. (left) shakes the hand of Eddie Shore at the benefit All-Star Game held in honour of Bailey. Shore started his career with his hometown minor hockey team, the Cupar Canucks. He played for the
Melville Millionaires and won the 1923–24 Saskatchewan senior championship. Shore moved up to professional hockey with the
Regina Capitals of the
Western Canada Hockey League in
1925. His team finished last in the league and moved to
Portland after the season. Shore moved to the league champion
Edmonton Eskimos in
1926, where he converted from
forward to defence and was given the nickname "the Edmonton Express".'' They remained partners for the rest of Hitchman’s career, with Shore’s rushing style complementing Hitchman’s stay-at-home play. During Shore’s second year with the team, he and Hitchman helped lead the Bruins to the
Stanley Cup Final, though they ultimately lost to the Ottawa Senators. Two years later, the pair anchored a defence that was virtually impenetrable. The Bruins surrendered only 52 goals over 44 games, helping the team capture its first Stanley Cup in 1929. His best statistical season came in
1932–33, when he scored 8 goals and 35 points, earning him the
Hart Memorial Trophy as the NHL’s Most Valuable Player for the first time. That year he also finished 12th in the league's scoring race, which was unheard of for a defenceman at that time. Shore brought a brand of rough-and-tumble hockey the league had never seen before. He antagonized fans, fought opponents, and stirred more controversy than any other player of his era. He quickly became one of the league’s first star players during the 1920s and 1930s. Also being credited for helping gain the city of Boston's interest in the NHL. Due to Shore being one of the top players in the league he regularly faced an onslaught of physical punishment. His former teammate
Milt Schmidt later commented “He was bruised, head to toe, after every game, everybody was after him. They figured if they could stop Eddie Shore, they could stop the Bruins.” By the end of the game Shore had suffered a concussion, a broken nose, two black eyes, and three broken teeth resulting in him spending the night in the hospital. Another unusual incident involving Shore occurred in January 1930 when he was challenged to a boxing match by baseball player
Art Shires. While NHL President
Frank Calder said that Shore's participation was up to Bruins' manager
Art Ross to decide, baseball commissioner Judge
Kenesaw Mountain Landis vetoed Shires' participation, and the match was never held. On January 24, 1933, during a game against Montreal, Shore accidentally punched NHL referee-in-chief
Cooper Smeaton during a fight with
Sylvio Mantha and was fined $100. On March 30, 1933, Shore scored a playoff overtime goal against Toronto, the only time he accomplished that feat in his career. In
Boston Garden on December 12, 1933, Shore ended the career of
Toronto Maple Leafs star
Ace Bailey when he hit Bailey from behind. When Bailey's head hit the ice, he was knocked unconscious and went into convulsions. Moments earlier, Maple Leafs teammate
King Clancy upended Shore with a hard check as he rushed up the ice. Angry, dazed, and thinking he was going after Clancy, Shore rushed at Bailey intent on revenge. In retaliation, the Leafs tough-guy
Red Horner punched Shore, whose head hit the ice as he fell from the blow. Shore was knocked unconscious and required seven stitches but was not seriously injured. An
all-star benefit game was held at
Maple Leaf Gardens on February 14, 1934, which raised $20,909 for Bailey and his family. Bailey and Shore shook hands and embraced at centre ice before the game began. Thirteen years later, the NHL introduced an annual
all-star game. Shore was named captain of the Bruins for the
1935–36 season and continued to be one of the league’s top players. As he went on to capture the Hart Memorial Trophy in back-to-back seasons (
1935 and
1936). During the
1937 season Shore missed half the year after suffering a cracked
vertebra. Shore and the Bruins won their second Stanley Cup in 1939. Shore retired and bought the
Springfield Indians of the
American Hockey League, where he was player-owner in 1939–40. He was persuaded to rejoin the Bruins after injuries to the Bruins' defence corps, with an agreement that he would play in home games for $200 per match. Shore played just four games for Boston, and was reported as being unenthusiastic about the arrangement. Obtaining permission to play in the Indians' home games, he began to agitate to play in Springfield road games as well, which provoked his trade to the
New York Americans on January 25, 1940, for
Eddie Wiseman and $5000. He stayed with the Americans through their elimination from the playoffs, and was simultaneously playing with the Indians in their playoff games. Shore's final NHL game was March 24 against the
Detroit Red Wings, which coincidentally was also the final NHL game for Hall of Famer and teammate
Nels Stewart. In February 1940, Shore and eight other arena managers organized the
Ice Capades. Throughout his career Shore had a reputation as a fierce competitor which was solidified by his aggressive style of play, which contributed to his nickname as one of the toughest players of his era. Shore's career was marked by significant injuries, yet he continued to play and push the boundaries of defencemen's roles by incorporating offensive strategies. Being viewed as one of the best defenceman in the history of the NHL. Richard A. Johnson, curator of
The Sports Museum in Boston, once remarked:
“I always describe Shore as both the Babe Ruth and Ty Cobb of hockey. He had skill and a charisma that made you never want to take your eyes off him, and he also had a competitive ferocity that created this aura of imminent dread and contention that was always present. You always had the sense that something was going to happen when he was on the ice.” Shore’s midnight ride One of the most famous tales about Shore took place when he was travelling with a friend to catch the Bruins’ overnight train to Montreal. Along the way, his friend’s car broke down. Instead of leaving him behind and grabbing a cab, Shore rolled up his sleeves and tried to repair the engine himself. By the time they finally made it to the station, the team train had already departed. Refusing to give up, Shore struck a deal with a taxi driver, offering $100 to be driven the to Montreal. Shore and the cab driver met rough conditions, with heavy snow in the
White Mountains. Resulting Shore often had to take the wheel himself, at one point stopping a trucker to borrow
tire chains. He shovelled the cab out of ditches multiple times, and when the car could go no farther, he even hopped onto a
horse-drawn sleigh to reach another station. The entire ordeal lasted 22 hours, but he managed to arrive just before game time. Coach Art Ross fined Shore $200 for the incident. However with his face raw from windburn and traces of frostbite, Shore went on to play one of the best games of his career scoring the only goal of the game with the Bruins winning 1–0. ==Retirement and the Indians==