• U.S.

Sport: New Garden

2 minute read
TIME

A team of bowlegged French-Canadian skaters from Montreal cut the ice in the rink of Madison Square Garden, Manhattan, into a fine powder. This way and that they swayed and slithered, passing the puck with flawless teamwork. A huge crowd of sportsmen, society dames, politicians, actors, editors, financiers, diplomats, discovered—as perhaps they had discovered before—that hockey is a pretty but not always a gentle game.

The men on the ice, like the notables in the boxes, were celebrating the formal opening of Madison Square Garden. There have been preliminary events in the new Garden—a six-day bicycle race, some amateur bouts, a championship fight—but the hockey was the fashionable start of Promoter Tex Rickard’s entertainment centre. Therefore the notables in the boxes, like the men on the ice, had been led to display an interest in professional hockey, in “Les Canadiens,” in the Prince of Wales Cup, which will go to the team which wins the league championship. John Ringling, Rosamond Pinchot, Frank Crowninshield, Mayor Hylan, Charles Sabin, Mayor-Elect Walker, Paul D. Cravath, Clarence Mackay, Mr. and Mrs. James N. Hill, Paul Manship, Sarah Schuyler Butler and innumerable others with printable names saw the Canadians in their scarlet shirts drub the New York team, 3 to 1.

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