Maple Leafs coach Punch Imlach in the dressing room with Frank Mahovlich (center) and captain George Armstrong.
"To understand what this means to the Leafs, think of this," Armstrong said. "I've been playing organized hockey since I was 10 or 11. That's 20 or 21 years in the sport. In all that time, it's been my one and only aim to play on a Stanley Cup team. Every player feels the same. Outside of four fellows -- Red Kelly, Bert Olmstead, Al Arbour and Eddie Litzenberger -- none of us has made it.
"We hadn't even come close. I'd been in the Final twice and we were beaten quite badly both times (by the Canadiens in 1959 and '60). So I'm talking on behalf of all the Leafs when I say that we're very happy and consider ourselves very fortunate."
The morning after the Maple Leafs' victory, there was a single switchboard operator working at their downtown arena. She wasn't answering the phone with "Maple Leaf Gardens" as usual. Her first words were "Stanley Cup champions."
Indeed, the Maple Leafs were Cup winners for the first time in 11 years. Toronto's last title, in 1951, had been bittersweet; it preceded the disappearance on a fishing trip of popular Maple Leafs defenseman Bill Barilko, four months after he scored the Cup winner in overtime in Game 5 of the Final against the Canadiens on April 21. On June 6, 1962, six weeks after Toronto won the Cup again, the wreckage of Barilko's plane was discovered in dense bush in northern Ontario.