Canadiens goalie Carey Price will stay with his teammates at the Fairmont Royal York Hotel, something that the late
Jacques Plante
more than once chose not to do with Blake's teams of the late 1950s and early 1960s -- driving his coach around the bend with distraction and frustration.
The Canadiens and five other Eastern Conference teams will live at the historic Royal York in a Secure Zone -- a bubble, in effect -- a couple blocks up Bay Street from Scotiabank Arena. The Canadiens (31-31-9, .500 points percentage) enter the Qualifiers as the No. 12 seed; they will play Pittsburgh, the No. 5 seed (40-23-6, .623), with the winner advancing to the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
For decades, the stately Royal York was the road address of every Original Six team visiting Toronto. Opened in 1929, the Royal York is just across Front Street from Union Station, the sprawling railway hub where trains transporting teams would arrive and depart, often overnight. Better yet for team management of that era, the hotel was a five-minute subway ride to Maple Leaf Gardens.
Canadiens coach Toe Blake and Jacques Plante on the ice at Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens.
Of course, the 24 teams playing in the Qualifiers -- 12 each in Toronto and Edmonton -- won't be riding public transit; they'll be shuttled in a bubble by the NHL through the Secure Zone. Julien won't be seeing Price coming out of Toronto's subway, having spent the night not at the Royal York but up Yonge Street at a Courtyard by Marriott, which was the Westbury Hotel when it opened in 1957.
Plante was a six-time Stanley Cup champion with the Canadiens, including five in a row from 1956-60. He won the Vezina Trophy seven times, six with the Canadiens and once more with the St. Louis Blues in tandem with
Glenn Hall
in 1968-69.
He also was a goaltending pioneer who, like many innovators, marched to his own drummer. Plante introduced the mask to the NHL mid-game on Nov. 1, 1959, against Blake's wishes. In time, the facial protection would be adopted by every goalie in the League. He constantly railed against hockey injustices, real and perceived. Plante barked instructions at his defensemen, boldly wandered behind his net to cut off the puck and rushed it unlike any goalie before him; those tendencies, and other eyebrow-arching idiosyncrasies that were bizarre even by today's standards of quirky goalie behavior, drove Blake almost into therapy.