<Tr> <Td> Ian "Scotty" Morrison </Td> <Td> 2002 </Td> <Td> current </Td> </Tr> <P> Like the Grey Cup, awarded to the winner of the Canadian Football League, the Stanley Cup is engraved with the names of the winning players, coaches, management, and club staff . However, this was not always the case: one of Lord Stanley's original conditions was that each team could, at their own expense, add a ring to the Cup to commemorate their victory . Initially, there was only one base ring, which was attached to the bottom of the original bowl by the Montreal Hockey Club . Clubs engraved their team names, usually in the form "TEAM NAME" "YEAR WON", on that one ring until it was full in 1902 . With no more room to engrave their names (and unwilling to pay for a second band), teams left their mark on the bowl itself . The 1907 Montreal Wanderers became the first club to record their name on the bowl's interior surface, and the first champion to record the name of every member of their team . </P> <P> In 1908, for reasons unknown, the Wanderers, despite having turned aside four challengers, did not record their names on the Cup . The next year, the Ottawa Senators added a second band onto the Cup . Despite the new room, the 1910 Wanderers and the 1911 Senators did not put their names on the Cup . The 1915 Vancouver Millionaires became the second team to engrave players' names, this time inside the bowl along its sides . </P> <P> The 1918 Millionaires eventually filled the band added by the 1909 Senators . The 1915 Ottawa Senators, the 1916 Portland Rosebuds and the 1918 Vancouver Millionaires all engraved their names on the trophy even though they did not officially win it under the new PCHA - NHA system . They had only won the title of the previous champion's league and would have been crowned as Cup champions under the old challenge rules . The winners in 1918, 1920 to 1923 did not put their winning team name on it . </P>

When did they start putting names on the stanley cup