@Maple Leafs de Toronto

75 ans et plus des Maple Leafs de Toronto – Maple Leafs Forever



Les Maple Leafs de Toronto (officiellement le Toronto Maple Leaf Hockey Club) sont une franchise professionnelle de hockey sur glace basée à Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Ils sont membres de la Division Nord-Est de la Conférence Est de la Ligue nationale de hockey (LNH). L’équipe est l’un des membres de la ligue « Original Six ». Depuis 2012, ils appartenaient à Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, Ltd. et sont représentés par le président Larry Tanenbaum. Leur directeur général est Dave Nonis. Leur entraîneur-chef est Randy Carlyle. En 1999, ils ont déménagé au Centre Air Canada, qui a remplacé Maple Leaf Gardens, leur maison depuis 1931. La franchise a été fondée en 1917, opérant simplement sous le nom de Toronto et connue aujourd’hui sous le nom de Toronto Arenas, car elle était exploitée par la Toronto Arena Company, propriétaires de l’arène Arena Gardens. En 1919, la LNH a transféré la franchise à de nouveaux propriétaires qui ont baptisé l’équipe les Toronto St. Patricks. La franchise a été vendue en 1926 et a été rebaptisée Toronto Maple Leaf Hockey Club. Les couleurs de l’équipe sont le bleu et le blanc. En 2011, les Maple Leafs avaient remporté treize championnats de la Coupe Stanley, juste derrière les vingt-quatre championnats de leur principal rival, les Canadiens de Montréal. Ils ont remporté leur dernier championnat en 1967. La sécheresse de 45 ans entre les championnats est actuellement la plus longue de la LNH. Ils sont la seule équipe « Original Six » qui n’a pas remporté le championnat de la Coupe Stanley depuis. Avec une valeur estimée à 1 milliard de dollars américains en 2012, les Leafs sont la franchise la plus précieuse de la LNH, suivis respectivement des Rangers de New York et des Canadiens de Montréal.

22 Comments

  1. This has the problem of modern documentaries: repetition and god awful music. However, very interesting for a Leafs fan who grew up in England. I never saw a game at the Gardens but my uncle took me there in the summer of 1973. It was his shrine (he played to quite a high standard in Ontario before the war) and I understood why the place was so loved by hockey fans. Let's hope 2019 is the year.

  2. The Toronto maple Leafs Can win the Tupperware Cup which is more realistic LoL

  3. Yea we only had to wait 50 more years to get our hockey team. Thanks a lot conn smythe. Lol I knew there was a reason Toronto is my 2nd favorite team

  4. 67. If it wasn’t for him phila would of had a team way before the flyers oh well let’s go flyers

  5. 75 years of tradition? what tradition? missing the playoffs? last place finishes?
    "choking since 1975" is pretty bad (that's the Flyers motto) … "choking since 1967", that's even worse!
    The wealthiest team in all of Hockey, is Hockey's biggest disgrace.

  6. Are you people f***ing delusional??? As long as you are willing to pay the highest NHL ticket prices to put your butts in the seats, buy the merchandise and have the owners get all of the tv rights that they want then WHY CHANGE ANYTHING. Kaching. Boycott the bums and that's when you may see a difference. Until then, Leaf fans are their own worst enemies. And a worst 122nd out of 122 pro North American sports teams two years in a row by the ESPN poll? The Leafs: rebuilding since 1967.

  7. Could somebody please explain why this video is so anachronistic? If I didn’t know hockey history there’s NO WAY I would’ve been able to follow along….

  8. I'm blue and white to the bone I bleed blue and white go leafs go we want the cup the maple leafs forever I'm 100 percent leaf fan

  9. Stephen King is honoring the Toronto Maple Leafs for his next best selling book on horror

  10. I like Mr. Imlach’s hat. Did not know Al Arbour played before coaching. I agree that it jumped around from year to year and was hard to follow. Also, Mr. Ballard was a jerk.

  11. the maple leafs the yankees of the nhl just without a winning tradition lol tavares watches this every night after his wife puts his pajamas on and tucks him in lmao regretting that decision now arent you pajama boy

  12. i came to this beautiful country and city at the age of 10 from Portugal my family was taken in with open arms from the great Canadian i will forever be grateful to this country and its people i call it my second home watching this documentary brought pride and i would be lying if i said i didn't shed acouple of tears of joy lol with that being said i refer to my self has a proud Portuguese Canadian!!

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