1952-53 NHL season: Difference between revisions
From SportsPaper Wiki
m (Text replacement - "Olympia Stadium" to "Detroit Olympia") |
|||
Line 33: | Line 33: | ||
| [[List_of_all-star_game_publications#National_Hockey_League|First All-Star Team vs. Second All-Star Team]] | | [[List_of_all-star_game_publications#National_Hockey_League|First All-Star Team vs. Second All-Star Team]] | ||
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/hockey/nhl/seasons/1952-53/nhl-all-star-game-program-1952.html NHL All-Star Game] | | [https://www.sportspaper.info/hockey/nhl/seasons/1952-53/nhl-all-star-game-program-1952.html NHL All-Star Game] | ||
| [[Olympia | | [[Detroit Olympia]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
! style="background:#C41230; color:#FFFFFF;" colspan="3"|Media Guides and Yearbooks | ! style="background:#C41230; color:#FFFFFF;" colspan="3"|Media Guides and Yearbooks |
Revision as of 08:48, 26 January 2023
Preseason | n/a |
---|---|
Regular Season | October 9, 1952-March 22, 1953 |
Postseason | March 24-April 16, 1953 |
← 1951-52 • NHL seasons • 1953-54 → |
The 1952-53 NHL season was the 36th season of the National Hockey League. The Montreal Canadiens were the Stanley Cup winners as they beat the Boston Bruins four games to one in the final series.
Publications
Programs | ||
---|---|---|
Team | Type | Venue |
Boston Bruins | Postseason | Boston Garden |
Montreal Canadiens | Regular Season | Montreal Forum |
New York Rangers | Regular Season | Madison Square Garden |
First All-Star Team vs. Second All-Star Team | NHL All-Star Game | Detroit Olympia |
Media Guides and Yearbooks | ||
Media Guides | ||
Yearbooks |