Frank McCool’s NHL story was brief, but the first chapter was unforgettable.
The former Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender, born Tobias Francis McCool and known as Frank during his playing days, stamped his name on hockey history in 1944-45 with a rookie season that ended in a Stanley Cup and a Calder Trophy. For a player whose career would be cut short almost as soon as it began, that one year carried plenty of weight.
McCool’s path to the NHL ran through Calgary, Alberta, and then Gonzaga University, where he played from 1940 to 1942. He enrolled in the army in 1942, but was discharged one season later after being deemed medically unfit to serve. In 1944-45, he returned to the ice and signed an NHL contract as a free agent with the Maple Leafs.
His debut came on Oct. 28, 1944, against the New York Rangers, and he made it count. The 26-year-old picked up a 2-1 win in his first NHL game, then followed that by winning his first six appearances while Toronto outscored opponents 33-13 over that stretch.
By the end of the regular season, McCool had posted a 24-22-4 record in 50 games. He added four shutouts and a 3.22 goals against average, helping push the Maple Leafs into the playoffs.
That’s where the rookie season turned into something even bigger. McCool appeared in 13 postseason games and went 8-5-0 with a 2.23 GAA and four shutouts as Toronto beat the Detroit Red Wings in seven games to win the Stanley Cup.
Along the way, he set a franchise record for shutouts in one postseason and established an NHL record for most consecutive postseason shutouts, a mark that has since been tied but not broken. His nine goals against in the Stanley Cup Final also stood as a league record until 2011, when it was surpassed.
The season’s reward came with rookie of the year honors. McCool won the Calder Trophy in 1944-45, beating out Ken Smith, Ted Lindsay, Frank Eddolls, and Butch McDonald.
What followed was a much shorter NHL career than anyone would have expected. Just 22 games into the 1945-46 season, McCool was diagnosed with severe ulcers and retired after parts of only two seasons in the league.
In all, he played 72 NHL games, finishing with a 34-31-7 record, four shutouts, and a 3.36 career GAA. It was a solid run on paper, but one that ended far too soon.
McCool died on May 20, 1973, at age 54. His legacy lives on through that rookie season with the Maple Leafs and an arena named after him in Calgary. He never got the chance to fully play out his NHL career, but his place in hockey history was secured in 1944-45 - on the Calder Trophy and on the Stanley Cup ring.
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