Backstrom's first came on a long slap shot at 14:22 of the third period; he retrieved the puck and had it mounted on a base with an engraved plaque and two crossed hockey sticks. His second followed 1:20 later during a goalmouth scramble. Canadiens center
Jean Beliveau
also scored twice that night but took second billing in the morning newspaper's headline:
"Backstrom, Beliveau Pace Habs 9-1 Win."
"You want to talk about classy players, start with Jean Beliveau," Backstrom, now 83, said this week from his home in Windsor, Colorado, about 60 miles north of Denver. "He was one of the all-time greats in the National Hockey League. It was such an honor to play with him and to be one of his friends.
"As for that night, I think I was in shock to score a couple of goals," he said.
There were another 276 to come, along with a total of 361 assists, before his NHL days were done.
Backstrom would score 40 points (18 goals, 22 assists) in 64 games in 1958-59, and was voted winner of the Calder Trophy as the top rookie in the NHL.
"It's just great any time you win an individual award," Backstrom said. "But winning the Stanley Cup was the only thing we had on our minds, and that's why we played together so hard. It was a wonderful thrill to join the guys who were already playing for the Canadiens."