Dit Clapper

{{Short description|Canadian ice hockey player}}

{{Infobox ice hockey player

| halloffame = 1947

| image = Dit_Clapper_photo.png

| image_size = 230px

| birth_date = {{birth date|1907|2|9}}

| birth_place = Newmarket, Ontario, Canada

| death_date = {{death date and age|mf=yes|1978|1|20|1907|2|9}}

| death_place = Peterborough, Ontario, Canada

| height_ft = 6

| height_in = 2

| weight_lb = 195

| position = Right wing/Defence

| shoots = Right

| played_for = Boston Bruins

| career_start = 1927

| career_end = 1947

}}

Aubrey Victor "Dit" Clapper (February 9, 1907 – January 20, 1978) was a Canadian professional ice hockey player. Clapper played his entire professional career for the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League (NHL). He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1947, the first Honoured Member to be living at the time of his induction.{{cite news |work=Lewiston Daily Sun |title=Pick Eddie Shore and Six Others To National Hockey Hall of Fame |page=9 |date=February 26, 1947 |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=CZ4gAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Q2gFAAAAIBAJ&dq=russell%20bowie%20hall%20of%20fame&pg=3290%2C4344082 |access-date=February 7, 2012}}

Clapper was the first NHL player to play 20 seasons,{{cite book |title=Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol II |last=Coleman |first=Charles |year=1969 |publisher=Progressive Publications Ltd. |location=Sherbrooke, PQ |page=627 }} one of only two to be an All-Star at both forward and defence, and the first non-goaltender to play at the age of 40.{{cite web|url=http://www.shieldmedia.ca/default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=1&twindow=&mad=&sdetail=828&wpage=1&skeyword=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restatus=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&repmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname=&pform=&sc=1944&hn=shieldmedia&he=.ca |title=NHL legend lives on in Hastings |last1=Freeman |first1=Bill |date=16 February 2007 |publisher=The Shield Newspapers |access-date=5 April 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071012114657/http://www.shieldmedia.ca/default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=1&twindow=&mad=&sdetail=828&wpage=1&skeyword=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restatus=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&repmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname=&pform=&sc=1944&hn=shieldmedia&he=.ca |archive-date=October 12, 2007 }} The right wing on the powerful "Dynamite Line"—one of the first forward combinations to receive a nickname in hockey history—along with linemates Cooney Weiland and Dutch Gainor, he contributed to the breaking of several scoring records in the 1930s. Towards the end of his career, he was named player-coach of the Bruins, and held the coaching position after his retirement as a player.

Early years

Aubrey Clapper, son of Bill Clapper, a lacrosse and factory labourer.https://trentvalleyarchives.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/ISN-1206-May-2010-b.pdf He was raised in Hastings, Ontario after relocated several years to Aurora, Ontario (1915-1920) and Oshawa, Ontario (1920-1923).{{cite news|url=http://www.emcnorthwest.ca/20120112/news/Dit+Clapper+story+needs+to+be+told+says+local+writer|title=Dit Clapper story needs to be told says local writer|access-date=12 January 2012|work=Northwest EMC|first=Bill|last=Freeman|date=12 January 2012}}{{Dead link|date=July 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Clapper was given his nickname at an early age when he would lisp his name, the result coming out "Dit."{{cite web |url=http://bruinslegends.blogspot.com/2007/03/dit-clapper.html |title=Dit Clapper |last1=Pelletier |first1=Joe |date=March 2007 |publisher=Greatest Hockey Legends.com |access-date=5 April 2012}}

Clapper was related to Ed Broadbent, who’s grandmother was cousins with father Bill.

Clapper started his hockey career at age 13, playing minor hockey in Oshawa,{{cite book |title=Hockey Hall Of Fame: The Official History Of The Game And Its Greatest Stars |author=Dan Diamond |author2=Joseph Romain |year=1988 |publisher=Doubleday |location=New York |isbn=0-385-24830-X |page=70 }} and going on to play with the junior league Toronto Parkdale club of the Ontario Hockey Association in 1925, scoring a goal in the team's Memorial Cup run that season. The following season he turned professional, playing for the Boston Tigers of the Canadian-American Hockey League.

NHL career

The Boston Bruins bought Clapper's contract from the Tigers in 1927. Hitherto a defenceman, Bruins' coach Art Ross decided to try Clapper at right wing, and the experiment stuck.{{cite web |url=http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=p194701&type=Player&page=bio&list=ByName |title=Dit Clapper, Biography |publisher=Hockey Hall of Fame |access-date=5 April 2012}} He scored his first NHL goal—ten seconds into his first shift{{cite book |title=Hockey's 100 |last=Fischler |first=Stan |year=1984 |publisher=Beaufort Books, Inc. |location=New York |isbn=0-8253-0245-5 |page=[https://archive.org/details/hockeys100person00fisc/page/233 233] |url=https://archive.org/details/hockeys100person00fisc/page/233 }}—in the season opener against the Chicago Black Hawks.{{cite book |title=The Bruins: Brian McFarlane's Original Six |last=McFarlane |first=Brian |year=1999 |publisher=Stoddard Publishing Ltd. |location=Toronto, ONT |isbn=0-7737-3189-X }}

The following season, Ross teamed Clapper up with Cooney Weiland and Dutch Gainor to form the renowned Dynamite Line, one of the first named forward lines in history.{{cite book |title=Checking Back |last=Isaacs |first=Neil |year=1977 |publisher=George J. McLeod Ltd. |location=Toronto, ONT |isbn=0-393-08788-3 |page=[https://archive.org/details/checkingbackhist00isaa/page/75 75] |url=https://archive.org/details/checkingbackhist00isaa/page/75 }} The Bruins won the American Division that season and went on to their first Stanley Cup championship, with Clapper scoring the winning goal in the first game of their best-of-three series with the New York Rangers.

In the 1930 season, the league considerably liberalized the passing rules, effectively eliminating offsides. The Stanley Cup champion Bruins took especial advantage, breaking many scoring records and recording the highest winning percentage the league would ever see, unsurpassed as of 2024.{{cite book |title=National Hockey League Official Guide and Record Book 2005 |last=Diamond |first=Daniel |year=2004 |publisher=Dan Diamond & Associates, Inc. |isbn=1-57243-603-4 }} Leading the charge was the Dynamite Line, as Weiland led the league in scoring, Clapper finishing third and Gainor finishing ninth; Clapper's goal total of 41 was the third most in league history at that time.{{cite book |title=Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol II |last=Coleman |first=Charles |year=1969 |publisher=Progressive Publications Ltd. |location=Sherbrooke, PQ |page=95 }} The Dynamite Line scored 102 of the Bruins' league record 179 goals, as many as last-place Pittsburgh managed. While Clapper scored four goals in six playoff games, the Bruins were shocked in the Stanley Cup finals by the Montreal Canadiens in their best-of-three series.

Clapper married Lorraine Pratt of Vancouver in April 1931.{{cite web |url=https://trentvalleyarchives.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/May2011.pdf|title=Mister Boston Bruin: the First. The Hastings Legend Part 5|last1=Barry |first1=Dave & Sharon |date=May 2011 |publisher= Heritage Gazette of the Trent Valley Volume 16, number 1.|access-date=6 November 2018}}

While Clapper kept his production high in the 1931 season, Gainor's scoring fell off badly, and the Dynamite Line was broken up at season's end. Clapper's 22 goals were good for eighth in the league, and he was named Second team all-star at right wing at year's end, the first season such All-Stars were named. The following year Clapper—with Bud Cook replacing the traded Gainor on his line with Weiland—was named team captain and again finished eighth in league scoring, but an injury-riddled Bruins' team fell into last place and out of the playoffs. While Weiland was dealt to Ottawa for the 1933 season, the Bruins purchased Montreal Maroons star Nels Stewart and paired him with Clapper to form a powerful offensive unit that led the Bruins back to a division championship.

The largest forward of his era at 6′2″ and 200 lbs, Clapper was a notably peaceful player who nonetheless was involved in an unusual incident in the 1937 Stanley Cup playoffs against the Montreal Maroons. Highsticking Maroon Dave Trottier twice in the head, referee Clarence Campbell (the future NHL president) called Clapper a profane name, and Clapper knocked the referee to the ice with a single punch. Speculation was heavy that Clapper's punishment would be severe, but Campbell himself pleaded Clapper's case, stating that he felt he had provoked the Bruin into the blow; Clapper received only a $100 fine for the incident.{{cite web |url=http://www.hhof.com/htmlSpotlight/spot_oneononep194701.shtml |title=One On One With Dit Clapper |date=7 May 2010 |publisher=Hockey Hall of Fame |access-date=5 April 2012 |archive-date=5 March 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120305122327/http://www.hhof.com/htmlSpotlight/spot_oneononep194701.shtml |url-status=dead }}

By 1938, Ross believed the Bruins needed an overhaul, and as part of it asked Clapper to move back to defence. Paired with perennial superstar Eddie Shore on the backline, the move proved highly successful, and Clapper was named a First Team NHL All-Star on defence in 1939, 1940 and 1941, leading the Bruins to Stanley Cup victories in 1939 and 1941.

In February 1942, Clapper suffered a severed tendon in a collision with Toronto player Bingo Kampman and was done for the season.{{cite book |title=Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol II |last=Coleman |first=Charles |year=1969 |publisher=Progressive Publications Ltd. |location=Sherbrooke, PQ |page=431 }} It was feared he would be forced into retirement, but he came back next year and returned to form. During the 1944 season, Clapper broke Hooley Smith's career record for games played, holding the record until Maurice Richard surpassed him in 1957.{{cite web |url=https://www.hockey-reference.com/leaders/games_played_progress.html |title=NHL Progressive Leaders for Games Played |publisher=hockey-reference.com |access-date=5 April 2012}}

Player-coach

During the 1944 season, Clapper filled in as interim coach when Art Ross took ill.{{cite book |title=The Bruins Book |last=Vautour |first=Kevin |year=1997 |publisher=ECW Press |location=Toronto |isbn=978-1-55022-334-7 |page=91 }} In 1945 Ross retired as Bruins' coach, retaining his general manager's position, and named Clapper as player-coach, the only one in team history. Clapper retained his team captaincy until his retirement as a player in 1947, ultimately serving as team captain for longer than any NHL player until Ray Bourque surpassed his total in the 1990s.

Retirement and legacy

File:Dit Clapper jersey at IHHOF.JPG]]

Hobbled by injuries and with his skills eroded, Clapper originally retired before the start of the 1946–47 season, but returned to play in November 1946 to replace the injured Jack Crawford in the Bruins' lineup.{{cite book |title=Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol III |last=Coleman |first=Charles |year=1976 |publisher=Progressive Publications Ltd. |location=Sherbrooke, PQ |page=25 }} He played only sporadically thereafter, and retired for good on February 12, 1947. Leading the Bruins to a 10–1 victory over the New York Rangers in his final game (in which Bill Cowley broke the league career scoring record), the Bruins further announced that day that his number #5 sweater would be retired, and the Hockey Hall of Fame immediately inducted him as an Honoured Member. Clapper was the only active player ever to be inducted into the Hall,{{cite book |title=Hockey's Book of Firsts |last=Duplacey |first=James |publisher=JG Press |isbn=978-1-57215-037-9 |page=25 |date=February 2008 }} and at the time the only living Member inducted.

Of his prowess, Bruins goaltending legend Tiny Thompson said:

"Clapper diagnosed the plays like a great infielder in baseball. He put himself where the puck had to come."

Clapper coached the Bruins for two more seasons until, unhappy with the club's performance in the 1949 playoffs against Toronto and uneasy about coaching friends with whom he had played, he resigned. Save for a single season coaching the American Hockey League's Buffalo Bisons in 1960, in which the team recorded a 33-35-4 record and failed to make the playoffs, he did not again participate in professional hockey.

Clapper ran a plumbing firm and a sporting goods store in Peterborough in retirement, while serving as a director of the Peterborough Petes of the OHA. He briefly attempted a political career, standing as a Liberal candidate for the Peterborough West riding in the 1949 federal election, losing by fewer than 250 votes to incumbent Progressive Conservative Gordon Fraser.{{cite news |title=Dit Clapper Candidate |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2194&dat=19490513&id=wx0vAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mNwFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4524,3432558 |newspaper=Ottawa Citizen |date=May 13, 1949 |access-date=3 April 2012}}

Clapper died of complications from a 1973 stroke, which had left him confined to a wheelchair, on January 20, 1978.{{cite book |title=Who's Who in Hockey |last1=Fischler |first1=Stan |last2=Fischler |first2=Shirley |year=2003 |publisher=Andrews McMeel Publishing |page=69 }}{{cite news |title=Dit Clapper Dead At 70 |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=CFc_AAAAIBAJ&sjid=m1IMAAAAIBAJ&pg=1098,2003149&dq=dit&hl=en |newspaper=Windsor Star |date=January 21, 1978 |access-date=3 April 2012}} He is buried in Trent Valley Cemetery in Hastings, Ontario.

In 1983, the Bruins signed former Montreal Canadiens star Guy Lapointe, Lapointe sought to wear his customary #5 jersey, which had been retired in Clapper's honour nearly forty years before. Team general manager Harry Sinden agreed to Lapointe's request, but under protests from Clapper's family, Bruins superstar Bobby Orr and the public, Lapointe was switched to #27 after a handful of games.

On August 11, 2012, former Hockey Hall of Fame coach Scotty Bowman, who was a young Peterborough Petes coach when Clapper served on the club's board of directors, paid tribute to Clapper. The occasion was the unveiling by Clapper's daughter, Marilyn Armstrong, of a new street sign named "Dit Clapper Drive" in Hastings, Ontario.{{cite news|url=http://www.emcquinte.ca/20120816/news/Hockey+hero+gets+his+day+in+Hastings|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130116061646/http://www.emcquinte.ca/20120816/news/Hockey+hero+gets+his+day+in+Hastings|url-status=dead|archive-date=16 January 2013|title=Hockey hero gets his day in Hastings|newspaper=Northwest EMC|first=Bill|last=Freeman|date=16 August 2012|access-date=18 August 2012}}{{cite news|url=http://www.communitypress.ca/2012/08/16/hastings-honours-hockey-great-dit-clapper|title=Hastings honours hockey great Dit Clapper|newspaper=Community Press|first=Mark|last=Hoult|date=16 August 2012|access-date=18 August 2012|archive-date=4 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304073218/http://www.communitypress.ca/2012/08/16/hastings-honours-hockey-great-dit-clapper|url-status=dead}}

Achievements and facts

Career statistics

=Regular season and playoffs=

  • Bold indicates led league

border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:60em"
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

1925–26

| Toronto Parkdale

| OHA-Jr.

| 2

0000

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1925–26

| Toronto Parkdale

| M-Cup

| —

| 5

101
1926–27

| Boston Tigers

| Can-Am

| 29

61757

| —

bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1927–28

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 42

42618

| 2

0002
1928–29

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 40

921148

| 5

1010
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1929–30

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 44

41206138

| 6

4044
1930–31

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 43

2283050

| 5

2464
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1931–32

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 48

17223923

| —

1932–33

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 48

14142842

| 5

1122
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1933–34

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 48

1012226

| —

1934–35

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 48

22163821

| 3

1010
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1935–36

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 44

12132514

| 2

0110
1936–37

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 48

1782525

| 3

2025
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1937–38

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 46

691524

| 3

00012
1938–39

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 42

13132622

| 11

0116
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1939–40

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 44

10182825

| 6

0222
1940–41

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 48

8182624

| 11

0554
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1941–42

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 32

3121531

| —

1942–43

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 38

5182312

| 9

2249
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1943–44

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 50

6253113

| —

1944–45

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 46

8152316

| 7

0000
bgcolor="#f0f0f0"

| 1945–46

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 30

2350

| 4

0000
1946–47

| Boston Bruins

| NHL

| 6

0000

| —

bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3" | NHL totals

! 835 !! 229 !! 248 !! 477 !! 452

! 82 !! 13 !! 16 !! 29 !! 50

Coaching record

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%; text-align:center;"
rowspan="2"|Teamrowspan="2"|Yearcolspan="6"|Regular seasoncolspan="1"|Post season
GWLTPtsDivision rankResult
Boston Bruins||1945–46

|50||24||18||8||56||2nd in NHL||Lost in Cup Finals

Boston Bruins||1946–47

|60||26||23||11||63||2nd in NHL||Lost in semi-finals

Boston Bruins||1947–48

|60||23||24||13||59||3rd in NHL||Lost in semi-finals

Boston Bruins||1948–49

|60||29||23||8||66||2nd in NHL||Lost in semi-finals

colspan="2"|NHL Total ||230||102||88||40

See also

References

{{reflist|30em}}