Montreal Gazette

Stanley Cup has quite the palate

Borscht, beer, caviar on menu this summer as trophy travels the world

- SCOTT ALLEN

During the past six weeks, the Stanley Cup has travelled from Washington to Russia and the Czech Republic, throughout Canada and the Midwestern United States. The trophy is headed back to Europe this week, where Capitals players Lars Eller, Andre Burakovsky, Nicklas Backstrom and Evgeny Kuznetsov, among others, will each spend one day with the Cup as part of a tradition formalized by the title-winning New Jersey Devils in 1995.

At each stop along the Stanley Cup’s summer victory tour, Capitals players and staff have filled the trophy’s bowl, which is engraved with the names of the 1907 champion Montreal Wanderers, with all sorts of things, from caviar and cereal to babies and good old-fashioned beer. Monday was 26-yearold Devante Smith-Pelly ’s day with the Cup and the Scarboroug­h, Ont., native, who scored seven goals during the playoffs, upped the ante by putting a good dog atop Lord Stanley’s trophy. Here’s a look at what else the Capitals have put in the Stanley Cup this summer:

CAVIAR

Last month, Alex Ovechkin brought the Stanley Cup to Moscow ’s Red Square and the Dynamo hockey facility where he played as a teenager. The Capitals captain also hosted a private party at a Moscow restaurant and served Russian caviar out of the top of the trophy. (The caviar was placed in a smaller bowl atop a layer of ice.)

PEPPERETTE­S

Capitals goaltendin­g coach Scott Murray filled the Cup with pepperette­s (sausage-like meat sticks) and roasted a whole pig during his day with the trophy in St. Clements, Ont.

HORSE FOOD

Capitals goalie Braden Holtby took the Cup to his parents’s farm in Marshall, Sask., last week. During his visit, Holtby signed autographs at the ice rink in nearby Lashburn where he played as a kid and visited the Lloydminst­er Animal Hospital where his sister works. Holtby also let a horse named Munchie eat pellets out of the Stanley Cup.

CEREAL

Cereal is probably among the most common foods to fill the Stanley Cup over the years. T.J. Oshie went with Cap’n Crunch, while fellow forward Tom Wilson opted for Lucky Charms.

Oshie and Wilson had no reason to worry about caviar-tainted milk. Philip Pritchard, the keeper of the

Cup for the last 30 years, cleans the trophy daily with soft detergent or hotel shampoo. In 2010, the Chicago Tribune swabbed the Cup for germs and sent the sample to a Chicago lab for analysis. Lab manager Nancy McDonald reported the trophy was “surprising­ly clean.” McDonald found no signs of staph, salmonella or E. coli and “only” 400 counts of general bacteria. By comparison, the Tribune reported, an office desk typically has more than 10,000 counts of bacteria.

BEER

The Capitals drank more than their fair share of beer — and fountain water — out of the Cup while parading it around Washington in the days after winning the franchise’s first championsh­ip. Matt Niskanen and Michal Kempny, among others, quenched their thirst with a drink out of the trophy during their respective days with the Cup. Pritchard said the Stanley Cup holds 14 12-ounce bottles of beer.

BABIES

In August 2017, Penguins forward Josh Archibald and his wife Bailey baptized their three-weekold son in the Stanley Cup during a small ceremony in Minnesota. The Cup hasn’t been used for any baptisms this summer (that we know of ), but it has held a lot of babies.

BORSCHT

Capitals defenceman Madison Bowey enjoyed a bowl of his grandmothe­r’s borscht out of the Stanley Cup during his day with the trophy in Winnipeg.

ICE CREAM

Everyone should be so lucky as to enjoy ice cream out of the Stanley Cup like the families of Capitals equipment manager Brock Myles and director of player personnel Chris Patrick.

 ??  ?? Madison Bowey
Madison Bowey

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