Cully Wilson

{{Short description|Icelandic-Canadian ice hockey player}}

{{for|the character in the television series Lassie|Cully Wilson (Lassie)}}

{{Infobox ice hockey player

| image = Cully Wilson, Seattle Metropolitans.jpg

| image_size =

| caption = Wilson with the Seattle Metropolitans

| position = Right Wing

| played_for = Chicago Black Hawks
Calgary Tigers
Hamilton Tigers
Montreal Canadiens
Toronto St. Pats
Seattle Metropolitans
Toronto Blueshirts

| shoots = Right

| height_ft = 5

| height_in = 8

| weight_lb = 180

| birth_date = {{birth date|1892|6|5}}

| birth_place = Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

| death_date = {{death date and age|1962|7|7|1892|6|5}}

| death_place = Seattle, Washington, U.S.

| career_start = 1910

| career_end = 1932

| halloffame =

}}

Carol William "Cully" Wilson (June 5, 1892 – July 7, 1962) was an Icelandic-Canadian professional ice hockey player. The right winger played in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Toronto St. Pats, Montreal Canadiens, Hamilton Tigers, and Chicago Black Hawks between 1919 and 1927. He was also a member of two teams that won the Stanley Cup before the NHL came into existence in 1917, the Toronto Blueshirts and Seattle Metropolitans.

Wilson came from a family of Icelandic descent and was born as Karl Wilhons Erlendson to parents Sigurður Erlendson and Medónía Indriðadóttir. The family later changed its name to Wilson.{{cite news |author1=Wes Wilson |author2=Elma Kozub |title=Discovering Carol 'Cully' Wilson an Icelandic hockey pioneer |url=https://timarit.is/page/2243924 |access-date=28 November 2022 |work=Lögberg-Heimskringla |date=25 March 2005 |pages=7–9 |via=Tímarit.is}}{{open access}}

Career

Wilson played amateur hockey in his hometown of Winnipeg between 1910 and 1912, with the Winnipeg Falcons and the Winnipeg Monarchs. He began his professional career with the National Hockey Association's Toronto Blueshirts in 1912–13. The next year, in 1913–14, he won his first Stanley Cup when the Blueshirts beat the Montreal Canadiens in the NHA playoffs.

File:1912–13 Toronto Blueshirts.jpg

He was a part of the "first" expansion of professional hockey when the Pacific Coast Hockey Association agreed to compete with the NHA in an east-west rivalry for the Stanley Cup championship. As a member of the Seattle Metropolitans, Wilson won the Stanley Cup for a second time in 1917, again beating the Montreal Canadiens.

Wilson signed with the National Hockey League's Toronto St. Pats in 1919, after having been expelled from the PCHA for a cheap shot on Mickey MacKay. In the NHL he also played briefly for the Montreal Canadiens, on a loan from the St. Patricks, and with the Hamilton Tigers. He left the NHL after the 1922–23 season and headed west to play for the Calgary Tigers of the Western Canada Hockey League.

Wilson returned to the NHL for one more season in 1926–27 after the WCHL folded and his rights were traded to the Chicago Black Hawks. After a disappointing year with the Black Hawks, Wilson moved on to the American Hockey Association's St. Paul Saints. Over the next three years he played and coached with the Saints before moving on to the San Francisco Tigers of the Cal-Pro League and the Duluth Hornets of the AHA. His last season was the 1931–32 season with the Kansas City Pla-Mors.

Wilson died in 1962 and is buried in Evergreen-Washelli Cemetery in Seattle.

Playing style

File:Cully Wilson, Toronto Blueshirts.jpg

Cully Wilson, a right winger position wise and a right-handed shot, was a fairly small-sized player even for his era, standing at 5 feet and 8 inches, but he compensated for his lack of size by playing an aggressive and rough style of hockey, both giving and receiving in the physical aspect of the game, quite similar to a modern day pest. As a result, he received a fair amount of slashes and cuts to his face throughout his hockey career.[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=PAMbAAAAIBAJ&sjid=SEkEAAAAIBAJ&pg=2092,3288294&dq "Cully Wilson's face hashed by clubs of opposing hockey players --- Doctors have sewed 50 stitches on his "map""] The Pittsburgh Press, January 12, 1916.

One infamous instance of Wilson being involved in a violent tussle happened during the 1919 PCHA season, in a game against the Vancouver Millionaires, where Wilson fought for the puck against Millionaires centre forward Mickey MacKay and slashed him over the mouth. MacKay suffered a fractured jaw and missed the rest of the season. When the season was over PCHA chief disciplinarian Frank Patrick banned Wilson from the league.[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=vg5kAAAAIBAJ&sjid=zXoNAAAAIBAJ&pg=3405%2C228059 "Injuries of Mickey MacKay are serious"] The Calgary Daily Herald, March 3, 1919.[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=JwhTAAAAIBAJ&sjid=6TcNAAAAIBAJ&pg=883,4392933&dq "Mickey MacKay may return to oldtime form"] The Morning Leader, October 31, 1924. Wilson led three different leagues in penalty minutes in different seasons: 1914–15 in the NHA, 1919 in the PCHA, and 1919–20 in the NHL.

{{quote box| quote="It was in a skirmish for the puck and my face got in the way of his stick. It wasn't his fault at all. Quite unintentional. Of course, I cannot say that about all the slashes and rips that have gone to disfigure my countenance. Most of them are, because hockey players are good sports, and it is not very often that a fellow deliberately takes a crack at an opponent's face to wound him." |align=right |width=45%|source= – Wilson describing a skirmish with Art Gagné in 1926.[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=uSZkAAAAIBAJ&sjid=aHsNAAAAIBAJ&pg=4983,474181&dq "Another Couple of Stitches In Cully Wilson's Face Now"], The Calgary Daily Herald. March 4, 1926 (p. 16). Retrieved 2023-04-06.}}

Towards the end of the 1925–26 WHL season, Wilson had accumulated upwards to 80 stitches in his face alone over the course of his career, the latest courtesy of Edmonton Eskimos forward Art Gagné in a game between the Eskimos and Wilson's Calgary Tigers. Two new stitches were required to the side of his right eye, but Wilson proclaimed that the incident, like most similar incidents throughout his hockey career, had been quite unintentional on Gagné's part and only happened by mistake.

Wilson also had decent scoring upside to go along with his physical playing style, and in 1914–15 he led the reigning Stanley Cup champions Toronto Blueshirts in scoring with 22 goals and 27 points in 20 games, on top of his league leading 138 penalty minutes.

Statistics

=Regular season and playoffs=

File:1919 Seattle Metropolitans.jpg

border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:55em"
bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3" bgcolor="#ffffff"|

! rowspan="100" bgcolor="#ffffff"|

! colspan="5"|Regular season

! rowspan="100" bgcolor="#ffffff"|

! colspan="5"|Playoffs

bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! Season

! Team

! League

! GP !! G !! A !! Pts !! PIM

! GP !! G !! A !! Pts !! PIM

1910–11

| Winnipeg Falcons

| MIPHL

| 4

4153

| —

bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1910–11

| Winnipeg Monarchs

| MHL-Sr.

| 1

2020

| —

1911–12

| Winnipeg Monarchs

| MHL-Sr.

| 7

1241633

| —

bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1912–13

| Toronto Blueshirts

| NHA

| 19

1201245

| —

1913–14

| Toronto Blueshirts

| NHA

| 20

941333

| 2

0002
bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1913–14

| Toronto Blueshirts

| St-Cup

| —

| 3

30315
1914–15

| Toronto Blueshirts

| NHA

| 20

22527138

| —

bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1915–16

| Seattle Metropolitans

| PCHA

| 18

1251757

| —

1915–16

| PCHA All-Stars

| Exh.

| 1

8080

| —

bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1916–17

| Seattle Metropolitans

| PCHA

| 15

1372058

| —

1916–17

| Seattle Metropolitans

| St-Cup

| —

| 4

1456
bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1917–18

| Seattle Metropolitans

| PCHA

| 17

861446

| 2

0003
1918–19

| Seattle Metropolitans

| PCHA

| 18

1151637

| 2

1120
bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1918–19

| Seattle Metropolitans

| St-Cup

| —

| 5

1346
1919–20

| Toronto St. Patricks

| NHL

| 23

2062686

| —

bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1920–21

| Toronto St. Patricks

| NHL

| 8

23522

| —

1920–21

| Montreal Canadiens

| NHL

| 11

61729

| —

bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1921–22

| Hamilton Tigers

| NHL

| 23

791620

| —

1922–23

| Hamilton Tigers

| NHL

| 23

1652146

| —

bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1923–24

| Calgary Tigers

| WCHL

| 30

1672337

| 2

1016
1923–24

| Calgary Tigers

| West-P

| —

| 3

3030
bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1923–24

| Calgary Tigers

| St-Cup

| —

| 2

0002
1924–25

| Calgary Tigers

| WCHL

| 28

1462020

| 2

1016
bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1925–26

| Calgary Tigers

| WHL

| 30

1141563

| —

1926–27

| Chicago Black Hawks

| NHL

| 39

841240

| 2

1016
bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1927–28

| St. Paul Saints

| AHA

| 38

1021264

| —

1928–29

| St. Paul Saints

| AHA

| 40

1051540

| 8

22414
bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1929–30

| St. Paul Saints

| AHA

| 48

761357

| —

1930–31

| San Francisco Tigers

| Cal-Pro

| —

10212

| —

bgcolor=#f0f0f0

| 1930–31

| Duluth Hornets

| AHA

| 24

1061624

| 4

0002
1931–32

| Kansas City Pla-Mors

| AHA

| 34

12328

| 4

0002
bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3"| NHA totals

! 59 !! 43 !! 9 !! 52 !! 216

! 2

0002
bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3"| PCHA totals

! 68 !! 44 !! 23 !! 67 !! 198

! 4

1123
bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3"| WCHL totals

! 88 !! 41 !! 17 !! 58 !! 120

! 4

20212
bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3"| NHL totals

! 127 !! 59 !! 28 !! 87 !! 243

! 2

1016

Awards and achievements

  • Stanley Cup championships (1914, 1917)
  • PCHA First All-Star Team (1919)
  • WCHL Second All-Star Team (1925)
  • In 2015, Wilson was inducted into the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame.{{cite news |title=Cully Wilson named to the Hockey Hall of Fame |url=https://timarit.is/page/7478419 |access-date=28 November 2022 |work=Lögberg-Heimskringla |date=1 May 2015 |pages=1, 5 |via=Tímarit.is}}{{open access}}

References

  • Society for International Hockey Research at [http://www.sihrhockey.org/main.cfm sihrhockey.org]

=Notes=

{{Reflist}}