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Toronto Maple Leafs’ George Armstrong, who grew up in Sudbury area, dies at 90

He played 21 seasons for the Toronto Maple Leafs between 1950 and 1971

George “Chief” Armstrong, who grew up in the Sudbury area and played 21 seasons for the Toronto Maple Leafs, died Jan. 24 at the age of 90.

According to Wikipedia, Armstrong was born in 1930 in Skead to an Irish Canadian father and Ojibwe mother, and grew up in Falconbridge, where his father was a nickel miner.

While attending Sudbury High School, Armstrong played on the hockey team with Red McCarthy and Tim Horton. Inspired by a newspaper advertisement offering tryouts with the Copper Cliff Redmen of the Northern Ontario Junior Hockey Association (NOJHA), Armstrong convinced Horton and McCarthy to join him in trying out. 

They made the team and Armstrong began his junior hockey career at age 16 in the 1946–47 season.

He recorded six goals and five assists in nine games and caught the attention of scouts for the National Hockey League (NHL)'s Toronto Maple Leafs who added him to their protected list. He also played with the Prince Albert Blackhawks for part of that season.

Armstrong quit school in Grade 11 to focus on his hockey career.

He played 1,188 NHL games between 1950 and 1971, all with Toronto and a franchise record, and was the team's captain for 13 seasons. Armstrong was a member of four Stanley Cup championship teams and played in seven NHL All-Star Games. 

He scored the final goal of the NHL's "Original Six" era as Toronto won the 1967 Stanley Cup.

Armstrong played both junior and senior hockey in the Toronto Marlboros organization and was a member of the 1950 Allan Cup winning team as senior champions of Canada. He returned to the Marlboros following his playing career and coached the junior team to two Memorial Cup championships. 

He served as a scout for the Quebec Nordiques, as an assistant general manager of the Maple Leafs and for part of the 1988–89 NHL season as Toronto's head coach. Armstrong was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1975 and the Maple Leafs honoured his uniform number 10 in 1998, and later officially retired the number, along with ten others, during a pre-game ceremony on October 15, 2016.

Also in 2016, Armstrong was honoured locally, when a banner featuring his image was unveiled at the Big Nickel, later to be displayed permanently at the Garson Arena.
 

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