Hall of Famer goaltender Glenn Hall, an iron man and innovator, dies at 94
Hall of Famer Glenn Hall, an iron man who changed the way goaltenders play during a stellar NHL career with Detroit, Chicago and St. Louis, has died at 94.
Nicknamed Mr. Goalie, Hall won two Stanley Cups, the Calder Memorial Trophy, three Vezina trophies and the Conn Smythe Trophy from 1952 to 1971. He was named a first-team all-star seven times and played in 13 all-star games.
Amazingly, he started and finished 502 consecutive regular-season games from the beginning of the 1955-56 season with Detroit through 12 games of the 1962-63 campaign with Chicago.
During that regular-season streak, also he played 50 straight playoff games. And he did it without a mask, only opting for facial protection late in his career.


