The top highlight of Season 12 is that last year's Creighton Cup champs, the Comets, cratered in the second half. Even so, they had an opportunity to claim the fourth and final playoff spot on the season's last day, but lost to the cellar-dwelling Thistles. On the flip side, last year's worst team, the Millionaires, jumped all the way to first place as their talented young core took a huge collective step forward. No one on the Millies exemplified this improvement more than third-year center Mickey MacKay, who harnessed his prodigious talent and won the scoring title (11 goals, 20 assists) by a single point over perennial contender Cyclone Taylor. Taylor was also denied the Defenseman MVP trophy, which went to Millionaires star Harry Cameron, who mixed elite offense (10 goals, 15 assists) with solid play in his own end; at +17, he was tops in the league, while the next-best player was just +10. Speaking of MVPs, the Forward MVP was a close race involving MacKay, his teammate Frank Foyston, and Bulldogs center Jack Adams, but the award ended up going to Joe Malone, who led the league in goals with 15 (no one else had more than 11). Malone scored a whopping 29% of the Bearcats' goals, and his late-season heroics helped propel the Cats into the playoffs. Before I move on to the postseason, however, I should comment on the continued decline in scoring. Teams scored just 2.48 goals per game this year (in contrast to 2.76 last year). Goalies dominated the league like never before, with the Victorias' Bowse Hutton (.937 save percentage and a seventh Goaltender MVP trophy), the Bulldogs' Hap Holmes (.928), and the Millionaires' George Vezina (.927) leading the way.
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