team. Like many other
centre forwards during the earlier years of professional hockey, Marty Walsh had his strongest suit in close proximity to the opponent net, where he would often park himself for redirections or deflections. The
Ottawa Citizen, in its January 26, 1911 issue, described a goal against the
Montreal Canadiens on January 21 during the
1910–11 NHA season, where Walsh had positioned himself right in front of
Georges Vézina for the game-winning goal in overtime, and the puck had caromed off of Walsh and into the net after first having left teammate
Jack Darragh's stick. The newspaper pointed out that that was how Walsh got most of his goals, and that he usually wasn't a "showy" player. The Ottawa Citizen from January 26, 1911, also pointed out that while Walsh couldn't skate like
Cyclone Taylor, wasn't blessed with the beautiful foot work of
Albert Kerr, and didn't show as spectacular as
Bruce Ridpath, his absence was still dearly felt for the Ottawas when he was off the ice, and exemplified the claim with a 5-minute slashing penalty on Walsh during the January 21 game against the Montreal Canadiens, by which "the Ottawa defence was demoralized, their attack seemed to melt to pieces, and before the Kingstonian's penalty had expired Canadiens had tied the score." Walsh's hovering around the opponent net earned him the nickname "Stick-around" Walsh from famous
Montreal Victorias player
Russell Bowie, but the January 26, 1911 issue of the Ottawa Citizen also claimed that "Marty's checking back has re[s]cued the Ottawa defence from many a perilous position this winter. He is always there with the poke and jab when the rubber is dangerously near the peerless
LeSueur." ==Post-career==