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The Frank Boucher Trophy was an annual award given to the Ranger "who is considered the most popular player on and off the ice" as chosen by the Rangers Fan Club. [213] It was named for Rangers great Frank Boucher. [213] It has not been awarded since the New York Rangers Fan Club suspended operations in 2010. [225]
Frank Boucher: New York Rangers: C 2 44 8 0.18 1929–30: Frank Boucher: New York Rangers: C 3 42 16 0.38 1930–31: Frank Boucher: New York Rangers: C 4 44 20 0.46 1931–32: Joe Primeau: Toronto Maple Leafs: C 1 45 25 0.56 1932–33: Frank Boucher: New York Rangers: C 5 46 4 0.09 1933–34: Frank Boucher: New York Rangers: C 6 48 4 0.08 1934 ...
François Xavier Boucher (October 7, 1901 – December 12, 1977) was a Canadian professional ice hockey player and executive. Boucher played the forward position for the Ottawa Senators and New York Rangers in the National Hockey League (NHL) and the Vancouver Maroons in the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA) between 1921 and 1938, and again from 1943 to 1944.
Rangers' team awards. Crumb Bum Award – "For service to New York youngsters" (1997) Frank Boucher Trophy – "Most popular player on and off the ice" (1991, 1999 ...
Lester Patrick is the only head coach to have coached the Rangers to multiple Stanley Cups. Under head coach Peter Laviolette the Rangers set franchise records in wins (55) and points (114) in a single season, having set both records in the 2023–24 season. [24] The Jack Adams Award has never been awarded to the head coach of the New York Rangers.
Cook left the Quakers midway through the season when asked by Frank Boucher, general manager of the New York Rangers, to return to the NHL club as its head coach. [35] He coached the final 47 games of the Rangers' 1951–52 season , winning 17, losing 22 and tying 8.
Caitlin Doornbos, a Washington correspondent at the New York Post, won a prestigious journalism award Tuesday night for a series of riveting stories she wrote while bravely embedding with troops ...
The Bread Line was the Rangers' first notable line.Consisting of Bill Cook, Bun Cook and Frank Boucher, they played together from 1926 to 1937.. After a loss to the Boston Bruins in the 1929 Stanley Cup Finals and a few mediocre seasons in the early 1930s, the Rangers, led by the brothers Bill and Bun Cook on the right and left wings, respectively, and Frank Boucher at center, would defeat the ...