Maurice Richard

Actor

Popular As Joseph Henri Maurice Richard

Birthday August 4, 1921

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Montreal, Quebec, Canada

DEATH DATE 2000-5-27, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (79 years old)

Nationality Canada

Height 5' 10" (1.78 m)

#23158 Most Popular

1921

Joseph Henri Maurice "Rocket" Richard (August 4, 1921 – May 27, 2000) was a Canadian professional ice hockey player who played 18 seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Montreal Canadiens.

Joseph Henri Maurice Richard was born August 4, 1921, in Montreal, Quebec.

His father, Onésime Richard, was originally from the Gaspé region of Quebec, before moving to Montreal, where he married Maurice's mother, Alice Laramée.

The couple settled in the neighbourhood of Nouveau-Bordeaux.

Maurice was the oldest of eight children; he had three sisters: Georgette, Rollande and Marguerite; and four brothers: René, Jacques, Henri and Claude.

Onésime was a carpenter by trade, and took a job with the Canadian Pacific Railway shortly after Maurice was born.

1930

The Richards struggled during the Great Depression; Onésime lost his job in 1930 and the family relied on government aid until he was re-hired by the railway around 1936.

Richard received his first pair of ice skates when he was four, and grew up skating on local rivers and a small backyard ice surface his father created.

He did not play organized hockey until he was 14.

Instead, Richard developed his skills playing shinny and "hog" – a game that required the puck carrier to keep the puck away from others for as long as possible.

While he also played baseball and was a boxer, hockey was his passion.

After he began playing in organized leagues, Richard joined several teams and used pseudonyms such as "Maurice Rochon" to circumvent rules that restricted players to one team.

1938

In one league, he led his team to three consecutive championships and scored 133 of his team's 144 goals in the 1938–39 season.

At 16, Richard dropped out of school to work with his father as a machinist.

He enrolled in a technical school, intent on earning a trade certificate.

At 18, Richard joined the Verdun Juniors, though as a rookie he saw little ice time in the regular season.

He scored four goals in ten regular season games, and added six goals in four playoff games as Verdun won the provincial championship.

1940

Richard, Elmer Lach and Toe Blake formed the "Punch line", a high-scoring forward line of the 1940s.

He was promoted to the Montreal Canadiens' affiliate in the Quebec Senior Hockey League in 1940, but suffered a broken ankle in his first game after crashing into the boards and missed the remainder of the season.

1941

The injury also aborted his hopes of joining the Canadian military: he was called to a recruitment centre in mid-1941, but was deemed unfit for combat.

Off the ice, Richard was a quiet, unassuming youth who spoke little.

1944

He was the first player in NHL history to score 50 goals in one season, accomplishing the feat in 50 games in 1944–45, and the first to reach 500 career goals.

1947

He won the Hart Trophy as the NHL's most valuable player in 1947, played in 13 All-Star Games and was named to 14 post-season NHL All-Star teams, eight on the first team.

1954

Richard was involved in a vicious on-ice incident late in the 1954–55 season during which he struck a linesman.

NHL President Clarence Campbell suspended him for the remainder of the season and playoffs, which precipitated the Richard Riot in Montreal.

The riot has taken on a mythical quality in the decades since and is often viewed as a precursor to Quebec's Quiet Revolution.

Richard was a cultural icon among Quebec's francophone population; his legend is a primary motif in Roch Carrier's short story The Hockey Sweater, an emblematic work of Canadian culture.

1956

Richard was a member of eight Stanley Cup championship teams, including a league record five straight between 1956 and 1960; he was the team's captain for the last four.

1960

Richard retired in 1960 as the National Hockey League's all-time leader in goals with 544.

The Canadiens retired his number, 9, in 1960, and in 1999 donated the Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy to the NHL, awarded annually to the league's regular season leading goal-scorer.

The oldest of eight children, Richard emerged from a poverty-stricken family during the Great Depression and was initially viewed as a fragile player.

A string of injuries prevented him from joining the Canadian military during the Second World War.

Intense, he was renowned for his physical and occasionally violent style of play.

1961

The Hall of Fame waived its five-year waiting period for eligibility and inducted Richard in 1961.

1975

In 1975 he was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame.

1998

In 1998, Richard was diagnosed with abdominal cancer and died from the disease two years later.

He was the first non-politician to be honoured by the province of Quebec with a state funeral.

2017

In 2017, Richard was named one of the 100 Greatest NHL Players in history.

His younger brother Henri also played his entire career with the Canadiens, the two as teammates for Maurice's last five years.

A centre nicknamed the "Pocket Rocket", Henri is enshrined alongside Maurice in the Hockey Hall of Fame.