Five Stanley Cups and a wartime hero — the most beloved goaltender in Toronto Maple Leafs history.
Walter Edward Broda was born in Brandon, Manitoba in 1914. He spent his entire 14-season career with the Toronto Maple Leafs — winning five Stanley Cup championships (1942, 1945, 1947, 1948, 1949). He won the Vezina Trophy as the NHL's best goaltender twice (1941, 1948). He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1967. He interrupted his career to serve in the Canadian Army during World War II from 1943 to 1945, returning to win another championship in 1945 after a three-year absence. His wartime service and his subsequent championship victories made him a beloved figure across Canada. He was considered the best money goaltender of his era — performing his finest work in playoff situations when the pressure was highest. He was famously ordered by Toronto owner Conn Smythe to lose weight in 1949 — the Battle of the Bulge, as newspapers called it — prompting national debate about athlete conditioning. He won the Cup within months of that controversy.
Stanley Cup 5x (1942,1945,1947,1948,1949)
Career Honours
- Stanley Cup 5x (1942,1945,1947,1948,1949)
- Vezina Trophy 2x
- Hall of Fame (1967)