1940–41 Boston Bruins | |
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Stanley Cup champions
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Prince of Wales Trophy winners
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Division | 1st NHL |
1940–41 record | 27–8–13 |
Home record | 15–4–5 |
Road record | 12–4–8 |
Goals for | 168 (1st) |
Goals against | 102 (T-2nd) |
Team information | |
General Manager | Art Ross |
Coach | Cooney Weiland |
Captain | Dit Clapper |
Arena | Boston Garden |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Roy Conacher (24) |
Assists | Bill Cowley (45) |
Points | Bill Cowley (62) |
Penalties in minutes | Des Smith (61) |
Wins | Frank Brimsek (27) |
Goals against average | Frank Brimsek (2.01) |
The 1940–41 Boston Bruins season was the Bruins' 17th season in the National Hockey League, and they were coming off of a successful season in 1939–40, leading the NHL in points for the third season in a row, as they finished with a 31–12–5 record, accumulating 67 points. However, the Bruins lost to the New York Rangers in the NHL semi-finals, ending their chances for a second-straight Stanley Cup. This year, the Bruins repeated as regular-season champs and returned to the Final, and defeated the Detroit Red Wings four games to none to win the organization's third Stanley Cup.
Boston would have a slow start to the season, going winless in their first 4 games (0–2–2), and sat with a 6–7–3 record 16 games into the season, fighting with the Chicago Black Hawks and New York Americans for 3rd place in the league. The Bruins would then go on a record breaking unbeaten streak, as they would have a 15–0–8 record in their next 23 games, and sit in 2nd place to the Toronto Maple Leafs. After a 2–0 loss to the New York Rangers, Boston would finish the season 6–0–2 to pass the Leafs, and finish with the most points in the NHL for the 4th straight year. Boston had an amazing 21–1–10 record to close out the season.
Bill Cowley would lead the NHL in scoring with 62 points, as he scored 17 goals and added 45 assists. Roy Conacher led the Bruins in goals with 24, and added 14 assists for a career high 38 points. Eddie Wiseman and Bobby Bauer had productive seasons, earning 40 and 39 points respectively, while Milt Schmidt finished with 38. Team captain Dit Clapper led the Boston blueline with 26 points, while Flash Hollett led the Bruins defense with 9 goals.