Hal Laycoe

Harold Richardson Laycoe (June 23, 1922 – April 29, 1998) was a Canadian ice hockey defenceman and coach. He played in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the New York Rangers, Montreal Canadiens, and Boston Bruins between 1945 and 1956. After his playing career he became a coach, working as both a coach and general manager in the Western Hockey League between 1956 and 1969. He coached the Los Angeles Kings of the NHL for the first part of the 1969–70 season, and in 1970 became the inaugural coach of the Vancouver Canucks, spending two seasons as coach and a final season as the general manager in 1973–74.

Playing career

Laycoe grew up in rural Sutherland, Saskatchewan. He played junior hockey in Saskatoon, but his dreams of turning pro in the sport were interrupted by World War II. Laycoe served in the Royal Canadian Navy and played on travelling teams while completing his military service. He started his National Hockey League career with the New York Rangers after signing with this team in 1945.

In 1947, Laycoe joined the Montreal Canadiens. Despite wearing eyeglasses during games due to his vision, Laycoe gained a reputation as one of the most physical players in the league. However, he struggled to find playing time on an exceptionally deep team. He was a midseason trade acquisition by the Boston Bruins in 1951, and he received an increased number of minutes on the blue line with his new club. His high stick on and subsequent fight with French-Canadian superstar Maurice Richard was the catalyst for the infamous Richard Riot. Laycoe retired after the 1955-1956 season.

Coaching career

Coaching during late 1960s
Hal retired in Vancouver and rightfully proud of his accomplishments in Hockey
On ice, Portland Buckaroos celebrate Cup win in 1965 at Victoria
One of four Stanley Cup Rings as European scout for the NY Islanders

Laycoe coached the New Westminster Royals of the Western Hockey League in 1956–57 and remained with the franchise when it moved to Portland, Oregon for the 1960–1961 season and was renamed the Portland Buckaroos. The Buckaroos won the league championship Lester Patrick Cup its first year in existence. Laycoe coached the Buckaroos for nine seasons and won another league championship in 1964–1965. During the 9 Buckaroo years, Laycoe led them to more victories (362) than any other professional team. In 1969, Laycoe moved to the National Hockey League, coaching the Los Angeles Kings for part of one season and then moving on to the expansion Vancouver Canucks for two more seasons. He later coached the Dutch national team in the 1977 B Pool World Championships.He continued to live in Vancouver after leaving the Canuck's management. His final position in hockey was as a scout with the New York Islanders. The Islanders gave team Stanley Cup rings to Laycoe after each of their 1980 to 1984 Stanley Cup wins.

In 1984, he was named to the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame.

Although his hometown of Sutherland became annexed into Saskatoon, Laycoe Crescent, Court, Lane and Terrace in the city's Silverspring subdivision is named in his honor.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1938–39Saskatoon ChiefsNSJHL30000
1939–40Saskatoon DodgersNSJHL4156620444
1940–41Saskatoon QuakersNSJHL111211231323470
1940–41Saskatoon QuakersSSHL10000
1940–41Saskatoon QuakersM-Cup10481222
1941–42Saskatoon QuakersSSHL281413272793474
1941–42Saskatoon QuakersAl-Cup40110
1942–43Ottawa Postal CorpsOCHL10000
1943–44Toronto NavyOHA1466124
1943–44Toronto People's CreditTIHL93142926811
1944–45Winnipeg NavyWNDHL151015258558130
1945–46New York RangersNHL170226
1945–46New York RoversEAHL357222925
1946–47New York RangersNHL581121325
1947–48Montreal CanadiensNHL141234
1947–48Buffalo BisonsAHL458253336820215
1948–49Montreal CanadiensNHL5135831701113
1948–49Buffalo BisonsAHL1041510
1949–50Montreal CanadiensNHL300222120000
1950–51Montreal CanadiensNHL3402225
1950–51Boston BruinsNHL10112460115
1951–52Boston BruinsNHL70571261711211
1952–53Boston BruinsNHL5421012361102210
1953–54Boston BruinsNHL57316192920000
1954–55Boston BruinsNHL70413173251010
1955–56Boston BruinsNHL65551016
1956–57New Westminster RoyalsWHL
NHL totals53025771022904025739

Coaching record

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGCWLTFinishGCWLResult
1956–57New Westminster RoyalsWHL70343452nd, WHL1367Lost in Final
1957–58New Westminster RoyalsWHL70392833rd, WHL413Lost in First Round
1958–59New Westminster RoyalsWHL70234525th, WHL
1959–60Victoria CougarsWHL70372943rd, WHL645Lost in Final
1960–61Portland BuckaroosWHL70382392nd, WHL14104Won Lester Patrick Cup
1961–62Portland BuckaroosWHL70422351st, WHL734Lost in Second Round
1962–63Portland BuckaroosWHL70432161st, WHL734Lost in Second Round
1963–64Portland BuckaroosWHL70333072nd, WHL514Lost in First Round
1964–65Portland BuckaroosWHL70422351st, WHL1082Won Lester Patrick Trophy
1965–66Portland BuckaroosWHL72432451st, WHL844Lost in Final
1966–67Portland BuckaroosWHL72412471st, WHL404Lost in First Round
1967–68Portland BuckaroosWHL72402661st, WHL1257Lost in Final
1968–69Portland BuckaroosWHL744018161st, WHL1147Lost in Final
1969–70Los Angeles KingsNHL2451816th, West
1969–70Vancouver CanucksWHL95311st, WHL1183Won Lester Patrick Trophy
1970–71Vancouver CanucksNHL78244686th, East
1971–72Vancouver CanucksNHL78205087th, East
NHL totals1804911417

References

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