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Stanley Cup Finals : ウィキペディア英語版
Stanley Cup Finals

In ice hockey, the Stanley Cup Final (also known as the Stanley Cup Finals among various media,〔The NHL officially began referring to the championship series as a singular "Final" circa 2006. However, various North American media still continue to refer to it as plural "Finals", similar to the NBA Finals.〕 (フランス語:Finale de la Coupe Stanley)) is the championship series to determine the winner of the Stanley Cup, the oldest professional sports trophy in North America,.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=NHL.com – Stanley Cup Fun Facts )
The Stanley Cup was originally a "challenge trophy"; the champions held onto the Cup until they either lost their league title to another club, or a champion from another league issued a formal challenge and subsequently defeated the reigning Cup champion in a special game or series.
Starting in 1915, the Cup was officially competed in an annual interleague championship series between the champion of the National Hockey Association (NHA) and the champion of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA). After a series of league mergers and folds, it became the championship trophy of the National Hockey League (NHL) in 1926. Today, the championship round of the NHL's playoffs is a best-of-seven series played between the champions of the Eastern and Western Conferences.
==History==
The Stanley Cup had been won and contested since 1893, when the Montreal Hockey Club was the first winner, for winning the 1893 AHAC season. The Cup winner would then have to defend its championship both through league championships and challenge games or series organized by the Stanley Cup trustees. These challenges could take place before or during a league season until 1912, when the trustees ordered that challenges only take place after league seasons were completed.
The last challenge, in 1914, was the inauguration of the first "World Series" of ice hockey,〔Diamond, Zweig, and Duplacey, p. 25〕 a series between the Stanley Cup and league champion Toronto Hockey Club of the National Hockey Association (NHA) and the Victoria Aristocrats, champions of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA). The series was pre-arranged between the two leagues prior to the season after post-season exhibitions held in the previous seasons. The inaugural series was to be held in the city of the NHA champion, and alternate annually thereafter.
After the series got under way, there was some concern that the series would produce an "official" Stanley Cup champion. The Victoria club had not formally applied to the Stanley Cup trustees to challenge for the Cup. A letter arrived from the Stanley Cup trustees on March 17, that the trustees would not let the Stanley Cup travel west, as they did not consider Victoria a proper challenger because they had not formally notified the trustees. However, on March 18, Trustee William Foran stated that it was a misunderstanding. PCHA president Lester Patrick had not filed a challenge, because he had expected Emmett Quinn of the NHA to make all of the arrangements in his role as hockey commissioner, whereas the trustees thought they were being deliberately ignored. In any case, all arrangements had been ironed out and the Victoria challenge was accepted. Any controversy was moot as Toronto successfully defended the Cup by sweeping a best-of-five series in three games.〔Diamond(1992), p. 46〕 This was the start of the end of the influence of the Stanley Cup trustees on the challengers and series for the Cup. In March 1914, trustee William Foran wrote to NHA president Emmett Quinn that the trustees are "perfectly satisfied to allow the representatives of the three pro leagues (NHA, PCHA and Maritime) to make all arrangements each season as to the series of matches to be played for the Cup."
Victoria vs. Toronto

''All games played at Arena Gardens in Toronto.''
Part of their 1913 agreement to set up drafting and player rights ownership, the NHA and PCHA leagues agreed to have their respective champions face each other for the Cup. At the same time, the NHA concluded a similar agreement with the Maritime Hockey League but the MHL champions abandoned their 1914 challenge and did not challenge again. From 1914 onwards, the Stanley Cup championship finals alternated between the East and the West each year, with alternating games played according to NHA and PCHA rules.〔Diamond, Zweig, and Duplacey, p. 20〕 The Cup trustees agreed to this new arrangement, because after the Allan Cup became the highest prize for amateur hockey teams in Canada, the trustees had become dependent on the top two professional leagues to bolster the prominence of the trophy.〔Diamond(1992), p. 45〕 After the Portland Rosebuds, an American-based team, joined the PCHA in 1914, the trustees issued a statement that the Cup was no longer for the best team in Canada, but now for the best team in the world.〔 Two years later, the Rosebuds became the first American team to play in the Stanley Cup championship finals.〔Diamond, ''The Official National Hockey League Stanley Cup Centennial Book'', 46〕 In 1917, the Seattle Metropolitans became the first American team to win the Cup.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Stanley Cup Winners: Seattle Metropolitans 1916–17 )〕 After that season, the NHA dissolved, and the National Hockey League (NHL) took its place.〔
In 1919, the Spanish influenza epidemic forced the Montreal Canadiens and the Seattle Metropolitans to cancel their series tied at 2–2–1, marking the first time the Stanley Cup was not awarded.〔Podnieks, p. 51〕
The format for the Stanley Cup championship changed in 1922, with the creation of the Western Canada Hockey League (WCHL). Now three leagues competed for the Cup and this necessitated a semi-final series between two league champions, with the third having a bye directly to the finals.〔Diamond, Zweig, and Duplacey, pp. 20–21〕 In 1924, the PCHA and the WCHL merged to form the Western Hockey League (WHL) and the championship reverted to a single series.〔Diamond, Zweig, and Duplacey, p. 21〕 After winning in the 1924–25 season, the Victoria Cougars became the last team outside the NHL to win the Stanley Cup.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Stanley Cup Winners: Victoria Cougars 1924–25 )
The WHL folded in 1926, and most of the players moved to the NHL. This left the NHL as the only league left competing for the Cup. Other leagues and clubs have issued challenges, but from that year forward, no non-NHL team has played for it, leading it to become the ''de facto'' championship trophy of the NHL.〔 In 1947, the NHL reached an agreement with trustees P. D. Ross and Cooper Smeaton to grant control of the cup to the NHL, allowing the league itself to reject challenges from other leagues that may have wished to play for the Cup.〔Diamond, Zweig and Duplacey, p. 40.〕 A 2006 Ontario Superior Court case found that the trustees had gone against Lord Stanley's conditions in the 1947 agreement. The NHL has agreed to allow other teams to play for the Cup should the league not be operating, as was the case in the 2004–05 NHL lockout.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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