The 1979 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the National Hockey League's (NHL) 1978–79 season, and the culmination of the 1979 Stanley Cup playoffs. The New York Rangers challenged the defending champion Montreal Canadiens, who made their fourth straight appearance. It was New York's first foray into the Finals since 1972. The Canadiens would win the best-of-seven series, four games to one, to win their fourth consecutive Stanley Cup championship.[2]
1979 Stanley Cup Finals | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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* indicates periods of overtime | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Location(s) | Montreal: Forum (1, 2, 5) New York City: Madison Square Garden (3, 4) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Coaches | Montreal: Scotty Bowman New York: Fred Shero | |||||||||||||||||||||
Captains | Montreal: Yvan Cournoyer[1] New York: Dave Maloney | |||||||||||||||||||||
Dates | May 13–21, 1979 | |||||||||||||||||||||
MVP | Bob Gainey (Canadiens) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Series-winning goal | Jacques Lemaire (1:02, second, G5) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Hall of Famers | Canadiens: Yvan Cournoyer (1982; did not play) Ken Dryden (1983) Bob Gainey (1992) Guy Lafleur (1988) Rod Langway (2002) Guy Lapointe (1993; did not play) Jacques Lemaire (1984) Larry Robinson (1995) Serge Savard (1986) Steve Shutt (1993) Rangers: Phil Esposito (1984) Coaches: Scotty Bowman (1991) Fred Shero (2013) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Networks | Canada: (English): CBC (French): SRC United States: (National): NHL Network (New York City area): WOR | |||||||||||||||||||||
Announcers | (CBC) Dan Kelly, Danny Gallivan (2), Gary Dornhoefer (1, 5), Gerry Pinder (2), Bobby Orr (3–4), and Dick Irvin Jr. (SRC) Rene Lecavalier and Gilles Tremblay (NHLN) Simulcast of CBC feed (WOR) Jim Gordon and Bill Chadwick | |||||||||||||||||||||
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This was the first of six consecutive Finals involving a team from the New York metropolitan area. The next five Finals would be contested by the Rangers' crosstown rivals the New York Islanders, who would win the first four of those series to forge a dynasty matching that of the Canadiens. By defeating the Rangers, the Canadiens completed the rare accomplishment of winning four consecutive titles in a North American league competition consisting of at least sixteen teams, and remain the only team based outside the New York metropolitan area to do so. Prior to the Canadiens' dynasty, the feat had been achieved only twice before, both times by the New York Yankees in Major League Baseball. The aforementioned Islanders are the only team to accomplish it since. This was also the last Stanley Cup Finals until 2013 where both teams were from the Original Six. An Original Six club would not reach the Finals again until Montreal won their next championship in 1986.
Paths to the Finals
editMontreal defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs 4–0 and the Boston Bruins 4–3 (highlighted by the "too many men on the ice" game seven overtime win) to advance to the Final.
New York defeated the Los Angeles Kings 2–0, the Philadelphia Flyers 4–1 and the New York Islanders 4–2 to make it to the finals.
Game summaries
editThe Canadiens won the Cup in five games, winning it on home ice for the first time since 1968.[3] After the game Jacques Lemaire, Yvan Cournoyer, and Ken Dryden retired, while head coach Scotty Bowman left the Canadiens to join the Buffalo Sabres, which would mark the end of the Canadiens' dynasty. Montreal Canadiens scored 46 total points during the Stanley Cup Finals, while the New York Rangers scored 26 points in the finals.[4]
This Final marked the second time in four years that Bowman and Fred Shero coached against each other. In 1976, they coached against each other, though Shero was with the Philadelphia Flyers.
May 13 | New York Rangers | 4–1 | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum | Recap | |||
Steve Vickers (5) - pp - 6:28 Ron Greschner (7) - 14:27 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
Phil Esposito (7) - pp - 9:30 Dave Maloney (3) - sh - 12:32 |
Second period | 7:07 - Guy Lafleur (9) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
John Davidson 31 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Ken Dryden 9 saves / 13 shots, Michel Larocque 9 saves / 9 shots |
May 15 | New York Rangers | 2–6 | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum | Recap | |||
Anders Hedberg (4) - 1:02 Ron Duguay (4) - 6:21 |
First period | 8:34 - Yvon Lambert (4) 12:24 - Guy Lafleur (10) 16:27 - Bob Gainey (4) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 6:51 - Steve Shutt (3) 17:35 - pp - Jacques Lemaire (8) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 4:38 - Mark Napier (3) | ||||||
John Davidson 27 saves / 33 shots | Goalie stats | Ken Dryden 23 saves / 25 shots |
May 17 | Montreal Canadiens | 4–1 | New York Rangers | Madison Square Garden | Recap | |||
Steve Shutt (4) - pp - 7:27 Doug Risebrough (1) - 15:44 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Mario Tremblay (3) - 14:48 Jacques Lemaire (9) - 17:10 |
Third period | 6:06 - Ron Duguay (5) | ||||||
Ken Dryden 19 saves / 20 shots | Goalie stats | John Davidson 19 saves / 23 shots |
May 19 | Montreal Canadiens | 4–3 | OT | New York Rangers | Madison Square Garden | Recap | ||
Rejean Houle (1) - 2:39 | First period | 1:19 - Pat Hickey (1) 17:03 - Don Murdoch (7) | ||||||
Yvon Lambert (5) - 18:05 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Bob Gainey (5) - 6:27 | Third period | 4:26 - Phil Esposito (8) | ||||||
Serge Savard (2) - 7:25 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Ken Dryden 18 saves / 21 shots | Goalie stats | John Davidson 38 saves / 42 shots |
May 21 | New York Rangers | 1–4 | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum | Recap | |||
Carol Vadnais (2) - 16:52 | First period | 10:36 - Rick Chartraw (2) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 1:02 - pp - Jacques Lemaire (10) 11:01 - Bob Gainey (6) 18:49 - Jacques Lemaire (11) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
John Davidson 27 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Ken Dryden 14 saves / 15 shots |
Montreal won series 4–1 | |
Team rosters
editMontreal Canadiens
editNew York Rangers
editStanley Cup engraving
editThe 1979 Stanley Cup was presented to Canadiens acting captain Serge Savard by NHL President John Ziegler following the Canadiens 4–1 win over the Rangers in game five.
The following Canadiens players and staff had their names engraved on the Stanley Cup
1978–79 Montreal Canadiens
Players
- 10 Guy Lafleur
- 11 Yvon Lambert
- 12 Yvan Cournoyer (Captain)
- 14 Mario Tremblay
- 15 Rejean Houle
- 20 Cam Connor
- 22 Steve Shutt
- 23 Bob Gainey
- 30 Pat Hughes
- 31 Mark Napier
- 3 Brian Engblom
- 5 Guy Lapointe
- 17 Rod Langway
- 18 Serge Savard†
- 19 Larry Robinson
- 24 Gilles Lupien
- 27 Rick Chartraw
- 29 Ken Dryden
- 1 Michel Bunny Larocque
- 33 Richard Sevigny(spare dressed in finals)††
Coaching and administrative staff
- Jacques Courtois (President), Sam Pollock (Director)
- Irving Grundman (Vice President/General Manager), Jean Beliveau (Vice President - Director of Cooperate Affairs)
- William Scotty Bowman (Head Coach), Claude Ruel (Director of Player Development)
- Al MacNeil (Director of Player Personnel), Morgan McCammon (Director)
- Ron Caron (Asst. General Manager/Director of Communication), Eddy Palchak (Trainer)
- Pierre Meilleur (Asst. Trainer)
Stanley Cup engraving
- †Yvan Cournoyer played only 18 regular season games. He missed the rest of the season due to a back injury. His name was still put on the cup, even though he did not qualify. Serge Savard served as interim captain while Cournoyer was injured.
- ††Richard Sevigny's name was engraved on the Stanley Cup, before he played his first NHL game. He was dressed in the finals when Michel Larocque was injured in pre-game warm-up for game two. Sevigny joined Montreal full-time, the next season after Ken Dryden retired.
- #26 Dan Newman played 16 regular season games, but did not qualify to be on the cup. He was dressed for one game in the quarterfinals, but did not play
- Floyd Curry changed roles from Assistant Manager to Director of Scouting. Name was left off the Stanley Cup.
- American Rod Langway was born in Taiwan. This makes Langway first and only player to win the Stanley Cup born in Taiwan (Republic of China).
Members of Montreal Canadiens 1976 to 1979 dynasty
edit- Players: Rick Chartraw, Yvan Cournoyer, Ken Dryden, Bob Gainey, Doug Jarvis, Guy Lafleur, Yvon Lambert, Guy Lapointe, Michel Larocque, Jacques Lemaire, Doug Risebrough, Larry Robinson, Serge Savard, Steve Shutt, Mario Tremblay
- Non players: Jacques Courtois, Sam Pollock, Jean Beliveau, Scotty Bowman, Claude Ruel, Eddie Palchak, Pierre Meilleur, Ron Caron, Floyd Curry
Broadcasting
editThe Stanley Cup Finals were produced by CBC, who carried the game in Canada and were shown in the United States on the NHL's syndicated package. Dan Kelly called the play-by-play for Games 1, 3, 4, and 5 entirely and split game 2 with Danny Gallivan. Gary Dornhoefer served as color commentator for Games 1 and 5, Gerry Pinder served as color commentator for Game 2 only, Bobby Orr served as color commentator from Madison Square Garden. Meanwhile, Dick Irvin Jr. served as color commentator for the entire Finals and hosted the games in Montreal, Dave Hodge and Howie Meeker hosted the games in New York City. ABC was contracted to televise game seven.[5][6] Since the Finals ended in five games, the contract was void.[7]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Due to injury, Cournoyer didn't play in any playoff games. Serge Savard served as acting captain.
- ^ "Canadiens do it again". St Petersburg Times (Page 21). May 22, 1979. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
- ^ Jenish, D'Arcy (2009). The Montreal Canadiens:100 Years of Glory. Doubleday. p. 234. ISBN 978-0-385-66325-0.
- ^ "1979 NHL Stanley Cup Final: MTL vs. NYR". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
- ^ "NHL, ABC-TV Agree". Reading Eagle. Associated Press. May 13, 1979. p. 89.
- ^ "May 26 Selected For a 7th Game". The New York Times. May 13, 1979. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
- ^ Ramsay, Donald (May 22, 1979). "Montreal win kills ABC TV deal but Ziegler feels pact is on way". The Globe and Mail. p. 35.
- Bibliography
- Total Stanley Cup. NHL. 2000.
- Podnieks, Andrew; Hockey Hall of Fame (2004). Lord Stanley's Cup. Triumph Books. ISBN 978-1-55168-261-7.