The Boomer — the hardest shot in 1930s hockey and the right wing of the legendary Kid Line.
Charles William Conacher was born in Toronto, Ontario in 1909. He attended the Toronto Maple Leafs as the right wing of the famous Kid Line alongside Harvey Jackson and Charlie Primeau — one of the most celebrated forward lines in early NHL history. He won the Stanley Cup with Toronto in 1932. He led the NHL in goals five times and won the Art Ross Trophy as scoring champion twice (1934, 1935). His shot was described by contemporaries as the hardest in the game — opponents feared it and goaltenders prepared specifically for the force of his releases. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1961. He represented the generation of Toronto Maple Leafs players who established the franchise as a cultural institution in Canada. His brother Lionel Conacher was a multi-sport athlete elected Canada's athlete of the first half of the 20th century. The Kid Line was the most celebrated offensive unit of the 1930s NHL.
Stanley Cup (1932)
Career Honours
- Stanley Cup (1932)
- Art Ross Trophy 2x
- NHL scoring leader 5x
- Hall of Fame (1961)