -Jacques Plante

"There are a lot of very good goalies, there are even a fair number of great goalies. But there aren't many important goalies. And Jacques Plante was an important goalie" Ken Dryden from ESPN Classic's SportsCentury series.

[edit] External links


Preceded by:
Bernie Geoffrion
Winner of the Hart Trophy
1962
Succeeded by:
Gordie Howe
Preceded by:
Terry Sawchuck
Winner of the Vezina Trophy
1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960
Succeeded by:
Johnny Bower
Preceded by:
Johnny Bower
Winner of the Vezina Trophy
1962
Succeeded by:
Glenn Hall
Preceded by:
Rogatien Vachon
and Gump Worsley
Winner of the Vezina Trophy
with Glenn Hall

1969
Succeeded by:
Tony Esposito
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