Jack Marshall (ice hockey)

John Calder Marshall (March 14, 1877 – August 7, 1965) was a Canadian ice hockey player.

The Wanderers won the ECAHA title that season and successfully defended their Stanley Cup championship of 1906 in challenges.

After Bruce Ridpath retired as manager in 1913, Marshall took on the responsibility while continuing to play for the team.

[5] Jack Marshall was a strong all-round player, and over the course of his career he tried out almost every position the seven-man game had to offer.

Although he was a right-handed shot he would later play on the left wing with the Winnipeg Victorias in the Manitoba Hockey Association, because the team lacked adequate enough left-handed options.

In the January 21, 1901 issue of the Winnipeg Tribune Marshall was described as "not a big man physically" but "solidly built, tough and enduring."

The newspaper also remarked that he played "a neat speedy and cool-headed game, very free from fouls or off-sides" and that he "is an excellent shot on goal and can supply the place of any man on the forward line who may get hurt.

Jack Marshall, fourth from left in the back row, with the 1913–14 Toronto Blueshirts .