Matt Leyden
Matthew Leyden was a Scotland-born Canadian former ice hockey executive and administrator, with the Ontario Hockey Association. He managed the Oshawa Generals from 1937 to 1953, and built the team which won seven consecutive OHA championships, and three Memorial Cups. He is the namesake of both the Matt Leyden Trophy, and the Leyden Trophy.
Career
Leyden was born in 1904, and was the first of three boys to parents Robert and Margaret Leyden. He immigrated with his family to Oshawa, Ontario, from Hawick, Scotland, in 1914 at age 10.Leyden managed the Oshawa Majors from 1928 to 1937, and the Oshawa Generals from 1937 to 1953. Leyden established the Generals dynasty from 1937 to 1944, winning seven consecutive J. [Ross Robertson Cup]s under his leadership. The Generals also won three Memorial Cups, in 1939, 1940, and 1944. As of the 2017 Memorial Cup, Leyden remains one of only three general managers to assemble three Memorial Cup winning teams; the others are Warren Rychel of the Windsor Spitfires, and Bob Brown of the Kamloops Blazers.
Leyden was also involved with men's box lacrosse. He managed the Oshawa team to the 1929 Mann Cup title, and was an active member of Oshawa Green Gaels from 1964 to 1971. Leyden served on the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association executive, while he was president of the Ontario Hockey Association from 1965 to 1967. Leyden and CAHA president Art Potter spoke at the 1965 Memorial Cup banquet and gave similar views on the state of minor ice hockey in Canada, and noted the booming growth in participation in the game, but that boys lost interest in their late teenage years after having played organized hockey for 10 years. Leyden felt that Ontario was on the right course with the established of multiple tiers in junior ice hockey to keep the players involved. He was succeeded by Jack Devine as OHA president.
Leyden died December 23, 1975, in Oshawa. He was interred at Mount Lawn Cemetery in Whitby, Ontario. He was regarded by Hap Emms as a close friend, an honorable person, and someone who should have been enshrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame.