Monday, Apr. 23, 1934

Hawks

In hockey, a good defense man sometimes trips an opponent intentionally, on the theory that the two-minute penalty for tripping is less disadvantageous to his team than a goal scored against it. Last week the Chicago Black Hawks were leading the Detroit Red Wings two games to one in the final series for the world's championship Stanley Cup (TIME, April 16). In the fourth game, at Chicago, the score was still tied 0-to-0 after 30 minutes of overtime play when Cook, Chicago forward, got the puck in front of the Detroit goal. Ebbie Goodfellow, Detroit defense man, wisely tripped him.

In hockey, the right play sometimes has the wrong result. With Goodfellow in the penalty box. Chicago's Manager Tommy Gorman sent a new forward line on the ice. Detroit, handicapped by one less man than their opponents, had no one to cover Chicago's small right wing, Harold March. Chicago's Romnes got the puck in mid-ice, passed to March. March turned in from the sideboards, whisked past the Detroit goaltender a waist-high shot that ended the game, 1-to-0, the series 3-to-1.

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