Alex Smart

Alexander Smart (May 29, 1918 – April 18, 2005) was a Canadian ice hockey forward. He played 8 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens during the 1942–43 season. The rest of his career, which lasted from 1938 to 1950, was mainly spent in the Quebec Senior Hockey League.

Playing career

Born in Brandon, Manitoba, Smart played junior hockey in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League with the Portage Terriers for two seasons. In 1937–38, joined the senior ranks with the Toronto Marlboros of the Ontario Hockey Association and scored 23 points in 12 games at a goal-per-game pace. The following season, he began a three-year stint in the Montreal City Hockey League (MCHL) with the Verdun Maple Leafs and Montreal Sr. Canadiens.

In 1941–42, Smart moved with the Sr. Canadiens to the Quebec Senior Hockey League (QSHL). Affiliated with the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League, Smart was called up to the NHL in January of the 1942–43 NHL season and, on January 14, became the first player in league history to score a hat trick in his NHL debut; this feat would not be matched for 36 years, by Réal Cloutier at the start of the 1979–80 NHL season, and since repeated by only Fabian Brunnström (2008), Derek Stepan (2010), Ryan Poehling (2019), and not exceeded until Auston Matthews (2016), who scored four. He completed the season with 5 goals and 2 assists in 8 games – the lone NHL stint of his career.

Smart spent the remainder of his career in the QSHL with the Montreal Royals and Ottawa Senators except for one more season in the MCHL with the Montreal Vickers and the final season of his career in the OVHL with Eastview St. Charles. He recorded a career-high 66 points in 47 games with the Senators in 1947–48, then helped the club to an Allan Cup in 1949 as Canada's senior amateur champions. Smart retired after the 1950–51 season spent with Eastview.

Post-playing career

After retiring from the QSHL, Smart became a scout for the Los Angeles Kings and worked with Goodyear Tire for forty years.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1935–36Portage TerriersMJHL16104144696152
1936–37Portage TerriersMJHL16154191040226
1937–38Toronto MarlborosOHA1212112310648129
1938–39Verdun Maple LeafsQSHL2269151821124
1939–40Verdun Maple LeafsQSHL2189171387189
1940–41Montreal Senior CanadiensMCHL337152221
1941–42Montreal Senior CanadiensQSHL36156214064484
1942–43Montreal CanadiensNHL85270
1942–43Montreal Senior CanadiensQSHL231211238
1943–44Montreal RoyalsQSHL2091423954372
1944–45Montreal RoyalsQSHL241919381272352
1945–46Montreal RoyalsQSHL37162440331155106
1946–47Ottawa SenatorsQSHL381421352691674
1947–48Ottawa SenatorsQSHL47283866111228106
1947–48Ottawa SenatorsAl-Cup1047112
1948–49Ottawa SenatorsQSHL4014274129113476
1948–49Ottawa SenatorsAl-Cup141452
1949–50Ottawa SenatorsQSHL288122028703312
QSHL totals3361491903392277829386755
NHL totals85270

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Alex Smart, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.