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Committee Chairman

Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .

Taken with the fourth overall pick in the 1973 Draft, Lanny McDonald made the Toronto Maple Leafs that year, and two seasons later, the mustached one was one of the snipers in hockey.

The Right Wing would be on a line with Darryl Sittler, and the two lit up the league.  McDonald was a Second Team All-Star in 1976-77, scoring 46 Goals, which began a four-year streak of hitting the 40-goal plateau.  His most famous goal occurred in the 1978 Playoffs, where he put the puck in the net in the series clincher against the heavily favored New York Islanders.

McDonald was used as a pawn in the feud between Sittler and Maple Leafs’ owner, Harold Ballard, when he was traded to the Colorado Rockies during the 1979/80 season.  He would later join the Calgary Flames and win the Stanley Cup in 1989, which was McDonald's final season.

With the Maple Leafs, McDonald had 219 of his career 500 Goals.  He was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1992 in his first year of eligibility.  

Irvine “Ace” Bailey was not planning to turn his hockey playing into a professional career, and in the 1920s, that was not considered a lucrative option.  The Toronto St. Patricks saw an abundance of talent in Bailey, and he signed with them before the 1926/27 season.

Bailey was an instant star, utilizing his marksmanship and speed to become one of the premier snipers in hockey.  Bailey would lead the NHL in Goals in 1928-29 (22) and Points (32), and he had two more 20-Goal/40-Point years, which was an impressive accomplishment back then.

On December 12, 1933, the Leafs were on the road against Eddie Shore and the Boston Bruins.  During the game, the tenacious King Clancy checked Shore with brute force, leading the Bruin to seek vengeance.  Shore got up, and with the Leafs advancing to the Boston zone, he used his stick to viciously trip Bailey (who he thought was Clancy), who thunderously fell to the ice head-first. 

Bailey was not just knocked out cold; he was in a coma for ten days, of which it was thought he would never recover.  Bailey came out of the coma, but his playing career was over.  To help Bailey financially, an All-Star Game, the first of its kind in the NHL, happened in 1934, with Shore and Bailey shaking hands to start the game.

The Maple Leafs honored Bailey and made history in the process by becoming the first NHL team to retire a number when Bailey’s number 6 was retired.  

Bailey was finally elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1975. 

The professional hockey career of Gordie Drillon was relatively short, considering that he would eventually become a Hockey Hall of Famer.  Still, he created an offensive strategy that would become a staple in the NHL.

Called up in 1936, Drillon was a Right Wing who used his size to position himself in front of the opponent’s net.  Drillon redirected shots and tipped them into light the lamp.  It worked, as Drillon led the NHL in Goals (26) and Points (52) in his second season (1937-38) and was a First Team All-Star.  Drillon would also win the Lady Byng that year with only four Penalty Minutes accrued.

Drillon continued to dazzle offensively, earning First Team honors in 1938-39, and was a Second Team All-Star selection in 1941-42.  With the Leafs, he had four 20-Goal seasons, which was excellent in an era where they played fewer than 50 Games.  

What Drillon failed at was defense, as he was not very committed to the back end.  Drillon was a member of the Toronto team that won the 1942 Stanley Cup, but he saw less action in the second half of the series, where Toronto overcame a 3-0 deficit to Detroit.  Drillon was shipped off to Montreal after the Cup win.

After one year with the Habs, Drillon joined the Canadian military to serve in World War II.  While he returned to play hockey after the war was over, his skills were no longer good enough to play in the NHL.

Drillon entered the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1975, on the strength of his play in Toronto, where he averaged 0.93 points per Game.   His attention to defense may have been lacking, but his offensive innovation still resonates in hockey today.

Playing at Defense, Red Horner was an 11-year veteran of the National Hockey League, all of which was as a Toronto Maple Leaf.

Horner was a meat-and-potatoes type of player who had no grace on the ice but effortlessly found teammates with precision passing.  His actual calling card was his toughness, as evidenced by leading the NHL in Penalty Minutes seven times.  Horner helped the Maple Leafs win the 1932 Stanley Cup, and his rock-solid defensive skills were a tremendous asset to Toronto.  

Horner was chosen for the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1965.