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The Kenora Thistles: The Smallest Town to Ever Win the Stanley Cup

26 min · 24 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Kenora Thistles: The Smallest Town to Ever Win the Stanley Cup

Descripción

In January 1907, a mill town on the edge of Lake of the Woods — population barely four thousand — beat the Montreal Wanderers and lifted the Stanley Cup. They held it for sixty-three days. No town that small has touched it since. This is the story of the Kenora Thistles: a roster of local boys and who climbed to the top of hockey in the last window the sport ever allowed it. We trace how they got there, why they couldn’t stay, and what the challenge-cup era looked like in the final years before the NHL made it impossible for a town like Kenora to ever try again. I'm Rob Barbieri. This is TimeStamped.

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Portada del episodio Jay Berwanger: The Kid From Dubuque Who Gave a President a Scar

Jay Berwanger: The Kid From Dubuque Who Gave a President a Scar

In 1935, a halfback from the University of Chicago won a trophy that didn’t yet bear John Heisman’s name. A few months later, he became the first overall pick in the first NFL Draft — and turned pro football down flat. This is the story of Jay Berwanger: the most decorated college player of his era, a man Gerald Ford once called the best he ever lined up against, and a name most football fans today couldn’t place in a lineup. We trace how a kid from Dubuque, Iowa became the face of college football in the 1930s, why he walked away from the pro game on his own terms, and what his quiet refusal tells us about the sport’s earliest fault lines. Featuring a Gerald Ford cameo, a wrestling match with future Nobel laureate Norman Borlaug, and a trophy that spent its first year without a proper name. I’m Rob Barbieri. This is TimeStamped.

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