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History Behind Lord Stanley Cup

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History Behind Lord Stanley

The Lord Stanley Cup. The oldest trophy competed for by professional athletes in North America and the greatest thing NHL hockey players dream of to hoist and kiss after a season. Training, practicing, motivation and pushing themselves to get better is what all these players put the hours into for that moment. After battling 82 games for a playoff spot, then continuing to win 4 playoff rounds, of best of seven series, they finally get to have the moment they’ve all been working and dreaming for as a kid. To raise the Cup, kiss it, scream, and then pass it to your fellow teammate. But that’s not why they do it. They do it because they had a dream as a kid and know the history behind what the Cup represents to …show more content…

In 1927-1928, a new structure was streamlined and a vertical shape of the Cup was used and by 1948, the Cup became to tall to hold as well as even stand up without tipping over. This Cup was changed to what we see today with the wider rings at the bottom standing at 35 inches tall and 17 inches wide. Since 1958, 5 new rings were added around the base of the Cup for championship teams, which means rings had to be removed to maintain the structure of the Cup. The rings that get removed and preserved in Lord Stanley’s Vault in the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto. This ends the evolution of what the Cup is today and we can now see all the alterations done over the years, plus see how the NHL has kept all the history of the cup either on the cup or in Lord Stanley’s Vault so none of the history is forgotten or left behind.

Next, I will talk about the history behind how the Stanley Cup was nicknamed “Lord Stanley”, how the cup is engraved and what the Cup does to help others. The original cup was bought for roughly $50 and donated from a man named Sir Frederick Arthur Stanley. Sir Frederick Arthur Stanley was a Colonial Secretary from 1885-1886 and the Governor General of Canada from 1888-1893, plus an avid sportsman. In 1892, he donated the cup and said, "I have for some time been thinking that it would be a good thing if there were a challenge cup which should be held from year to year by the champion hockey team in the Dominion of Canada. There does not

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