Description
Claude David Larose is a retired former professional ice hockey player who played 943 career NHL games for the Montreal Canadiens, Minnesota North Stars and St. Louis Blues. He also served as an assistant coach for the Hartford Whalers after his retirement. He won 6 Stanley Cups during his career 1965, 1966, 1968, 1971, 1973, 2006 with Carolina.
Prior to his joining the Montreal Canadiens, the team suffered from a lack of toughness. Claude Larose was one of those players Sam Pollock thought could add toughness without sacrificing speed and scoring and he was right. Over a 16-year career, 10 with the Canadiens, Larose scored 226 goals and added 257 assists for 483 points in 943 NHL games. He also had 887 career penalty minutes and led the Canadiens in penalties during the 1971 Stanley Cup Playoffs, when Montreal upset both the defending champion Boston Bruins and the powerful Chicago Black Hawks. "We became the toughest team in the League in 1963?64, which dismayed the opposition," Canadiens captain Jean Beliveau wrote in his autobiography.
Statistics say some things about a player, but not everything. Claude Larose was instant chemistry for his linemates.
Born
March 2nd, 1942 in Hearst (Age 82)
Teams
Last Changes
2024/01/28
New Response (Success): Sent LOR w/ question, SASE, 1 IC, 2 pics and 2 TCs..
2024/01/28
New Scanned Autograph (TTM/Probably Authentic)
2024/01/28
New Scanned Autograph (TTM/Probably Authentic)