Background
Charlie Hodge was born in Lachine, Quebec.
Charlie Hodge was born in Lachine, Quebec.
Charlie Hodge began his hockey career with the Montreal Junior. Canadiens in 1950. In 1952, Hodge began showing his true skills finishing with a 2.22 Gaelic Athletic Association. The next year, he led the Quebec Junior Hockey League with 35 wins and 5 shutouts. Hodge then moved on to the Cincinnati Mohawks in the International Hockey League.
In 1955, he played his first game with the Montreal Canadiens.
Hodge"s first National Hockey League game occurred in 1954 with Montreal. But because teams in that era only carried one goalie, and Montreal had perhaps the best goalie of the era in Jacques Plante, Hodge was only used in emergency situations.
During this time, he played mostly in the AHL. When Plante was traded in 1962, Hodge got his chance to play full-time. He also played 1 game in the finals in 1955, but lost to Detroit.
In 1967, young goaltender Rogatien Vachon was called up by the Canadiens.
Vachon played superbly, and there was no more room for Hodge. Hodge was left unprotected in 1967 and he was picked up by the Oakland Seals in the 1967 National Hockey League Draft. In 1967, the league doubled in size to 12 teams.
Hodge was picked up in the 1967 National Hockey League Draft by Oakland.
In Oakland, Hodge garnered up three shutouts and 13 wins. Next season, he saw his playing time greatly reduced and was sent down to the Western Hockey League where he played for the Vancouver Canucks.
Hodge was an expansion pick again when the Vancouver Canucks entered the National Hockey League in 1970. He posted a winning record while sharing netminding duties with George Gardner and Dunc Wilson.
He retired after being unable to come to terms with General Manager Bud Poile.
Hodge sold real estate for a decade until Winnipeg Jets General Motors John Ferguson recruited him for the team"s scout in Western Canada. Hodge is currently an amateur scout for the National Hockey League"s Tampa Bay Lightning after two decades with the Pittsburgh Penguins. He primarily scouts the Vancouver Giants and Chilliwack Bruins of the Western Hockey League and the Lower Mainland clubs in the British Columbia Hockey League.
Turner Cup Championship in 1954. Stanley Cup Championship as a goaltender in 1956, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1965, 1966 with Montreal. Stanley Cup Champion 1992 as Scout with Pittsburgh. Vezina Trophy Winner in 1964 and in 1966 (shared with Gump Worsley). Played in 1964, 1965, and 1967 National Hockey League All-Star Games. Selected to the National Hockey League Second All-Star Team in 1964.
Hodge was devoted to becoming a member of the Montreal Canadiens.