Ab DeMarco

Albert George DeMarco, Sr. (May 10, 1916 – May 26, 1989) was a Canadian professional ice hockey player. DeMarco started his National Hockey League career with the Chicago Black Hawks. He would also play with the New York Rangers, Boston Bruins and Toronto Maple Leafs. He played in the NHL from 1938 to 1947. He played several years in minor professional hockey until 1952, and played on in senior amateur hockey in his hometown of North Bay during the 1950s.

Ab DeMarco
DeMarco pictured in a 1943 newspaper
Born (1916-05-10)May 10, 1916
North Bay, Ontario, Canada
Died May 26, 1989(1989-05-26) (aged 73)
North Bay, Ontario, Canada
Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 168 lb (76 kg; 12 st 0 lb)
Position Centre
Shot Right
Played for New York Rangers
Boston Bruins
Toronto Maple Leafs
Chicago Black Hawks
Playing career 19371952

Career

Albert was born in North Bay, Ontario. He played junior and minor hockey from 1933 until 1937, when he became a professional with the Baltimore Orioles of the Eastern American Hockey League. DeMarco signed with the Chicago Black Hawks in 1938, splitting time with the Providence Reds of the International-American Hockey League. After two seasons, the Hawks traded DeMarco to Providence, where he played until 1943. In the 1942–43 season, DeMarco was loaned to the Toronto Maple Leafs, then traded to the Boston Bruins. The following November, he was traded by Boston to the New York Rangers. He remained with the Rangers before being traded to the Cleveland Barons of the American Hockey League in 1947. It was the end of his NHL career, but DeMarco played for Cleveland, the Washington Lions and Buffalo Bisons for another five years. In 1952, DeMarco returned to his hometown and played for the senior North Bay Trappers for several more years. His last full season of play was 1954–55. He moved into coaching and played only occasionally until 1959.

DeMarco's overtime goal in the 1943 playoffs against Montreal eliminated the Canadiens; it would be the last time the Bruins defeated Montreal in a playoff series for the next 45 years.[1]

DeMarco's son Ab Jr. also played in the NHL.

Awards

  • Won John B. Sollenberger Trophy (Top Scorer- AHL) (1951)
  • Won Les Cunningham Award (MVP- AHL) (1951)
  • 1st All-Star Team (AHL 1950-51)
  • 2nd All-Star Teams: (EAHL 1937-38) (AHL 1949-50)

Transactions

  • Signed as a free agent by Chicago, September 28, 1938.
  • Traded to Providence (AHL) by Chicago for cash, May 14, 1940.
  • Loaned to Toronto by Providence (AHL) with the trade of Buck Jones for the loan of Jack Forsey and George Boothman, February 3, 1943.
  • Traded to Boston by Providence (AHL) with Oscar Aubuchon and Norm Calladine for cash, March 8, 1943.
  • Traded to NY Rangers by Boston for cash, November 1943.
  • Traded to Detroit by NY Rangers with Hank Goldup for Flash Hollett, June 19, 1946. Transaction voided when Hollett decided to retire, June, 1946.
  • Traded to Cleveland (AHL) by NY Rangers with Joe Cooper for cash, May 5, 1947.
  • Traded to Washington (AHL) by Cleveland (AHL) with Bryan Hextall Sr. for Dan Porteous and Ken Schultz, January 20, 1949.
  • Traded to Montreal (Buffalo- AHL) by Washington (AHL) for George Robertson with Montreal retaining right of recall, January 28, 1949.
gollark: Well, if you plan to implement some cookie-type mechanism, there are challenges in securing websites *from each other*.
gollark: Browsers also present large security challenges if you do some stuff, though. Do you know about the same origin policy and stuff?
gollark: Okay?
gollark: Anyway, the latest issue was caused by the privileged execution mode, a trusted/signed program which downloaded code via HTTP, and a variation of a previous exploit on the SPUDNET process (patched by polychoron fixes) being used to fake HTTP responses to it.
gollark: ...

References

  1. Wee, K.P. (October 2015). The End of the Montreal Jinx: Boston's Short-Lived Glory in the Historic Bruins-Canadiens Rivalry, 1988-1994. p. 4. ISBN 978-1517362911.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.