His name is Mud. Sort of.
But he made a name for himself in hockey history.
March 24, 1936, 90 years ago: The longest game in National Hockey League history is played, at the Montreal Forum. The Montreal Maroons host the Detroit Red Wings in the 1st game of the Stanley Cup Semifinals, a best-3-out-of-5 series.
The Maroons, founded in 1924, were the defending Stanley Cup Champions. Coached by Tommy Gorman, they included 4 future members of the Hockey Hall of Fame: Reginald "Hooley" Smith, Lionel Conacher, goaltender Alex Connell, and Hector "Toe" Blake, later to win 8 Stanley Cups as head coach of the Montreal Canadiens. They also had All-Stars Jimmy Ward, Herb Cain, Cy Wentworth, Earl Robinson and Lawrence "Baldy" Northcott (who, at the time, had plenty of hair).
The Wings, coached by Jack Adams, once a star player, and founded in 1926, had reached the Stanley Cup Finals in 1934, but hadn't yet won it. They had 4 Hall-of-Famers: Marty Barry, Herbie Lewis, Syd Howe (not related to later Detroit star Gordie) and Ebenezer "Ebbie" Goodfellow. (Yeah, I know: His name makes him sound like Ebenezer Scrooge's "good twin.")
Not in the Hall of Fame were All-Stars, the brothers Wally and Hector Kilrea, and Larry Aurie, whose Number 6 was long believed retired by the team, but it isn't, at least not officially. Wilfrid "Bucko" McDonald was elected to the Hall of Fame -- the one for lacrosse. Modere Fernand "Mud" Bruneteau was elected to the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame, though not the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto.
Wings goaltender Normie Smith isn't in the Hockey Hall of Fame, either. But, on this night, he wrote his name into hockey history, much as Connell, who had also won the Cup with the 1927 Ottawa Senators, had already done.
Except Connell wouldn't be the Maroons' goalie in this game. It would be Lorne Chabot, who had won the Cup with the 1928 New York Rangers and the 1932 Toronto Maple Leafs. In 1933, he was the winning goalie in the Leafs' 1-0 win over the Boston Bruins, a game that went to 6 overtimes, and was then the longest game in NHL history.
The puck was dropped at 8:30 PM. After the full 60 minutes of play, the score was 0-0. A full 20-minute overtime period was played. No goals in that, either. A 2nd overtime was played. Still no score. A 3rd overtime was played. And a 4th. A 5th. Nothing. Chabot had done this before. Smith had not.
There is no official record of how many shots and saves were made, but one source suggests that Smith made 92 saves. If so, it would be an NHL record. (In a 2020 Playoff game that went to 5 overtimes, Joonas Korpisalo of the Columbus Blue Jackets made 85 saves, which is recognized as the official record. But the Jackets lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning. The accepted regulation record is 70, set by Ron Tugnutt of the Quebec Nordiques, in a 3-3 tie with the Boston Bruins in 1991.)
It was a clean game, by the standards of the time. The Wings were penalized only 5 times throughout the long contest; the Maroons, just 4. There were no penalties in the 1st 3 overtimes, and just 1, Hooley Smith at the start of the 4th overtime, thereafter.
Finally, with 3:30 to go in the 6th overtime, after one hundred sixteen minutes and thirty seconds of scoreless hockey, nearly 3 full games, with Smith and Connell turning away all shots, at 2:25 AM on March 25, Bruneteau, only 21 years old, intercepted an errant pass, and put the puck past Chabot. Final score: Red Wings 1, Maroons 0.
Smith shut the Maroons out again in Game 2, and the Wings completed the sweep in Game 3. They beat the Leafs in the Finals, 3 games to 1, to win their 1st Stanley Cup. Had there been a trophy for the Most Valuable Player of the Playoffs, Smith would likely have won it. (The Conn Smythe Trophy for Playoff MVP did not debut until 1965.)
Mud Bruneteau would play 11 seasons in the NHL, all with the Red Wings, winning the Stanley Cup in 1936, 1937 and 1943, and captained the Wings in the 1943-44 season. He scored 139 goals, plus 23 more in the Playoffs. He later won minor-league championships as the head coach of a Wings farm team, the Omaha Knights. He died in 1982, of cancer, at age 67.
Normie Smith played 5 seasons in the NHL. He was also a member of the Wings' back-to-back Cup winners in 1936 and 1937. In 1937, he won the Vezina Trophy as the NHL's best goaltender. He was traded to the Bruins in 1939, and retired rather than report. (That could have been a mistake: With Frankie Brmisek in goal, they won the Cup in 1941.) During World War II, despite having won the Cup in 1943 and reached the Finals the year before, the Wings needed to counter the manpower drain, and coaxed him back for 5 games in 1944 and 1 in 1945. He lived until 1988, age 79.




















