On February 7 in NYR history: A Hall of Famer spurns the Blueshirts

Red Kelly (middle left) and Andy Bathgate drop the puck between Wayne Gretzky #99 of the New York Rangers and Mats Sundin #13 of the Toronto Maple Leafs (Photo by Graig Abel/Getty Images)
Red Kelly (middle left) and Andy Bathgate drop the puck between Wayne Gretzky #99 of the New York Rangers and Mats Sundin #13 of the Toronto Maple Leafs (Photo by Graig Abel/Getty Images) /
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What happened on February 7 in the history of the New York Rangers

On this date in 1960 a proposed deal between the New York and the Detroit Red Wings officially went south when the two players swapped to the Rangers refused to report and announced their retirements. The big name in the deal was 32-year-old Red Kelly, a defenseman who had won the Norris Trophy, three Lady Byng Trophies and was a first or second team All-Star for eight straight years from 1950 to 1957.

Accompanying Kelly to the Rangers was forward Bill McNeill.  Going to Detroit was forward Eddie Shack and blueliner Bill Gadsby.  Both Kelly and McNell were upset with the trade and chose to  quit hockey rather than play in New York.

Though the deal came down on February 5,  the following day, NHL President Clarence Campbell gave the players 24 hours “to think about it.”

The back story was that Kelly had told a reporter that his poor play in the 1958-59 season may have been due to him playing on a broken ankle. It was front page news in Detroit and Red Wings GM Jack Adams was livid at the suggestion that they had forced him to play (probably true) and he brokered the deal to New York.

Red Kelly ultimately came out of retirement to play for the Toronto Maple Leafs for eight more seasons.  He played forward instead of defense and won his fourth Lady Byng Trophy.

As for the Rangers, they were able to finally deal Bill Gadsby to Detroit in 1961 and Eddie Shack was traded to Toronto the next fall.

Kelly was inducted in the Hall of Fame in 1969 and Gadsby made the Hall the following year.

Today’s birthdays

36 NHL players have been born on February 7 including four former New York Rangers.

Alexander Daigle

By the time he made it to New York, he had played for three teams and he was so lowly regarded, the Rangers got him from Tampa for cash.  He played 58 games in the 1999-2000 season and scored eight goals and 26 points.  They waived him after the season and when no team was willing to sign him, he retired at the age of 25.  He came back two years later with Pittsburgh and actually scored 20 goals for Minnesota.  He finished his playing career in Switzerland.

Jody Shelley was born on February 7, 1976 in Thompson, Manitoba.   He played 12 years in the NHL and was one in a series of “enforcers” acquired by Glen SatherMike HartmanTom Williams

The numbers

The Rangers have played 38 games on February 7 and based on their record, it’s a date they want to avoid. They have won only 10 games out of those 38 in regulation for an awful .394 points percentage, their worst record of any day in February.

Games: 38
Regulation wins: 10
Regulation losses: 20
Ties: 6
Overtime wins: 1
Shootout wins: 1
Points percentage:

Last year

Buffalo 3, Rangers 2

The Rangers lost a game they needed to win, dropping a 3-2 decision to the Buffalo Sabres at Madison Square Garden.  It was Jimmy Vesey’s return to the Garden and he made it count, assisting on one goal and scoring the game winner int he third period.

The Rangers poured 39 shots at Carter Hutton and made it close with two late third period goals by Mika Zibanejad and Chris Kreider, but it was too little too late.

With only eight games until the trade deadline the Rangers were nine points out of a playoff spot and the season was fading fast.  Kreider’s power play goal was his 20th of the season amid speculation about his future in New York.

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