The black base shows the most wear, but Pritchard says that's normal, with the Cup being picked up and put back down, sometimes not gingerly.
"That's not the fault of the Capitals, of any player or person," he said. "Louise has two bases, maybe more, that she rotates onto the bottom of the Cup from year to year."
The Cup was brought to St. Jacques' home early Monday, delivered by caretakers Mike Bolt and Howie Borrow, who had driven up after having spent a few days with the trophy at Kraft Hockeyville USA in Clinton, New York.
The Cup then was taken to St. Jacques' Montreal studio to begin the painstaking work of taking it apart, restoring it, adding the Capitals and reassembling it.
And what a delightful coincidence it was that Bolt and Borrow had stayed Sunday in a downtown Montreal hotel that was a slap shot across Peel Street from the historic Club Sportif Montreal AAA, the oldest athletic club in Canada, founded in 1881, with a remarkable link to the Stanley Cup.
The Montreal Hockey Club, representing Montreal AAA, was the inaugural winner in 1893 of the Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup, which would become known as the Stanley Cup. The trophy, then a simple silver bowl, was commissioned in 1892 by governor general Lord Stanley of Preston to be his gift to Canada, honoring the country's best amateur hockey team. Montreal AAA teams would win the Cup again in 1894, 1902 and 1903.