NHL

Forgotten Stanley Cup mayhem resurfaces with coronavirus

Sarah Hall has heard the stories about her great-grandfather, more and mź¦ŗore as the years have gone on. She understands the rising interest in Joe Hall ā€” sometimes dubbed ā€œBadā€ Joe Hall for his overwhelming penalty minutes while playing for the Canadiens just after World War I.

Hall was on the team in 1919 when the Stanley Cup final between šŸŽ¶the CanadšŸ”Æiens and the Seattle Metropolitans was canceled hours before Game 6, when the winner was set to take home the Cup. Too many players were hospitalized with the Spanish Flu, including Hall. Just weeks before his 38th birthday and four days after the game was canceled, Hall died of pneumonia.

Hall became hockeyā€™s face of that pandemic from just over a century ago, one that would kill tens of millions around the world. That year stood as the only time the Stanley Cup was not awarded from its inception in 1892 until the NHL locked out its players and canceled the 2004-05 season. Now with the coronavirus pandemic spreading rapidly, the NHL is in a ā€œpauseā€ phase, facing tšŸŽhe grim reality that the season is more likely to be canceled than restarted.

And so Sarah Hall kindly returned a message from a reporter when she had far greater things to think about. She is an anesthesiologist at Nanaimo Regional General Hospital, in beautiful Vancouverš’€° Island, British Columbia. Her hospital had not received any patients suffering from COVID-19 as of Saturday afternoon, but she has seen all the graphs and projections and knows that it is coming sooner rather than later.

It fšŸ¦©elt like the calm before the storm, and Hall was just hoping to prepšŸ˜¼are herself and her hospital as well as she possibly could.

ā€œLooking at our demographics, theyā€™re projecting that we could need as manį€£y as 900 ventilators,ā€ Hall told The Post. ā€œAnd we currently have ā€” if we include the ones we have in our operating room ā€” 30. So, yeah, itā€™s pretty dark.ā€

Hall is not much of a sports fan, which she jokingly said mā™šade her ā€œa great disappointment to my family.ā€ Thatā€™s obviously not true, as she was about to be on the front lines of a battle that mattered a lot more than anything with a sšŸ”Æilver chalice as a reward.

ā€œItā€™s been really, really busy,ā€ Hall said. ā€œAs with most hospitals, weā€™re in the center of preparing airway teams, and trying š”‰to cobble together the equipment that we donā€™t have. Just making a plan.ā€

In all of the hubbub, she has taken a little bit of time to think about her great-grandfather, whom she didnā€™t know much about growing up. But it was impossibleā€ to avoid the parallels between then and now, even with greater worries swirling in everyoneā€™s mind.

ā€œIt certainly has caused me to reflect upon his situation,ā€ Hall said. ā€œBut Iā€™m not sušŸ¦©re that I can say that itā€™s more strange. Itā€™s just part of our history.ā€

It is also part of the history of the Stanley Cup — one that a lot of people donā€™t know about.

That year, the Canadiens were the NHL champions andšŸ¬ they were to take on the champion of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA), with the winner of the series getting the Cup. The two leagues played by different rules, wšŸ’Æith seven players per side in the PCHA and six per side in the NHL. All the games were at the Seattle Ice Arena, and the Metropolitans won Games 1 and 3 in blowouts playing by their rules ā€” a combined score of 14-2 ā€” while the Canadiens won Game 2 and 5 playing by their rules.

Game 4 was considered one of the best games in hockey history, with Georges Vezina dazzling in the Canadiens nets to keep it a scoreless match through two overtimes before it was called a draw. It was played under NHL rules, so Game 5 was considered ā€œa replayā€ and played under the same rules (thereafter it wašŸŒ„s determined that overtimes would go on until a goal was scored). The Mets were up, 3-0, but then ā€œFrank Foyston got hurt, Jack Walker broke a skate, and Cully Wilson collapsed from exhaustion,ā€ according to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. They went on witą²žh only four skaters, and the Canadiens tied it before their substitute, Jack McDonald, sprinted onto the ice and won the game in overtime.

Some players had to be carried off the ice, and some went directly to the hospital. Along with Hall, the Canadiens had five players in the hospital or bedridden, along with owner George Kennedy, who would die two years later after being weakened by the flu. (His widow then sold the team for $11,000.) The two clubs decided to call off the series, and in 1948, the league made an inscription on the Cup underį€£ the year 1919, saying: ā€œSeries not completed.ā€

ā€œIšŸ…·tā€™s eerily similar,ā€ Sarah Halź¦¦l said. ā€œThere are a lot of parallels, for sure.ā€

Back thenš’ƒ, the world was just coming out of war, and would soon dive into a deep economic depression. Who knows what is going to happen now, with the Stanley Cup oā›Žr otherwise?

So Sarah Hall was planning for a mountain bike ride before geā˜‚tting back to woršŸ»k. She rightfully said her home ā€œis a great place to be isolated.ā€ But she knew that the lessons from the time of her great-grandfather were not far behind.

ā€œSo far, so good,ā€ Hall said, ā€œbut I think weā€™re bracing foršŸ”œ whatā€™s yet to come.ā€