The Chief — eight Stanley Cups and the longest-serving captain in Toronto Maple Leafs history.
George Edward Armstrong was born in Skead, Ontario in 1930. He spent his entire 21-season career with the Toronto Maple Leafs — serving as team captain for 12 consecutive seasons, the longest captaincy in franchise history. He won four Stanley Cup championships (1962, 1963, 1964, 1967). He was named to four All-Star teams. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1975. He scored the empty-net goal that clinched the 1967 Stanley Cup against Montreal — the last championship the Toronto Maple Leafs have won. He was nicknamed the Chief due to his Indigenous heritage — his mother was of Ojibwe descent — making him one of the most prominent Indigenous players in Maple Leafs history. He was later a coach in the Maple Leafs organisation for decades. His 1967 Cup-clinching goal remains one of the most bittersweet moments in Toronto sports — a moment of triumph that has become increasingly poignant with each passing decade without another championship.
Stanley Cup 4x (1962,1963,1964,1967)
Career Honours
- Stanley Cup 4x (1962,1963,1964,1967)
- NHL All-Star 4x
- Hall of Fame (1975)