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LIFFITON HOCKEY
A third brother, Artie, moved to New York City in 1899, where he was a star in the first American hockey league for fourteen years. Pete, the youngest of the four, did not achieve the fame of his brothers, but played senior hockey in Montreal from 1912 through 1916. Currently David Liffiton of Windsor, Ontario is making his mark in the American Hockey League as one of the top prospects for the National Hockey League's New York Rangers. Lest it be thought only Liffiton men play hockey, Ashlee Liffiton of Ontario was the goalie on a team which won its league championship in 2000. Read the stories of the six Liffiton hockey players by following the links on the left. Organized ice hockey, leagues with regular teams and regular schedules, developed in Canada as the country's cold weather enabled the sustained use of natural ice rinks. Railroad lines allowed teams to travel long distances to play matches. Prior to 1895, when artificial ice rinks were constructed in New York City, Pittsburgh, and Baltimore, ice hockey in the United States was dependant on sporadic cold spells. Hockey rules were first written down in Montreal, but they were quite different from modern hockey rules. Seven players rather than six comprised a team. Players skated the entire game, two thirty minute periods, rather than a few minutes at a time. The hockey season of 1900 was more like the football season of today. It started in late December and was eight or ten weeks long with teams playing a match each week. The modern regular season starts in September, and each team plays eighty-two games before the playoffs begin. Goals in the oldtime game before 1900 were scored between two posts sticking in the ice with no netting to catch the puck. Goalies were not allowed to leave their feet to fend off the puck. Read about each of the six Liffiton hockey players by selecting a name on the left, or start by following this link to a page on Charlie Liffiton. Copyright © 1992 - 2006 Thomas Liffiton |