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FORWARD MARCH: The First On Ice Fatality?

Ashley March
9 years ago
It’s been two weeks since I’ve graced Canucks Army with a post and I’ve had a pretty good reason for my absence! I almost died!
No, seriously. I almost did.
Granted, my health has been pretty crappy over the past couple years but it was finally taking a turn on the upside. I was put on a new medication and my doctors told me that this was going to make everything all better! It would take six to eight weeks before the medication would take effect but hey, that’s a blink in time to me. 
So I lasted about three weeks until I forced to come off of it. Why? Because the damn thing tried to kill me! Overnight and while I was sleeping, my throat swelled shut and I developed a rash all over my body. Woke up because I couldn’t catch my breath and after a little ring-a-ding-ding to 911, an ambulance brought me into the hospital. By that point, my eye balls were on fire as with the rash. 
Long story short: typical allergic reaction. Gave me meds and I was fine after about a week but boy was it scary.
Then the news comes out about the Pittsburgh Penguins’ Pascal Dupuis with the blood clot on his lung and Bryan Murray and his battle with cancer. 
Naturally, my mind got morbidly to thinking about all of the injuries hockey players suffer. More specifically the on ice ones. You know, your Clint Malarchuk skate to the throat, your Richard Zednik skate to the throat, your Bryan Berard stick to the eye and I wondered: “Has anybody ever died on the ice or account of an injury?”
Thanks to the handy dandy Google machine, my questions was answered. What’s even more shocking to the answer was not only has a death happened, but it happened in my hometown!
THE TALE OF OWEN MCCOURT
What a time to be alive. It was the early 1900’s in the newly formed country of Canada and the population’s fascination with the fastest game on ice had barely started. The passion we know and love today from Canadians was in its infancy. However in Cornwall, the small Seaway town had been established for well over a hundred years already. Early versions of the game had already taken place up and down the St. Lawrence corridor; it was only fitting for a league to start in the area.
Under the leadership and guidance of the already well-established Montreal Wanderers hockey club, the formation of the Federal Amateur Hockey League began in 1903. What came to fruition was a 4 team, 6 game season that would begin that very winter. The clubs in the mix were the aforementioned Wanderers, Montreal Nationals, Ottawa Capitals (who would later become the Ottawa Silver Seven) and a team from the Seaway City of Cornwall. Over the next couple of years, clubs from three other small towns in the area, Brockville, Morrisburg, and Smith Falls would try their hand at winning a championship with the latter winning one in 1906.
In 1905, two teams from the FAHL and four from the Canadian Amateur Hockey League decided to join forces and form the Eastern Canada Amateur Hockey Association. Their decision to amalgamate was based on entertaining the idea to maximize revenues as hockey was turning into a wildly popular spectator sport. Along the same lines, some players were being paid under the table. This league would attempt to foresee the professionalism of the sport. This was the very beginning forms of the National Hockey League that we know and love today.
Cornwall’s club was not one of the lucky two who got picked to join. The powerful Montreal Wanderers and Ottawa HC were the ones invited instead. However, the league was looked at as a sort of farm league for the clubs in the ECAHA. Cornwall had its fair share of powerful players but could not manage a standing place of higher than third in their years together. One player in particular showed promise as he was flying up and down the ice with great speed and developing a reputation of a powerful goal scorer. His name was Owen McCourt.
(Pictured: Owen McCourt. They took pictures with a potato in the early 1900s too.)
Owen McCourt was just 22 years old when he was invited to play a couple games with the Montreal Shamrocks of the ECAHA. McCourt was proving himself on the ice as he became the top goal scorer for Cornwall in the 1906 season with 5 (remember, seasons consisted only 5 or 6 games apiece). In 1907, the local brick layer was top of the world again as he notched 16 goals in 8 games including a 7 goal performance against Morrisburg in late February. Taking note of his goal scoring abilities is what prompted the Shamrocks to invite McCourt for two games late in the 1907 season. McCourt was also a seasoned local lacrosse player which added to his skills on the ice.
DEATH OF A YOUNG SUPERSTAR
It was not uncommon for players to bounce around teams and leagues from time to time. Some looked down upon this tactic but it only improved the playing abilities of both the player and club. In the beginning of March, the Cornwall H/C were hosting the Ottawa Victorias at the old rink on Third Street. The fixture would be a replay of sorts from a game that was supposed to have taken place on February 15th. It did not go through as planned as McCourt and another Cornwall player were away with the Montreal Shamrocks while Ottawa protested the move accordingly.
The game started off without incident but as it continued on tempers were starting to flare. Referee’s seemed to turn a blind eye and let the players get away unpenalized for a variety of infractions. Of course this happened all the time. In the days before replay, most of these dilemmas were based on word of merit if plays went unseen. During the second half of the match McCourt got to show off how his fists work as he managed to get himself into a predicament with Victorias’ tough guy Arthur Throop.
(Pictured: Arthur Throop. Doesn’t really have the whole “I’m going to kill somebody” vibe eh?)
As the two made their way to the bench, Throop decided to get one last jab in at McCourt. As McCourt went to answer the call, Throop’s teammate Charles Masson reached out and slashed McCourt over the head with his hockey stick. A teammate of McCourt’s managed to come to the aid of his and cracked Throop on the head making it bleed. Both players went down to the ice within seconds.
In true hockey player fashion, McCourt was taken off the ice for a few minutes then returned to the game. He then started to complain and was making his way to the dressing room once again. By the time he got there he had collapsed; completely unconscious. McCourt was rushed to the Hotel Dieu hospital where it was learned that a blood vessel had broken inside of his brain. He never woke up.
Masson was charged with assault to do grievous bodily harm. He was not a dirty player; this incident was very out of character for him. As the public and authorities learned that McCourt had passed, the charges were then upped to murder. Days passed and more stories of what happened came from various players who had front row seats as witnesses. At one point one story had four different players on the ice suffering from blows to the head from hockey sticks. Some had complete other players in the mix. There will be no way to completely find out the actual play by play of what happened that fateful night. The only consistent players in each story were Charles Masson and Owen McCourt.
(Pictured: Charles Masson. And that’s MASSON not MANSON.)
Masson was eventually acquitted based on witnesses testifying that another unidentified player struck McCourt on the head before Masson. The predicament put a sour cloud over the Cornwall and area hockey scene as the team decided to withdrawal from the league.
This is perhaps the first recorded cases of a death resulting from flared tempers in a hockey game. Owen McCourt was on his way to making a name for himself in the hockey world. Who knows what records he could have produced and what teams he could have played with. At the same time, his name is now in the hockey history books.
AROUND THE TRENCHES IN THE HOCKEY WORLD
I stumbled across the best hockey fight that I’ve ever had the pleasure of witnessing in person on YouTube. This is Serge Roberge and Ryan Vandenbussche from an AHL tilt that took place in 1995. How often do you see fights until both jerseys are completely off now?
A great article from Dan Rice of The Hockey Writers on Keri Lehtonen’s escape from the Atlanta Thrashers. 
Leaf fans aren’t happy with Randy Carlyle. So they took their anger out on Wikipedia. Naturally.

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